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General News of Friday, 21 May 2010

Source: GNA

Experts resolve to expedite national framework on pollutants

Accra, May 21, GNA - Ghana and Nigeria have resolved to enact nation= al legal frameworks on sustainable management of Persistent Organic Pollutan= ts (POPs) contaminated sites in both countries. They also resolved to ensure the successful implementation of the regional project on POPs due to their disastrous impact on human health a= nd the environment.

These were contained in 13 point communiqu=E9 issued at the end of a=

three-day First Regional Ministerial Committee meeting held in Accra. POPs are chemical substances that persist in the environment and bio-accumulate through the food web which poses a risk of causing adverse=

effects to human health and the environment.

They are derived from pesticides, industrial discharges and elements= in electrical transformers. Attended by 20 representatives from civil societies, government agencies as well as Ministers of Environment from Ghana and Nigeria the meeting sought to develop appropriate strategies for identifying sites contaminated by chemicals in the Sub-Region. Participants were to help develop a sustainable organisational agreement set up for the timely and well-monitored implementation of the project. The draft policy would be the sub-regional policy for the management= of contaminated sites in the sub-region. The meeting also reviewed splinter legislation on toxic chemicals management in the agencies represented and to synchronize the laws to hel= p in the management of the sites.

"Underscoring the active support and constructive inputs of all relevant stakeholders to realising the aims of the project, we will strengthen collaborative efforts among sectors and ensure the integration= of their contributions in the implementation", it said. The Communiqu=E9 signed by Ms Sherry Ayitey, the Minister of Environ= ment, Science and Technology and Mr John Odey, Minister of Environment of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, also called for the revival of the Toxic Was= te Dump Watch to share information within the sub-region on trans-boundary movements of hazardous waste in the ECOWAS sub-region. "We also call for the improvement in inter-sector collaboration at t= he national level including Health, Environment, Lands and Natural Resource,=

Agriculture Energy and the security Agencies," it said.

Research indicates that, "POPs accumulate in body fat and passes fro= m mother to foetus in the womb and through breast milk. Such chemicals are easily transported from their point of release throughout the biosphere especially into the Polar regions by wind and water currents". "It can stay in the environment for a very a long time without degrading; such chemicals and toxic substances pollute water bodies and agricultural lands and find their way into food substances." "For a long time the natural environment is considered and treated a= s a self-renewable resource, but we realize today that humanity is sowing the=

seed of its own destruction by the way we treat the environment". Although the negative effects of those chemicals affected every farm= er who used pesticides, industrial workers were the most vulnerable. To devise a means of addressing the challenge, the International Community negotiated and agreed on a convention in December 2000 in Stockholm, Sweden which Ghana was a signatory. The convention set out control measures covering the life cycle of PO= Ps from production to disposal. The convention signed by delegates from 122 countries also called on=

all parties to prohibit and take legal action and administrative measures= to eliminate the production and use of POPs. 21 May 10