AFRIPOL.ORG IDEAS HAVE CONSEQUENCES
Zeroth strategy for waste oil disposal in Nigeria
By Emeka Chiakwelu
Nigeria is relatively an emerging
industrial nation, with dilapidated automobiles roaming the nooks and corners of
the country together with the outdated industrial machineries are generating
thousands of litres, if not millions of waste oil and lubricants. So are the
emissions of the alarming quantities of atmospheric pollutants including
photochemical pollutants, smog, gas flaring, sulfur oxides and fluorides that
are contributing and enhancing global warming and ozone hole.
Again engine and lubricant oil are common elements in the daily lives of
Nigerians, as they are essential, to enable motor engines and industrial
equipments to operate. But there is no environmentally safe and sound strategy
to dispose the generated spent oil that are carelessly discharged and abandoned
in the contaminated gutters, including the roadside and any place deem
convenient to the generator of the waste oil.
In Nigerian cities - Kano, Lagos, Onitsha, Calabar, Warri, Aba and all the major
cities, The National Environmental Standards and Regulations Enforcement Agency
(NESREA), the Nigerian environmental regulatory agency have no presence. NESREA
neglected their major function in the urban settings which is to regulate,
control and eliminate domestic and industrial waste that poses health hazard to
the people and the environment. There are no adequate formulae to control sewage
disposal generated by citizens and industries. In the case of spent automobile
oil there is no atom of effort to collect, store and recycle. This incompetence
is the major reason that used oils are litter across the country without
strategy to correctly handle and safely dispose them in Nigeria.
Used oil or spent oil is a product of petroleum, produced during the process of
fractional distillation. Due to the presence of the hydrogen carbon bond and
hydro-carbon chains it poses a health danger to man and ecosystem. When virgin
oil is introduced and injected into an automobile, it does undergo both physical
and chemical changes. It mixes with car dirt, impurities, and water and engine
scrapings and finally emerged more toxic than virgin oil. In this case, the oil
must then be changed. The used oil must be properly collected and efficiently
disposed; this is where environmental bureaucrats have failed Nigeria. The
dangers associated with used oil are:
"Waste oils are hazardous waste as they display some hazardous properties. Waste
oils that are found in rivers, lakes and streams threaten aquatic life. Indeed,
a litre of waste oil can contaminate a million litres of water. Furthermore,
severe soil contamination can result from waste oils being left on the ground.
Used motor oil is insoluble, persistent and can contain toxic chemicals and
heavy metals. It's slow to degrade. It sticks to everything from beach sand to
bird feathers.
It's a major source of oil contamination of waterways and can result in
pollution of drinking water sources."
NESREA cannot afford to stand on the road side and do nothing to contribute and
hence the environmental integrity of our country Nigeria. Protection and
maintenance of the environmental reliability for Nigeria is the fundamental
responsibility of NESREA. A sustainable strategy must be formulated and
implemented that is comprehensively tailored to collect, store, and recycle
waste oil.
First and foremost, the agency must alert and disseminate to the Nigerian public
the in depth and requisite education on the dangers of oil spills and illegal
discharges of the used engine oil. The public must be given the adequate
disposal means particularly the civic responsibility and information tool that
will enable them to comprehend the ramifications of illegal discharge of waste
oil. The local chapters of The National Environmental Standards and Regulations
Enforcement Agency (NESREA) must initiate meetings and collaborations with
operators of mechanic workshops who are the greatest culprits in the unsafe
discharge of used oil, in order to aid them in collection and recycle of waste
oil. The educational awareness is the greatest empowerment of the citizens and
commencement of healthy and sustainable green environment.
NESREA can set up front store centers and depots in different parts of the
cities, where the public and mechanic workers can bring in their waste oil for
storage before they are safely transported to the appropriate location for
reprocessing and recycling. The NESREA can be financially self-sustainable in
this endeavor by levying small fees on the public citizens and mechanic workers
that are bringing their used oil for recycling.
NESREA which is the major Nigerian environmental agency must have a
comprehensive strategy grounded on standard operation procedures; a paradigm for
collecting, disposing and recycling of spent oil in a manner that will be safe,
efficient, environmentally sound and cost-effective for Nigeria.
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