An electronic waste (e-waste) Hand Over Centre (HOC), meant to serve as a storage or collect point of e-waste products, was inaugurated in Accra on Friday.
An electronic waste (e-waste) Hand Over Centre (HOC), meant to serve as a storage or collect point of e-waste products, was inaugurated in Accra on Friday.
Apart from serving as a storage or collection point, the HOC would help facilitate the recycling process of e-waste products in line with global best practices.
The e-waste HOC formed part of the “Recycling and Disposal of Electronic and Electrical Equipment in an Environmentally Sound Way,” project initiated by the government, through the Ministry of Environment, Science, Technology, and Innovation (MESTI) in partnership with the German Government, through KfW.
Speaking at the inauguration ceremony, the sector Minister, Mrs Ophelia Mensah Hayford, said the establishment of the HOC was a testament to the government’s commitment to both the environment and public health.
She also noted that the facility marked the reflection of the achievements of the e-waste project which included the safe collection of over 476.88 tons of e-waste cables, 37.03 tons of mixed batteries, 31.83 tons of thermoplastics, and 87.00 sets of Cathode Ray Televisions (CRT).
Mrs Hayford further indicated that the partnership with various stakeholders such as the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Metropolitan, Municipal, and District Assemblies (MMDAs), and the e-waste fund had resulted in a system that incentivised safe disposal of e-waste, created over 450 green jobs , and trained more than 200 scrap dealers in the safe handling of e-waste.
“It is our firm conviction that this initiative will strengthen the capacity of local e-waste handlers to properly manage electronic waste in ways that reduce the associated risks and increase value recovery,” Mrs Hayford added.
She also expressed her profound gratitude to all relevant stakeholders, including scrap dealers, for their commitment and cooperation in ensuring that the e-waste project remained a success.
In 2016, the government passed Act 917 to deal with the issue of e-waste management after media reports by local and international media on the use of unconventional, crude methods such as burning and acid leaching to extract valuable metals from e-waste materials at Agbogbloshie and its health risk on the citizenry.
Following the passage of Act 917, the government, in a bilateral collaboration with the Federal Republic of Germany through BMZ and implemented by KFW, started the implementation of the ‘Recycling and Disposal of Electronic and Electrical Equipment in an Environmentally Sound Way’ project, expected to end next year.
An amount of €20 million was earmarked by the project partners for the project which had three components, namely, supply side, which focused on the incentive collection of e-waste, Hand Over Centre, which focused on the storage of e-waste, and the demand side, which focused on the tendering and recycling of e-waste in an environmentally sound manner.