Audio By Carbonatix
The Vision for Alternative Development (VALD), a health related non-governmental organisation, has called on African governments to be firm in holding big polluters liable for fuelling climate crisis.
VALD said such polluters must not be allowed to self-regulate their own activities as is the case in most countries, rather they should be properly monitored and regulated by law to make them more responsible.
Programmes Director at VALD, Mr Labram Musah, while throwing his weight behind the just launched “Liability Roadmap,” a global tool that outlines how local and global decision-makers could hold polluting industries liable for climate damage, said Ghana and other African nations should be bold to demand climate justice.
Mr Musah, at a press conference in Accra on Tuesday, said the environmental harm and damage being caused by those big polluters, including fossil fuel producers, plastic manufactures and coal miners, were “worse than the benefit they purport to bring to us”.
“We cannot take a further risk as the future of our planet is uncertain. Government across the world must priorities the adoption of the liability roadmap into their national development agendas,” he stated.
Mr Musah said with the emergence of oil fields in Ghana, it behoved on the country to begin to follow and adhere to global best practices to ensure that present and future generations were protected from the devastating effects of the big polluters.
The World Health Organisation (WHO) has predicted that from 2030 to 2050, certain effects of climate change would contribute to an increase of about 250,000 deaths per year from conditions such as heat stress, malnutrition, diarrhoea, and malaria, he said.
Also, air pollution is known to be the world’s largest single environmental health risk, and a leading risk factor for non-communicable diseases, causing seven million deaths every year worldwide.
Mr Musah said in Ghana, however, skin diseases and associated ailments were being recorded in Agbogbloshie in the Greater Accra Region, with respiratory illnesses being the worst health problem.
He, therefore, called on the Government to ensure that activities that affected the health of the people were curtailed and the polluters made to own up to their responsibilities of solving the healthcare needs of the people.
Latest Stories
-
82-year-old man emerges Overall National Best Farmer
9 seconds -
Calls grow for stronger oversight as free trade and lax regulation fuel fake medicines
20 minutes -
World Cup 2026: Tuchel keeps group stage opponents under wraps, shuns Ghana
35 minutes -
Volta Region received a significant share of Big Push road projects – Mahama
40 minutes -
Togbe Afede XIV lauds government’s $10bn ‘big push’ programme for boosting farm produce transport
2 hours -
FDA urges consumers to prioritise safety when purchasing products during festive season
2 hours -
President Mahama calls for single-digit interest rates on agricultural loans
2 hours -
President Mahama urges Ghanaians in formal jobs to take up farming
2 hours -
Farming interventions paying off, lifting incomes and food security, says Agric minister
2 hours -
Gov’t pledges science-backed interventions in agriculture, says Agric minister
3 hours -
Ghana unveils $3.4bn plan to accelerate national clean energy transition
3 hours -
Interior minister urges security agencies to maximise use of new NSB regional command in Ho
3 hours -
Photos: Ghana celebrates 41st National Farmers’ Day
3 hours -
2025 Farmer’s Day: Farmers demand a 2% interest rate on loans to boost farming activities
3 hours -
Chamber of Aquaculture Ghana calls for strong public-private partnerships to unlock finance and transform the sector
4 hours
