Ministry of Environment Commissions Electronic Waste Hand-Over Centre

Apart from serving as a stor­age or collection point, the HOC will help facilitate the recycling process of e-waste products in line with global best practices.

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An electronic waste Hand Over Centre (HOC), meant to serve as a storage or collection point of e-waste products has been inaugurated in  Accra.

Apart from serving as a stor­age or collection point, the HOC will help facilitate the recycling process of e-waste products in line with global best practices.

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The e-waste HOC is 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.

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Speaking at the inauguration ceremony, the Minister for Environment, Sci­ence, Technology and Innovation, 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 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 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.

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 “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 expressed gratitude to 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 after local and international media reports 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.

The government in collaboration with the Federal Re­public of Germany through BMZ and 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 for the project which had three components, namely, the supply side; focusing on the incentive col­lection of e-waste, Hand Over Cen­tre, focusing on the storage of e-waste and the demand side, focusing on the tendering and recycling of e-waste in an environ­mentally sound manner.

Source:norvanreports.com

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