National Post

THE BIG CHILL

HOW AFRICAN NATIONS ARE ENGAGING IN BATTLE WITH ‘ ZOMBIE’ COOLING APPLIANCES

- PEYTON FLEMING

On Nigeria’s bustling streets, stalls selling stacks of well- worn, energy-sucking refrigerat­ors and air conditione­rs are known as “tokunbo,” a Yoruba word that means “from abroad.”

Millions of people flock to such markets across Africa each year to buy the imported appliances at bargain prices, particular­ly as their incomes rise along with their ability to invest in cooling technology.

In many African countries, demand for cooling devices has doubled or tripled over the past decade, particular­ly as climate change brings ever hotter days, their government­s say.

But once the cast- off appliances are carted home, there is no guarantee they will come back to life — and, if they do, the cost to run them can be exorbitant, both for their users and the environmen­t, environmen­tal groups say.

Africa is often the last stop for cheap, outdated “zombie” fridges and air conditione­rs discarded mostly from homes in Europe and then illegally resold.

But some African countries are now pushing back against the trade, which can lead to heavy demands on limited power supplies and release now-banned coolants that act as important drivers of climate change.

Since 2013, Ghana has enforced a ban on imports of used cooling appliances and Rwanda approved a similar ban last year, along with regulation­s requiring new cooling equipment to meet minimum energy performanc­e standards by next year.

A half- dozen African countries have joined a United Nations working group, launched in April, that aims to find ways to curb the flow of these appliances. But success is still largely elusive.

“They come in branded as new, but when they’re off- loaded it’s mostly near-end-of-life e-waste,” said Leslie Adogame, executive director of SRADEV, a Nigerian non- profit environmen­tal health research group.

“They’re certainly cheaper to buy, but they use a lot more energy, don’t meet environmen­tal standards and usually have a very short shelf life.”

Nigeria and other West African countries with high summer temperatur­es and proximity to European shipping ports are especially popular destinatio­ns for used cooling appliances, which arrived stuffed into containers, cargo vehicles and even used cars.

Reliable statistics on the trade are hard to come by for Nigeria, but Ivory Coast and Senegal have both seen a doubling in used refrigerat­or imports since 2010, mostly from Europe, according to government data.

More than 3.7 million refrigerat­or units were imported into Ghana from 2004 to 2014, about 75 per cent of them second- hand, according to a 2017 study by Ghana’s University of Energy and Natural Resources.

A 2018 UN- backed analysis of 60,000 metric tonnes of used electrical equipment imported into Nigeria, most of it from Europe, found that at least a quarter of it was not functionin­g, much of it refrigerat­ors and air conditione­rs.

Shipping non- working electronic equipment is illegal under both the Basel Convention, an internatio­nal treaty, and the European Union’s waste shipment directive.

Because many of the used cooling devices use two to three times more electricit­y than new models, they stress already overburden­ed electricit­y grids. Many of them also use outdated chemical refrigeran­ts that are potent contributo­rs to climate change. And because many don’t work for long, they add to the already prodigious electronic waste dumps across Africa.

With African demand for air conditioni­ng growing quickly, the electricit­y needed to run them is expected to increase 10-fold by 2040, according to the Internatio­nal Energy Agency.

“Used cooling appliance imports are an enormous hurdle as African countries try to satisfy consumer needs and rising national energy demands,” said Brian Holuj, who leads a United Nations- backed effort to raise the efficiency of appliances. “The long- term consequenc­es for the health and well- being of Africans, and the planet, are profound.”

Efforts to halt internatio­nal trade in discarded second- hand appliances have been going on for decades.

The Basel Convention, a treaty ratified by most world government­s in 1989, prohibits illegal exports or dumping of non- working electronic products containing hazardous waste. The EU’S waste shipment directive similarly forbids exports of waste electrical and electronic equipment to non-eu countries.

But stopping these flows between Europe and Africa is a challenge, not least because both continents see some benefit.

Europeans say, “Oh my God, it’s going to cost so much to recycle the refrigeran­ts and refrigerat­ors,” said Jim Puckett, executive director of the Basel Action Network.

Africans, meanwhile, want affordable devices to keep cool.

Customs officials at African ports are the primary gatekeeper­s monitoring the flows.

Jose Ramon Carbajosa, an electronic products stewardshi­p expert in West Africa, said customs agents have the daunting task of deciding whether big volumes of used appliances are functional and legal, or illegal e-waste.

It doesn’t help that African government­s also profit from the imports.

In 2018, Senegal’s government earned about US$ 1.8 million in customs duties and $ 1.5 million in value- added taxes from refrigerat­or imports, said Carbajosa, who has worked with African and European Union countries on electronic­s recycling.

Alarmed by the widening gap between energy demand and power production, Ghana in 2008 banned imports of electricit­y- hungry used cooling appliances.

But an estimated 300,000 used refrigerat­ors a year continued to arrive — along with worsening power blackouts — until 2013, when the government stepped up inspection­s and began profiling importers, according to Kofi Agyarko, director of energy efficiency and climate change at the Ghana Energy Commission.

In the first year, flows of used refrigerat­ors dropped by half. Last year, new devices made up 95 per cent of Ghana’s refrigerat­or sales, he said.

While new appliances cost two to three times as much as used ones, they use a third as much electricit­y, with Ghanaian customers saving on average $ 140 a year on energy bills, Agyarko said.

Although the door has largely closed, importers still try to sneak old appliances into Ghana.

In late March and April, even as COVID-19 restrictio­ns limited shipments to “essentials,” inspectors seized more than 300 used refrigerat­ors, most of them from Britain, Agyarko said.

He hopes other African government­s will replicate Ghana’s program, but he says the seizures are a clear sign of the challenges Africa faces.

“We have a law that prohibits shipments of used and substandar­d equipment to Ghana, yet we’re still getting it in quantities,” he said.

“So what happens to other countries that have no laws at all?”

TH EY COME IN BRANDED AS NEW, BUT WHEN THEY’RE OFF-LOADED IT’S MOSTLY NEAR-END- OF-LIFE E-WASTE. ... THEY USE A LOT MORE ENERGY, DON’T MEET ENVIRONMEN­TAL STANDARDS AND USUALLY HA VE A VERY SHORT SHELF LIFE. — LESLIE ADOGAME, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF SR ADEV

 ?? GEORGES GOBET / AFP via Gett y Images files ?? Africa is often the last stop for cheap, outdated “zombie” fridges and air conditione­rs discarded mostly from homes in Europe and then illegally resold. About a half- dozen
African countries have joined a United Nations working group, which launched in April, that aims to find ways to curb the flow of these appliances.
GEORGES GOBET / AFP via Gett y Images files Africa is often the last stop for cheap, outdated “zombie” fridges and air conditione­rs discarded mostly from homes in Europe and then illegally resold. About a half- dozen African countries have joined a United Nations working group, which launched in April, that aims to find ways to curb the flow of these appliances.
 ?? SEYLLOU / AFP via Gett y Images files ?? In many African countries, the demand for cooling devices has doubled or tripled over the past decade.
SEYLLOU / AFP via Gett y Images files In many African countries, the demand for cooling devices has doubled or tripled over the past decade.
 ?? Gett y Images files ?? Reliable statistics are hard to come by for Nigeria, but Ivory Coast and Senegal have both seen a doubling in used refrigerat­or imports since 2010, mostly from
Europe, according to government data.
Gett y Images files Reliable statistics are hard to come by for Nigeria, but Ivory Coast and Senegal have both seen a doubling in used refrigerat­or imports since 2010, mostly from Europe, according to government data.

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