The Star Malaysia - Star2

Finding value in waste

In nigeria, only a small fraction of trash is recycled, but some entreprene­urs are helping to address this issue by setting up recycling plants for aluminium.

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MOUNDS of waste scattered along roads and vast landfills are a Nigerian eyesore.

In Africa’s biggest economy and most populous country, collecting, sorting and recycling trash is despairing­ly rare.

But there is also good news. Some entreprene­urs are working hard to tackle the rubbish mountain, despite the many challenges.

Romco Metals started recycling aluminium at its factory outside Lagos in 2015, drawn by global demand for the light, strong, flexible metal.

Buoyed by good results, it built a second facility outside Ghana’s capital Accra and now plans to open at least three new plants across Africa and triple production by 2025.

Aluminium is the world’s second most-used metal after steel and used widely in constructi­on, medicine and car-making.

“Electric vehicles require more durable, lighter material such as aluminium, and that’s where our materials end up,” said the company’s youthful founder, 32-year-old Raymond Onovwigun.

Job creation

A British-registered company, Romco melts down and recycles around 1,500 tonnes of discarded aluminium per month, out of a capacity of 3,000 tonnes.

It says it has created 450 direct jobs – 5,000 in total, in this labourinte­nsive sector – and plans to double that number within a year.

“Before... there was no work,” community leader Bankole Gbenga known as Chief Abore said during a recent visit to the Lagos facility.

Chief Abore says more than a hundred young people from his community alone now work for Romco in some capacity.

“Some are doing carpentry, some are welders ... some of the youth are doing security,” said the 40-year-old.

Among those who have most benefited from Romco’s business are material suppliers like Mohammed Ashiru Madugu, who delivers several truckloads of metal scrap each week.

Madugu has a warehouse in northweste­rn Katsina, where suppliers from across the state and even neighbouri­ng states bring him discarded metal.

He loads the goods onto trucks and sends them all the way to Lagos, more than a thousand kilometres away.

For one truck, he can get paid up to 26 million naira (RM273,200) although the price fluctuates.

The scrap supplier said those trips required escorts because of the risk of ambushes by criminal gangs on the road.

Romco later said that none of its suppliers need escorts and none had been involved in any attacks by criminals.

“We have had zero instances of anything of the sort,” it said in a statement.

Vast problem

Only a tiny fraction of waste is recycled in Nigeria, a country of some 210 million consumers.

Plastic, metal and glass that in advanced economies are routinely picked up and processed are mostly tossed out.

Each year, Nigeria disgorges 200,000 tonnes of plastic into the Atlantic, the UN Industrial Developmen­t Organisati­on reported last year.

In Lagos alone, a city of more than 20 million people, less than 10% of total recyclable­s are currently collected, Ibrahim Adejuwon Odumboni, managing director of the Lagos State Management Agency said.

By comparison, in Britain, more than 41% of waste picked up by local authoritie­s was recycled last year, according to British statistics.

For Odumboni, recycling initiative­s are to be commended but more should be done by the companies making aluminium beverage cans and other products.

“We need the manufactur­ers to invest in the collection system.

“In many parts of the world, a portion of what producers sell is going into the recovery of products.

“We currently don’t have that in Nigeria,” he said.

If companies selling aluminium products “are not held responsibl­e (for collecting waste) then it doesn’t make any sense – we’re just going round and round in circles”.

He blames poor legislatio­n but says an improved law on Extended Producer Responsibi­lity (EPR) is currently being discussed in the state house of assembly.

EPR is an environmen­tal policy in place in many countries that gives producers incentives to take responsibi­lity for their products after they are used.

Another challenge for recyclers is carbon emissions from the energy they use to crush, shred or melt old materials.

Romco, for instance, uses compressed natural gas to turn the aluminium into ingots.

“(It) is still a fossil fuel but the best, most efficient fossil fuel. It doesn’t contain lead or sulphur,” said Onovwigun.

The company says, however, that it wants to be independen­t of fossil fuels and is “exploring the potential of using solar, green hydrogen, and biofuels”.

 ?? —afp ?? Workers gather piles of scrap automobile aluminium and metals for recycling at the romco factory in Lagos.
—afp Workers gather piles of scrap automobile aluminium and metals for recycling at the romco factory in Lagos.

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