waste management nigeria

Waste Management Progress in Nigeria’s Delta State

Waste management is a serious problem in Nigeria, and Delta State is no exception. It is a problem that starts at a cultural level: many of the populace believe that once they remove waste from their homes it is no longer their concern. It is a problem that starts at a cultural level: many of the populace believe that once they remove waste from their homes it is no longer their concern, and you often see people disposing of their household waste in the streets at night. Once the waste gets out into the streets, it’s perceived as the duty of the government to handle it.

However, I have never yet heard of any Nigerian politician making waste management a feature of his or her manifesto during the election campaign process. Having said that, a few of Nigeria’s political leaders deserve to be commended for coming to terms with the fact that waste has to be managed properly, even if such issues were far from their minds when they entered political office.

waste management nigeria

Legislation and Framework

Nigeria does have a waste legislation framework in place. Its focus has been on the most toxic and hazardous waste: partly in response to some major pollution incidents in the 1980s, the government took powers in relation to Hazardous Waste in 1988. In the same year, the Federal Environmental Protection Agency was established – and was subsequently strengthened by the addition of an inspectorate and enforcement department arm in 1991, with divisions for standard regulation, chemical tracking and compliance monitoring. These laws have since given rise to regulations and guidelines pertaining to environmental and waste management issues.

Under our laws, waste management in each state is the duty of the local governments that fall within it, but few are taking an active approach to implementing and enforcing the sensible measures that the regulations require. A small number of states have taken over this task from local government, and Delta State’s decision to do this has led to significant new investment in waste management.

One of the fruits of that investment is the Delta State Integrated Waste Management Facility at Asaba for treating both household and clinical waste generated locally. It was developed when the Delta State government decided to put an end to the non-sustainable dumping of waste in Asaba, the state capital.

Integrated Waste Management Facility at Asaba

It is described as an integrated waste management facility because it includes a composting department, a recycling department and a (non-WTE) incineration department. Trucks carrying waste are weighed in as they come into the facility. From the weigh bridge, they move to the relevant reception bay – there are separate ones for household and clinical wastes – to tip their load, and are then weighed again on the way out.

Medical waste is taken directly for incineration, but household wastes are sent along conveyors for sorting. Recyclables and compostable materials are, so far as possible, separated both from other waste and from one another. Each recyclable stream ends up in a chamber where it can be prepared for sale. The compostable materials are moved to the composting section, which uses aerated static pile composting.

The remaining waste is conveyed into the three incinerators – moving grate, rotary kiln and fixed end– for combustion. The resulting ash is recycled by mixing it with cement and sharp sand and moulding it into interlocking tiles. The stacks of the three incinerators are fitted with smoke cleaning systems to reduce emissions. The process produces wastewater, which is channelled to a pit where it is treated and reused. Overall, 30% of the waste is composted, 15% recycled and 55% incinerated.

There are many examples of sophisticated waste infrastructure being built in developing countries, but failing because the necessary collection systems were not in place to support them. To ensure that this problem is avoided at Asaba, the Delta State government is working with a group known as the Private Sector Participants (PSP).

Each member of this group has trucks assigned to them and has been directed to collect household waste from different parts of the city, for delivery to the facility for treatment. The arrangements made by each PSP are different: some collect from outside individual properties, and some from communal sites; most collect waste that is found in the streets; and while each is subsidised by the state, households also have to pay towards the cost.

Before the Asaba waste management facility was developed, most of the wastes generated in Asaba were disposed of at a dumpsite just adjacent to the Delta State Airport. This created a pungent odour, as well as visual disamenity for people nearby. A great deal of remediation work is now taking place at the dumpsite, which is vastly improving the local environmental quality.

War on Waste

Of course, although this is an improvement there remains more to do. First on the list is education. People do not know how sustainable waste management can impact positively in their lives, reducing their exposure to toxins as well as improving their surroundings. Nor do they understand that recycling a beverage can or a plastic bottle will cost less than producing one from virgin materials and will have a lesser environmental impact. There remains a good deal of cultural change and environmental education that is needed before people will stop throwing waste and litter on the streets – but there are few countries where, to some extent, the same would not be true.

Next is the lack of infrastructure. Nigeria has 36 states and a federal capital, yet the facility in Asaba is the first publicly commissioned one of its kind in the country; there are also some privately owned incinerators that a few companies in Port Harcourt use to treat wastes from vessels (ships), hospitals and industries. Lagos state and Abuja are relatively advanced, simply by virtue of having put in place a few managed landfills, but they are still far from having the level of facility that Asaba can now boast.

The backbone of Asaba’s progress is the state government’s commitment to put a proper waste management solution in place. We’ve seen the impact in the form of infrastructure, collections and remediation, and law enforcement work is starting to change people’s perception about waste management in Delta State. At the moment, plans are being concluded to setup another facility in Warri, Delta State’s industrial hub, which will be twice the size of the Asaba facility.?

My hope is that the progress made by Delta State will be a beacon for other states’ governments. The example we are providing of cleaner, hygienic, more environmentally responsible waste management, and the positive changes that is bringing about, should inspire new development elsewhere in the country, which could equal or even exceed Delta State’s results. So whilst Nigeria’s track record on waste may leave a lot to be desired, the path ahead could be a great deal more promising.

Note: The article is being republished with the kind permission of our collaborative partner Isonomia. The original article can be found at this link.

author avatar
Benneth Obinna Obasiohia
Benneth Obinna Obasiohia is the facility manager at the Delta State Integrated Waste Management Facility, Nigeria. After completing a BSc in Applied Biochemistry and working as a biology and chemistry teacher, his awareness of the low level of waste management in Nigeria inspired him to travel to the United Kingdom for a Masters Degree in Sustainable Waste Management. He has previously worked as a technician in a forensic laboratory and as environmental and waste management advisor at Afrika Grin Ventures, Nigeria. He specialises in waste management planning, waste minimisation techniques, incineration, pyrolysis, TDU for drill cuttings treatment, composting, waste audit, life cycle assessment? and environmental management within organisations.

22 thoughts on “Waste Management Progress in Nigeria’s Delta State

  1. Estos residuos son combustibles de capacidad suficiente para generar energía , quemandolos adecuadamente .
    Se destilan los gases y se obtienen subproductos calificados.
    Los hornos que queman deben ser tubulares verticales .

  2. We are able and willing to set up integrated Waste Management Plant generating much needed electricity in Nigeria. We have been trying for last 3 years. I myself visited Nigeria many times. However, the appetite and desire is not there. I have met a few Govt Officials at Abuja and attended 6 State Governors presentations in London. Again, It is all in there ” TO DO LIST”

  3. The plan is good and the writeup is literaly excellent but the realistic uccurrence is damn negative co’s the end of it all is ash ahs and more ash ,workers lack materials and work clothes(coverall),besides ,the workers are being denied their salaries in due Time and they remain with fear of loosing both their jobs and salaries at Same Time

  4. Very nice piece, just want to confirm if the facility is still functioning and if the one the Warri has been completed?

    Thank You

  5. Please, are corps members accepted at the Asaba facility? I’m a waste management enthusiast and I would love to serve there.

  6. Nice work,keep it up,
    I want to know if you are willing to buy my used plastics bottles,etc, in large quantity and at what rate?

  7. I love this work piece that has being setup by the delta state government, but how can the private sectors on waste management come into partnership this in the collection and delivery of waste.

  8. Good morning sir/madam, am a tenant at #4 Benji Onyedili street akwebulu opposite head bridge total filling station Asaba. Please sir/madam, I want to come to my aid, my landlady and her family are making my own family lives difficult to live in her compound. They are taking under my window to do their dump site and where they also keep their untreated ? dogs ????! The horrible smell of the refuse and parasitic fleas of the ? dogs entering my household is unbearable ???. How do I get help required from you people ?????? I have talked with them with calm and shouting voices but it seems not to be working because it is their house after all! As you all know that I can’t pack out now because of this deadly disease that is pestering our very existence. Please help me, this is email ( sayeahgbedee@gmail.com) and my direct contact too(07033153832)

  9. Good morning sir/madam, am a tenant at #4 Benji Onyedili street akwebulu opposite head bridge total filling station Asaba. Please sir/madam, I want to come to my aid, my landlady and her family are making my own family lives difficult to live in her compound. They are taking under my window to do their dump site and where they also keep their untreated ? dogs ????! The horrible smell of the refuse and parasitic fleas of the ? dogs entering my household is unbearable ???. How do I get help required from you people ?????? I have talked with them with calm and shouting voices but it seems not to be working because it is their house after all! As you all know that I can’t pack out now because of this deadly disease that is pestering our very existence. Please help me, this is email ( sayeahgbedee@gmail.com) and my direct contact too(07033153832)

  10. I am currently writing a business plan for the company UBIDO Water Cycle, as a name at this point. It will be located in anround my childhood town of Warri or my ancestral town of Agbarho. I require the process of collecting wastewater from septic tanks for delivery at processing plants. How do I get a wastewater collection tankard from the waste management board? Please answer soonest. Thank you.

  11. By the above article, would I be correct to say that our business UBIDO Water Cycle will need to register as a PSP in order to be able to empty septic tanks and deliver to receptacle pits at processing plants?

  12. This is facisnating, i reside in Asaba i will like to know where this integrated waste management facility is located

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