These
are the words of Ban Ki-moon, UN Secretary-General, to mark the World Environment
Day 2015.
According
to him, the well-being of humanity, the environment and the functioning of the
economy, ultimately depend upon the responsible management of the planet’s
natural resources.
“Living
sustainably is about doing more and better with less. It is about knowing that
rising rates of natural resource use and the environmental impacts that occur
are not a necessary by-product of economic growth,” said Ban Ki-moon.
In
Ghana, World Environmental Day is being commemorated amidst flooding in parts
of the country, leading to some loss of lives.
The
country’s environmental pollution and degradation fuel the floods anytime the
rains set in. Littering and disposal of garbage in drains and gutters choke
waterways and bring about flooding. Poor infrastructure development has
resulted in people building in waterlogged areas, whilst law enforcement is
relaxed for political expediency.
Ghana’s
environmental sanitation challenges could be exacerbated by the changing
climate – in less than half a century, the country’s forest cover has depleted from
seven million hectares to 1.3million.
Drastic
measures are required for a sustained future.
The
Ministry of Environment, Science, Technology and Innovation (MESTI) has set an
ambitious goal of plant, nurture and grow 30million trees annually.
The
existing trees will also need to be protected to halt the speed of
deforestation.
Sector
Minister, Mahama Ayariga, talks about the deployment of biogas technologies,
especially in rural communities, to prevent tree felling for firewood and
charcoal.
“It
is now imperative because of the energy challenge that we have since biogas,
when well managed, can also run generators to provide electricity,” he added.
The
Ministry plans to present new regulations to parliament to compel the construction
of bio-septic tanks in private housing facilities whilst all public schools are
supported to generate their energy from biogas plants.
Many
of the Earth’s ecosystems are nearing critical tipping points of depletion or
irreversible change, pushed by high population growth and economic development.
“By
2050, if current consumption and production patterns remain the same and with a
rising population expected to reach 9.6 billion, we will need three planets to
sustain our ways of living and consumption,” said the UN Secretary-General.
The
theme for this year’s celebrations, “Seven Billion Dreams. One Planet.
Consume with Care”, emphasizes that personal responsibility each one bears
for enabling inclusive and sustainable economic development while stabilizing
and reducing the rate of resource use.
“The
annual World Environment Day reminds people across the globe that it is our
personal choices that shape the world around us. Our daily decisions as
consumers, multiplied by billions, have a colossal impact on the environment –
some of them contribute to the further depletion of natural resources, others
help to protect fragile ecosystems. Every time - the choice is ours,” said Achim Steiner, UN Under-Secretary-General and
Executive Director of the UN Environment Programme.
It
is hoped that the WED serves as an opportunity for everyone to realize the
responsibility to care for the Earth and to become agents of change.
Story
by Kofi Adu Domfeh
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