Africa is battling plastic pollution and waste crisis, activists say

A Greenpeace team has carried out infrared scans and analyses textile waste at the landfill site near Mortuary Road in Ghana from 2023.

Africa continues to grapple with plastic pollution, a waste crisis, and limited investment, activists report, as discussions unfold at the UN climate meetings in Azerbaijan. To shed light on these overlapping challenges, RFI interviewed campaigners and negotiators from across the continent.

Zitouni Ould Dada, a veteran of at least 15 Cop meetings, is attending Cop again. Previsiously he was there as a director with the UN's Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), this time he is with the FAIRR Initiative, a collaborative investor network focused on raising awareness of environmental, social, and governance risks as well as opportunities in the global food sector.

"If we keep going to every Cop and just make pledges and commitments, we're not going to change the world like that," he told RFI.

"We're not going to reduce emissions [by half] to the rate that is required... by 2030, which is just next door, and then reach net zero by 2050. So, there are many commitments and pledges made by countries, but overall the progress we are making is small."

He is calling on world leaders to renew their commitment to the net-zero carbon target and the Sustainable Development Goals that aim to reduce growing inequality and prevent recurring climate disasters.

"We need [to be more ambitious]," the Mauritania-born negotiator said.

Plastic pollution and fossil fuel disasters

Elsewhere, a recent report by Greenpeace has revealed the scale of environmental and public health damage caused by the global secondhand clothing trade in Ghana.


Read more on RFI English

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