The Guardian (Nigeria)

UN predicts more plastic products in oceans than fishes by 2050

• Experts seek legislatio­n against wastes • India to eliminate all single-use plastics by 2022

- By Emeka Nwachukwu and Kehinde Sobowale

THE United Nations (UN) Secretary General, Antonio Guterres, says the uncensored use of plastics all over the world, would make them to outnumber fishes in oceans by 2050.

Guterres declared this in his speech to mark the 2018 World Environmen­t Day.

The theme of his message was: “Beat the plastic pollution, environmen­tal, social and economic concerns.” He warned that the world is “currently swamped by harmful plastic water, and micro-plastics in the seas, which now outnumber stars in the galaxy.”

He explained that eight million tonnes of plastic end up the oceans every year from the remote islands to the Arctic, as “nowhere is untouched by the presence of plastics. Also, environmen­talists in Nigeria have urged the Federal Government to create policies to monitor the production and use of plastics in the country.

Executive Director, Sustainabl­e Research and Action for Environmen­tal Developmen­t (SRADEV Nigeria), Leslie Adogame, urged government to focus on plastic materials in managing the environmen­t, especially the single use plastics.

The executive director said this was necessary because the use of plastics have had severe environmen­tal and health consequenc­es in the country.

“Government should declare plastic an emergency zone, and take the issue with the highest priorities, because we are in bad times with plastic wastes. It is high time that the government places an environmen­tal tax on plastic materials, particular­ly the single use plastics,” the SRADEV boss said.

The expert urged government­s, industries, communitie­s, and individual­s to explore sustainabl­e alternativ­es and urgently reduce the production and excessive use of single-use plastic.

The immediate past Chairman of Nigerian Environmen­tal Society, Olu Andah, also counselled Nigerians to take proactive measures to end plastic pollution and protect the planet.

“We can see plastics floating in our rivers, ocean, and lagoons, littering our landscapes and affecting our health and the future of billions of children and youths,” he said.

He continued: “The sight of plastic bags and bottles on the road, in homes and littered in the environmen­t is a nuisance to the environmen­t.

“When some of the compounds of these plastic products find their way into the human or animal body, they cause various health problems”

 ??  ?? Governor, Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Godwin Emefiele (right), Special Adviser to the CBN Governor on Sustainabl­e Banking, Dr. Aisha Usman Mahmood, at the Visions Cape Polymer Recycling and Processing Exhibition stand, at the CBN 2018 World...
Governor, Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Godwin Emefiele (right), Special Adviser to the CBN Governor on Sustainabl­e Banking, Dr. Aisha Usman Mahmood, at the Visions Cape Polymer Recycling and Processing Exhibition stand, at the CBN 2018 World...

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