Ban single-use plastics - UN urges Ghana government
Head of United Nations Office for Project Services UNOPS, Ifeoma Esther Charles Monwuba, has charged the government to ban the use of single use plastics in the country. Addressing the media on Friday, madam Charles Monwuba said that careless disposal of single
use plastic waste has become a threat to agriculture, water sources as well as human and marine lives. The UN Ghana organised a cleanup exercise at the Labamba Beach on Friday to encourage citizens to work towards a clean environment. The Head of UNOPS asked
Ghanaians to take a bold step and replace plastics with paper and ceramics as has been adopted by the United Nations and its staff. “The UN is deeply committed to this, so in our offices, we are taking action to ensure that we do not contribute any negative impact on the
climate,” she said. She revealed that UN, in its commitment to contribute to clean Ghana, has banned the use of single use plastics in its offices and events. “We are taking that to our homes and our communities to ensure that we also influence those around us to also
do the same,” she added. UNOPS Project Engineer, Hadia Gariba, also encouraged citizens to use reusable plastics to curb the growing menace of plastic waste. “Single-use plastics are used and disposed of quickly, there isn’t an opportunity for you to recycle, there isn’t an opportunity to reuse,” Madam Gariba noted.