Mail & Guardian

Senegal awash in litter of discarded water sachets

- Soulé Dia — Agence France-presse

Moussa Ndoye, a 28-year-old beachgoer in Senegal’s capital Dakar, gulps down the water from two plastic sachets in quick succession and throws them in the sand.

“This is our rubbish bin,” he says with a laugh, while sitting with friends in the shade of a large wooden fishing boat.

The white sand shore is littered with plastic waste, including discarded transparen­t pocket-sized drinking water sachets.

Practical, easily purchased in shops or from street hawkers, and cheaper than water bottles, the sachets are integral to everyday life in Senegal. However, they are a key contributo­r to plastic waste marring the West African nation’s streets and coastlines.

Water sachets take 400 years to decompose into microplast­ics, according to Adams Tidjanis, professor of environmen­tal studies at a private university in Dakar.

In Senegal, more than 250 000 tonnes of plastic are discarded each year, while only about 30 000 tonnes are recycled, according to a report last year by the ministry of urban planning.

“There are a lot of them on the beaches; they’re part of the plastic waste we see the most,” says Pape

Diop, head of an environmen­tal protection associatio­n.

Previously, “fishermen took cans [of water] to sea, but now they use sachets of water, drink them, then throw them away — this waste all end up here [on the beach] because the sea rejects it”, he adds.

In addition to polluting the water, the sachets obstruct drains, contributi­ng to urban flooding. They are often burned with other trash, releasing toxins into the air.

In Dakar, they litter sports fields, constructi­on sites and busy intersecti­ons. They are particular­ly noticeable during the hot season, which runs from June to October.

It is a phenomenon seen across much of the continent, with water sachets common in Nigeria, Côte d’ivoire and Burkina Faso. They are outlawed in Kenya and Rwanda under bans on single-use plastics dating back to 2017 and 2019, respective­ly.

Senegal passed similar single-use plastics legislatio­n in 2020, supplement­ing a 2015 law.

But exceptions were made for the sachets and other types of plastics in light of the Covid-19 pandemic, which severely affected people who live from day to day.

“Our socio-economic realities do not allow us to move towards their total ban,” explains Khadidjato­u

Drame, who runs legal affairs at the environmen­t ministry.

Around 50 brands compete for Dakar’s water sachet market. They sell the sachets individual­ly or in batches of 30. The 400ml sachets fetch 50 CFA francs (R1.50) on the street. For the 250ml sachets, it’s 25 CFA francs.

Amadou Diallo, 63, launched the “Debeya” brand in 2017. In his small factory in the Dakar suburb of Guediawaye, tap water passes through three blue tubes containing

cotton, thread and coal to purify it.

The water flows on through two 1 000-litre tanks and then into a packaging machine that fills the sachets, seals them and places them in a blue basin.

Diallo says he produces 9000 to 12000 sachets a day in the hot season.

Getting started does not cost much — a cubic metre of tap water costs 202 CFA francs.

All producers are meant to have government authorisat­ion in order to operate — but many fail to follow

hygiene rules, according to Mbaye Loum, head of the health ministry’s National Hygiene Service.

Many customers said that they wonder about the source of the water they drink.

“We can’t even count” how many rivals operate clandestin­ely, admits Diallo, whose operation is authorised.

“They set up their factories behind closed doors and you wouldn’t even suspect that water is produced [inside].”

 ?? ?? Pollution hazard: A man loads plastic sachets filled with water in Dakar, Senegal.
Pollution hazard: A man loads plastic sachets filled with water in Dakar, Senegal.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa