Saturday, May 25, 2013

Nigeria Needs to Reduce Their Dependency of Single-use Plastic Bags...


Plastic shopping bags are widely used for transporting a range of small consumer goods and in some regions, also serve secondary roles for conveying drinking water and disposing of human and other domestic wastes. While annual production and use statistics are not available from industry sectors, environmental groups estimate that between 500 billion and 1 trillion plastic bags are used globally each year. Since their inception, uncontrolled disposal of these bags has been causing environmental problems worldwide, and many municipal, regional, and national governments are beginning to take action. 



The problem is particularly acute in Africa due to its unique set of socio-economic and political conditions. Similarly unique solutions will be needed to solve this complex issue. In a number of African countries including Nigeria, plastic bag pollution is causing severe environmental and health damage that manifests itself in a number of ways. The bags are also used for disposing of human waste in city streets, in gutters, and on neighboring roofs. This leads to an "out-of-sight, out-of-mind" philosophy that superficially and incorrectly portrays the absence of the existing health risks compared to otherwise "open" human waste disposal.


Bags can block storm drains and sewage systems, leading to flooding and increased spread of disease. Water trapped in the bags also provides an ideal breeding ground for mosquitoes, raising the risk of malaria transmission. Plastic bags in our sewage system breed death threatening pathogens like typhoid, cholera, bacillary dysentery, tuberculosis, anthrax ophthalmia and infantile diarrhea, as well as parasitic worms.



Since most landfills are not routinely covered with soil in Nigeria, the bags are easily transported around the countryside where wildlife and livestock consume the materials, thus entering the food chain. The open fifth caused by plastic bags in our environmental promote excess reproduction of the house fly; more than 100 pathogens associated with the house fly may cause disease in humans and livestock.



Another health damaging practice is burning of waste. Where the bags are burned either for energy or mass reduction purposes, heavy metals and toxic organic compounds (e.g., polychlorinated dibenzo-p-dioxins and furans [PCDD/Fs; commonly referred to as "dioxins"] and polyaromatic hydrocarbons [PAHs]) can be produced causing respiratory diseases like asthma, cystic fibrosis, emphysema, chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder or acute respiratory distress syndrome just to name a few.


 
In agricultural areas, the bags can interfere with water and air movement through the soils, and thus decrease productivity of much-needed farmlands. And perhaps of greatest consequence, regardless of their location or end use, the bags require unsustainable petroleum-based raw material inputs for their production and once produced require centuries or millennia to decompose.

We need to eliminate the dependency on single-use plastic bag in our everyday habits…



Friday, May 24, 2013

Plastc Bag Pollution Persist


An article in the Vanguard news paper explained that Lagos State Waste Management Authority (LAWMA) put forth a initiative to combat the nuisance of pure water bag pollution within the state. LAWMA developed a buy back program; the program gives the bags a financial value which offers an incentive for people to sell the water bags back to the state rather than discard them as mealiness trash. (http://www.vanguardngr.com/2012/06/lagos-drains-of-pure-water-sachets-plastic-bottles/ )

The buy back program gets an "A" for effort, but a "F" for failing to have foresight.

Nigeria has no proper disposal or recycling method for its plastic and non plastic waste. Lagos alone generates 9000 metric tons of waste daily; 86% of the waste generated consists of plastic bottles and bags. In Nigeria, plastic bags have become almost a national symbol of waste and decadence. While plastic bags are not the only cause of pollution in Nigeria, they are perhaps the most evident of our garbage




LAWMA Recycling Manager said:“To make our land fill sites less odorous and over packed with waste, we have adopted a zero waste initiative to improve life in the society. The best way to become eco-friendly and help protect our environment is by recycling. This helps to eliminate the problem of landfill areas becoming filled with junk that could harm the soil as well as the environment.

However, for LAWMA to recycle pure water bags right back into another type of plastic bag is only converting one pollution menace into the same menace of being a plastic bag but with a different color and a different use. Over all both pure water plastic bags and thin black plastic bags are single use items that will continue to be a part of the millions of plastic bags that get dumped into waterways and landfill each year causing pollution, erosion, irrigation blockages and health problems.

Plastic is the fastest-growing component of the waste stream and plastic pollution like single-use bags are among the most commonly found items during environmental cleanups. Because plastic essentially never biodegrades, once littered, plastic becomes a permanent environmental problem. Plastic bags have become a threat to our ecosystem. LAWMA is not arresting the problem of plastic pollution, they are in fact promoting more of it and going against their OWN waste diversion goals.







Thursday, May 23, 2013

May 23 is WORLD TURTLE DAY!

  HAPPY WORLD TURTLE DAY!
MAY WE COEXIST WITH YOU AS YOU HAVE DONE WITH EVERY SPECIES IN THE WORLD FOR OVER 150 MILLION YEARS WITHOUT HARM OR INJURY. MAY WE LEARN TO APPRECIATE YOUR STRUGGLES AND EXISTANCE BY PROTECTING THE WATERS AND SHORES SO THAT YOU CAN CONTINUE TO GRACE THE OCEANS WITH YOUR ENDURANCE AND WISDOM.


Marine turtles are found in warm and temperate seas around the world. Adults of most species are found in shallow, coastal waters, bays, lagoons, and estuaries and the open sea. Juveniles of some species may be found in bays and estuaries, as well as at sea.

Marine turtles are reptiles and belong to a group of animals which also includes snakes, lizards, and crocodiles. Marine turtles are split into two families; Cheloniidae, which are marine turtles with shells covered with scutes (horny plates), and Dermochelyidae with only one modern species, the leatherback turtle, which are covered with leathery skin. Turtles have inhabited the planet for over 150 million years.

Because of Nigeria’s warm climate and various waterways; it is only natural that sea turtles would call the coastal waters of Nigeria home. Unfortunately, sea turtles are endangered in every part of the world and Nigeria has a variety of this endangered species that occupy their shores 

Unfortunately, our waste is contaminating the ocean with billions of tons of plastic, which harms and kills approximately 100,000 sea turtles and other marine animals each year. Sea turtles often mistake floating plastic bags for their favorite food, jellyfish, and the consequences of ingesting plastic causes blockages within their digestive system and eventual death.  




The plastic in our oceans is killing thousands of sea turtles and marine mammals each year. Help us decrease the amount of plastic that is put in our oceans by adopting habits that exclude plastics.  

We can easily save the sea turtles from extinction by eliminating our use of plastic bags... There other obstacles that harm marine life, but for sea turtles the biggest is plastic bags in the ocean. Switching to REUSABLE BAGS can eliminate millions of plastic bags entering the ocean in a lifetime thus allowing the sea turtle to continue to strive along with other marine life.

Sea turtles play a vital role in out marine ecosystem protecting their existence in turn protects human existence. Say NO to Plastic! and Don't forget your Reusable Bag! 







Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Do You Know How Long Your Trash Last?

This is why we have to be conscious about the things we use and the things we throw away. We should always have it in the forefront of our minds to be aware of what is biodegradable and what is not and what are the long term affects to our Eco-system when we choose convenience over consideration. Our future relies on the actions of the present day.