Opinion
Restoring Port Harcourt’s Garden City Status (II)
Cont’d from last Friday
The state of our markets is equally pathetic. I wonder why no one is saying anything about modernising our markets. The most worrisome part is the food section of the market. Our abattoirs for instance, are extremely dirty beyond human standards. A good example is the Port Harcourt slaughter house at Trans-Amadi.
In the Western countries, abattoirs are neat places with high level of hygienic standards. I don’t know why we choose to remain stagnant with ancient and archaic mentality in processing our food. I think we need to evolve into globally accepted standards in processing our food.
Each time it rains, I find it very difficult going to the market because our market places are unhygienic. Yet, this is where food stuffs, both perishable and non-perishable stuffs are being sold in the open. Market people display their stuff openly with flies perching freely on them.
Modern market should have facilities that promote good health even though what is being sold most times constitutes what makes the market dirty in the first place. Market operators should therefore, ensure that persihable food items are sold under hygienic conditions.
Before building markets, certain things must be taken into account such as proper dump sites, good and functional drainages, spacious and ventilated stores; and most importantly, market control authorities must liaise with municipal authorities to ensure that sanitation laws are enforced.
Now, to the most vexed issue of our time, which is air pollution. Port Harcourt is home to two refineries, Eleme Petrochemical and Okrika refineries.
These two refineries continuously emit gases into the atmosphere and it has been proven by research that pollutants endanger the health of the people. At the moment, no one is talking about the quality of the air we breathe, but research has shown with convincing evidence that pollutants in the air have been responsible for a number of diseases that are highly connected with cardiac and lung related cancer. And what about the gases we emit from vehicle exhaust and fumes from power generating sets? These substances are highly toxic and can affect our health very seriously. Little wonder that most times even when we sleep with the fan on at nights, we still sweat profusely.
The reason is that global temperature has been on the rise due to global warming and it has been discovered that green house gases have been majorly responsible for this.
Most times, we may realise that we experience more rainfall than usual and coping with the impact has always been a huge challenge for us. Time has come when we re-examine our policies and direct our energy sources away from these dangerous types and concentrate on renewable energy sources. It has been proven that bio-fuel is of high environmental standards and countries like Brazil have gone far benefiting from experiments on biofuel consumption. Why can’t Nigeria do the same thing?
Government must rise to the challenge of safeguarding the environment and the health of those residing in Port Harcourt city. The ‘Garden City’ must return to its past glories. First, we must evolve laws that evoke the consciousness of people to the very essence of maintaining a green environment, preserving our natural endowment and building recreational parks.
Government must also build roads that will reduce the heavy traffic we are experiencing now. The roads should be properly constructed wide enough to accommodate three or four lanes.
Similarly, the drainage system must be interconnected in such a way that water can move freely along its pathways.
We must also do something about the current state of our markets and how food items are being processed, particularly perishable items like meat. Our slaughter houses must evolve to reflect global standards. Even if other cities are unconcerned about this, the ‘Garden City’ authorities can start up with something that will very soon become a reference point to other cities in the country.
Meanwhile, the gas that is continuously flared into the atmosphere is damaging to our ecosystem and biodiversity life, so Nigerian petrochemical and petroleum engineers can begin to research on what to do with this gas being emitted.
Most importantly, our consumption attitudes have been destructive such that we fail often to recognise that we owe our posterity a lot. So, in our care giving responsibility of the ecosystem, we must avoid the ceaseless despoliation of our common pool resources so that Port Harcourt city will be a better place for all, irrespective of social class, income level, tribe or nationality.
Benjamin is of the Department of Sociology, University of Port Harcourt.
Ubleble Benjamin
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