The Accra-Tema Beach Road Nostalgia vs. The Ramsar Reality: Why Ghana’s Eco-Governance is an Expensive Fraud

The Illusion of Governance
Ghanaian governance has evolved into a highly profitable, self-sustaining "talk-shop" industry. Every perennial flood or ecological disaster triggers an expensive, predictable cycle of high-level dialogues, multi-million Cedi ministerial committees, and academic PowerPoint presentations. Meanwhile, the critical state infrastructure and natural buffers that protect human lives continue to decay in real-time.

As a retired civil servant, I have spent decades analyzing the inner workings of our state institutions, and my previous essays on this platform have consistently hammered home one uncomfortable truth: Ghana does not suffer from a deficit of laws, but from a total bankruptcy of political will.

Nowhere is this institutional paralysis more dangerous than the unchecked, state-sanctioned destruction of our internationally protected wetlands. The time for polite diplomacy, symbolic stakeholder workshops, and toothless ultimatums has expired. The Ghanaian public is exhausted, broke, and unequivocally declares that we have had enough of the talk. We demand a transition from elite rhetoric to uncompromising execution.

A Vignette of What We Lost: The Golden Age of the Beach Road

To understand the depth of our current systemic decay, one must look back at what our natural environment used to give us for free. In the late 1960s and throughout the 1970s, driving along the Accra-Tema Beach Road was not the frustrating commute through traffic and concrete dust that it is today; it was a scenic, bountiful journey through a thriving ecological paradise.

THE 1970s BEACH ROAD EXPERIENCE ├── Pristine Lagoons: Crystal clear waters teeming with marine life. ├── Roadside Markets: Direct-from-nature fresh catch at unbeatable prices. └── Abundant Species: Massive tilapia, robust mudfish, and giant prawns.

In those days, commuters could pull over anywhere near the Sakumono or Kpeshie catchments and buy baskets of glistening, freshly harvested tilapia, heavy mudfish, crabs, and giant prawns directly from local artisanal fishermen. The lagoons were pristine, deep, and constantly flushed by the tides. They were living, breathing economic engines.

Today, that beautiful, productive landscape has been replaced by a congested urban wasteland. The fresh fish stalls have vanished, replaced by illegal high-walled mansions, structural blocks, and open sewer drains. We have successfully traded our long-term food security and natural beauty for short-term real estate corruption.

The Anatomy of Ecological Plunder

We must bypass vague political generalities and confront the specific geographic fronts where the state has completely surrendered its regulatory sovereignty to lawless developers and corrupt public planners:

The Economic Math: Millions Flushed and Billions Forfeited

The destruction of our wetlands is not merely an environmental tragedy; it is an act of macroeconomic self-sabotage. Our leaders view wetlands as waste land, blind to both the structural liabilities they create and the massive creative and marine economies they actively crush.

1. The Catastrophic Losses of Inaction

2. The Hypocrisy of the Seafood Crisis

We stand along our shorelines today lamenting the skyrocketing cost of fish and the dwindling supply of seafood in our local markets, entirely forgetting that coastal wetlands are the very delivery rooms of the ocean.

3. The Forfeited Wealth of a Green Economy

While we beg for foreign bailouts, we are actively burying a multi-billion Cedi golden goose. According to global ecosystem assessments, well-managed wetlands offer massive wealth-generation potential:

THE MACROECONOMIC STAKES ├── GHS 20 Billion: National economic loss from floods (2013-2023) ├── GHS 200 Million: Capital washed away in Accra every single year ├── 2.7 Million: Ghanaian livelihoods crushed by breeding ground destruction └── $4.8 Billion: Available tourism inflows vulnerable to urban blight

The Budgetary Fraud and Institutional Complicity

As Parliament prepares to debate the national budget allocations for the Ministry of Water Resources and Sanitation, we must expose the deep financial absurdity of our national approach to flood management. Year after year, the national budget allocates hundreds of millions of taxpayer Cedis to superficial, repetitive drain-dredging and emergency flood relief.

This is an organized economic drain. While the state uses public funds to clear flood channels, Municipal Chief Executives (MCEs) and corrupt spatial planning officers line their pockets by quietly issuing building permits inside those exact same flood basins.

As I noted in my previous piece on The Anatomy of State Capture, when public regulatory power is hijacked to serve private, well-connected commercial interests, the state completely loses its moral authority. The taxpayer is forced to fund the relief, and eventually, pays even more money for delayed, reactive demolitions.

Actionable Recommendations and Suggestions

To collapse the "talk-shop" industry and restore structural integrity to our eco-governance, all primary stakeholders must immediately enforce the following policy directives:

A Commander-in-Chief's Ultimatum: The Call for Military Intervention

Because the civil machinery of state has proven itself hopelessly compromised by political patronage, we must look to the ultimate custodian of national order. I call directly upon the Commander-in-Chief of the Ghana Armed Forces, President John Dramani Mahama, to bypass the sluggish, corrupted channels of municipal bureaucracy. The presidency must deploy the absolute discipline of our military engineers.

Mr. President, exercise your executive authority by ordering the 48 Engineer Regiment (the Sappers) and the Field Engineers Corps to take complete, unhindered charge of the physical demolition, dredging, and full restoration of all compromised Ramsar sites. Let the military draw the red lines that civilian regulators are too compromised to enforce.

This intervention must be absolute, swift, and executed no matter whose ox is gored, without fear or favor. As this is your final term in high office, you are unburdened by the cautious calculations of future election cycles. Use this historic autonomy to break the back of real estate lawlessness, reclaim our natural buffers, and secure an ecological legacy for generations of Ghanaians yet unborn.

No More Soft Landings

In my recent commentary on Reengineering the Ghanaian Dream, I argued that a true, functioning democracy cannot be measured by the ritualistic act of voting every four years. True democracy is measured by the uniform enforcement of the rule of law, the preservation of our collective natural assets, and the absolute accountability of those trusted with state power.

Ghana cannot survive another decade of comfortable elite consensus-building while the very ground we stand on washes away beneath our feet. True leadership is measured by the enemies it makes in defense of the public good. To every minister, director, and stakeholder currently holding a microphone instead of an enforcement order: step up, execute your statutory duties without fear or favor, or step aside. The talking shop is officially closed.

✍️By A Concerned Senior Citizen

Retired Senior Citizen
For and on behalf of all Senior Citizens of the Republic of Ghana 🇬🇭

Teshie-Nungua
akpaluck@gmail.com

A Voice for Accountability and Reform in Governance

Disclaimer: "The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect ModernGhana official position. ModernGhana will not be responsible or liable for any inaccurate or incorrect statements in the contributions or columns here."

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