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Waste can generate income, don’t discard it – LAWMA Boss

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  • Gbadegesin emphasized that what many perceive as waste is actually a source of income
  • He encourages every household in the city to use separate bins for general waste and recyclables, such as paper, PET bottles, cans, and textiles
  • Gbadegesin also highlighted LAWMA’s commitment to environmental education and youth involvement in waste management, through LAWMA Academy.

Dr. Muyiwa Gbadegesin, CEO of the Lagos Waste Management Authority (LAWMA), urged Lagos residents to recognize the economic value of waste materials by embracing recycling and the circular economy.

Eko Hot Blog reports that in a recent interaction with journalists, Gbadegesin emphasized that what many perceive as waste is actually a source of income, highlighting the lucrative opportunities available to those who collect and sell waste materials to recycling companies.

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According to him, “Waste is inevitable; it’s a byproduct of human activity. But we cannot continue to simply dispose of it, we must move towards a circular economy where we reduce, reuse, and recycle. We envision a Lagos State where at least 90% of our waste generated is recycled”.

He highlighted LAWMA’s ongoing initiative that encourages every household in the city to use separate bins for general waste and recyclables, such as paper, PET bottles, cans, and textiles.

“The private sector is actively involved in collecting waste from homes to dumpsites. We want them to also take part in the recycling business. It’s more sustainable when the government creates the framework as we are doing, and the private sector drives it,” he said.

He also disclosed that upon full decommissioning of Olusosun and Solous landfills, Transfer Loading Stations (TLS), would be built, as the sites would be finally turned to Materials Recovery Facilities (MRF).

“We plan to build transfer loading stations at Olusosun and Solous. The vision and plan is to reduce waste, manage waste sustainably, and extract maximum value from waste,” he stressed.

Waste can generate income, don't discard it - LAWMA Boss

The LAWMA boss noted that the agency’s partnerships went beyond large corporations to start-ups like GreenDeall, which planned to build a recycling plant at a closed dumpsite at Abule-Egba, to recycle a certain class of plastic, into oil for heavy industries.

He said, “Later this year, we plan to launch a deal book that will break down all the opportunities in the waste management sector. We are also creating a base map of the locations. People will be able to go to the LAWMA website to select areas of waste management they are interested in”.

Gbadegesin also highlighted LAWMA’s commitment to environmental education and youth involvement in waste management, through LAWMA Academy, where a dedicated team goes round schools on weekly basis to sensitize the pupils, in addition to a monthly internship programme, where undergraduates and graduates come to learn modern waste management.

“We are also looking to bring together alumni, because what we preach is for them to return to their communities as LAWMA ambassadors. We have also expanded our waste management coverage to primary schools. Mr. Governor kindly gave us 2,000 recycling bins, which had been distributed to schools, and we introduced a recycling company to collect the plastic waste from those schools”, he stressed.

He further disclosed that LAWMA recently received approval from the Ministry of Education to create two modern recycling hubs in schools located in Yaba. “We want to do modern recycling in those two schools, to become the location where students from the school and around the Mainland area can come and see. They will be the ones running it. In the hub, we will have bins for metal, paper, organic and all other fractions of waste. The belief is that if we continue this and we do it well, in the years to come, the children will have imbibed the attitude that waste is wealth.”

FURTHER READING

The LAWMA helmsman identified human behaviour as the biggest challenge in waste management, hence his agency’s consistent effort at bringing the younger generation of residents to the forefront of unlocking values.

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