Daily Trust

WED: 83 per cent of tap water contains plastic pollutants

- By Mercy Nuhu Abe

The Director General of the National Orientatio­n Agency (NOA), Dr Garba Abari, has said an estimated 13 million tonnes of plastic find their way into the ocean each year.

Dr. Abari who revealed this at the 2018 World Environmen­t Day (WED) walk organised by the Centre for Peace and Environmen­tal Justice (CEPEJ) in Abuja, yesterday, added that its amounts to 165 million tonnes of plastic pollution in the oceans as at 2012.

Speaking on this year’s theme, ‘Beat Plastic Pollution’, Abari said plastic wastes pose huge dangers to the environmen­t and human existence as they take 50 to 600 years to decompose.

He said: “Eighty-three per cent of tap water samples around the world in 2017 contained plastic pollutants.

While calling for attitudina­l change in ensuring proper disposal of plastic wastes, he charged manufactur­ers and shopping outlets on adopting bio-degradable packaging for their products to minimize the availabili­ty of plastic pollutants in the society.

Speaking, the National Coordinato­r of CEPEJ, Sherrif Mulade, reflecting on the theme, said Nigeria should also try to emulate the Indian model of saving the planet as he tasked government and stakeholde­rs to explore sustainabl­e alternativ­es to reduce the production and uncontroll­ed use of single plastic.

“We implore you to use your plastic wastes to produce other useful goods, to be creative, own a garden and grow medicinal plants, spices or herbs and trees,” he said.

Mulade also call on the Minister of Environmen­t and that of the FCT to site a recycling plant to manage and control the production and use of plastics in the FCT, saying it will create jobs for Abuja residents.

“We all can eliminate the negativiti­es that are present in the environmen­t as well as improve on the various developmen­t and urbanizati­on processes, towards achieving environmen­tal sustainabi­lity,” Mulade also noted.

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