QUESTION ONE: CASE STUDY
Title:
Municipal Solid Waste Management in the Kanzo Metropolitan Area,
Sikaman
Kanzo
is a metropolitan area in Sikaman, a least developed country in
West Africa, which has experienced rapid urbanisation over the past
six decades. The population of Kanzo in 1965 was 45,000, which
tripled in two decades, and further reached 1.2 million in the year
2005. The National Development Planning Council (NDPC),
headquartered in Kanzo has estimated that the city’s population
surpassed the threshold of 5 million in 2019. City authorities have
become worried, considering the current rate of urbanisation pegged
at 3 percent per annum. The population growth coupled with the
rapid expansion of the city has resulted in an urban sprawl and
uncontrolled expansion from the adjourning municipalities. Also,
there has been an increased crowding resulting in higher occupancy
ratios in existing housing units, and the infilling of vacant plots
in existing residential areas. According to the NDPC, over 70
percent of the population of Kanzo live in low income, high density
population areas which account for many of the slums in the city
and its peripheral environs.
Kanzo
generates over 3,000 tons of solid waste per day and only about 60
percent is collected by the waste management organisations
contracted through a public private partnership (PPP) arrangement.
Of these, the organic waste, made up of kitchen waste including
food leftovers, rotten fruits, vegetables, leaves, crop residues,
animal excreta and bones constitute 65-70% whiles industrial waste
made up of plastics, glass, metals, and paper account for the
remaining 30-35%. The high organic and moisture contents left in
the open at prevailing high temperatures require frequent removals,
which place additional burden on an over strained collection
system. Experts have warned that the delays and inefficiencies in
the solid waste collection system in Kanzo, is what has accounted
for the high incidence of cholera, typhoid fever, malaria, and
other health hazards witnessed in the metropolis. Especially in low
income areas where the waste is not segregated but mixed due to
inadequate sanitation facilities, the problem becomes more
compounded.
The
lack of proper land use planning in Kanzo, also hinders effective
sanitation and waste management practices. As reported in the April
9, 2019 edition of the Daily Mail Newspaper, the lack of
comprehensive planning, the absence of planning controls, week
enforcement of bye-laws, indiscipline, difficulty to apply service
charges, limited number of waste management organisations, and the
lack of an adequate and well maintained infrastructure in the
urban, and industrial development processes is responsible Kanzo’s
environmental problems. The publication further outlines that the
poor layouts, untarred and narrow nature of the road networks
particularly in slums, make it difficult for waste collection
vehicles to reach some parts of the city compound the situation.
This uncontrolled urbanisation has resulted in an increase in the
average travel distance to be covered by collection vehicles and
additional cost to waste management.
In
January, 2020, resident associations from all sub-metropolitan
areas of Kanzo staged a mammoth demonstration at the city centre
and presented a petition to the Office of the Mayor of Kanzo, Dr.
E.M Hygiene, to express their concerns on the unsustainable manner
and poor solid waste management system, as well as the
environmental risks associated with the practice.
REQUIRED:
i.
Identify any four (4) major causes of the poor solid waste
management and sanitation problems
confronting the Kanzo Metropolitan Area.