THE VULTURE'S NEST: Why Ghana’s National Cleaning Day Won't Wash Away a 600-Ton Daily Trash Crisis

With Accra drowning in 300+ tons of daily plastic waste, experts demand a return to the feared 1960s "Tankasey" regime and structural drainage overhauls before the next deadly flood.

The devastating floods of June 29, which tragically claimed 12 lives and displaced thousands across seven regions, have once again forced our nation into a familiar posture of grief and reactive panic. In response, the presidency and the Post-Flood Mitigation Committee declared July 10 and 11 as National General Cleaning Days. Today, as security personnel, local assemblies, and citizens in communities like Alajo desilt choked gutters and clear mounds of debris under heavy security enforcement, a critical question flashes across our national conscience: Beyond the cleaning, what next?

For decades, Ghana's approach to environmental sanitation has mirrored the proverbial vulture who promises to build a nest only when the rain beats him, yet completely forgets the commitment the moment the sun shines. We cannot continue to run a nation on the wheels of reactive, ad-hoc cleaning exercises while treating structural, behavioral, and legal lawlessness as normalcy. National Cleaning Days are commendable, but brooms and shovels alone will not fix systemic engineering failures and a culture of institutional apathy. It is time to transition from temporary crisis management to a permanent, sustainable sanitation culture.

The Grim Math of Our Plastic Crisis

The visual evidence of our clogged gutters is backed by a terrifying reality of numbers. According to data from the International Growth Centre (IGC), the city of Accra alone generates an astonishing 2,800 metric tons of solid waste every single day. Environmental audits reveal that 14% to 16.1% of this mountain of trash consists of high-value recyclable plastics—specifically single-use PET bottles and HDPE water sachets. This means Accra produces roughly 300 to 450 metric tons of plastic waste daily.

Worse yet, municipal systems only manage to collect 70% to 75% of daily urban refuse. The uncollected backlog—amounting to over 600 metric tons of garbage every day—is routinely dumped into open drains, lagoons, and water bodies. Nationally, the Ghana Climate Innovation Centre (GCEC) notes that we import about $300 million worth of virgin plastic resins annually, yet 51% of the resulting plastic waste is entirely mismanaged through open dumping or burning. We are quite literally drowning in plastic convenience, allowing it to choke our primary waterways and guarantee catastrophic structural flooding every time the clouds gather.

Critical Recommendations for Key Stakeholders

To break this vicious cycle of filth, floods, and cosmetic cleanups, every sector of Ghanaian society must shift from temporary compliance to permanent accountability:

1. Direct Call-to-Action: Ministry of Sanitation and Water Resources (MSWR)

2. To Traditional Authorities: Reclaiming Power & Resurrecting the "Tankasey"

3. To the Central Government & Policy Makers

4. To Local Government Authorities (MMDAs)

5. To the General Public & Civil Society

Time to Build the Nest

The image of thousands of Ghanaians clearing filth today is a powerful testament to our collective strength when mobilized. However, if we return to business as usual on Monday—if shops reopen, citizens resume littering, and authorities return to their comfortable offices without enforcing the law—this weekend's sweat will yield nothing but the next disaster.

We must resolutely reject the mindset of the proverbial vulture. We cannot wait for the next heavy downpour, the next submerged community, or the next preventable loss of life to remind us of our civic duties. Sanitation is not a two-day event; it is a continuous, institutionalized discipline. By combining the rigid engineering of the central government with the fierce, community-level discipline of the resurrected 1960s Tankasey, we can finally build a resilient, clean, and structurally sound nation that protects its people before the rain begins to fall again.

Explanatory Footnote

The June 29 Flood Timeline:

✍️ 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

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