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Home Environment

Ghana may spend at least $300M to restore polluted water bodies

Esther Sampson by Esther Sampson
March 12, 2025
in Environment, General News, Headlines, Top Stories
Reading Time: 2 mins read
Mining Water
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Professor Nana Ama Browne Klutse, Acting Chief Executive Officer, Environmental Protection Authority (EPA), says restoring a water body polluted by illegal mining activities could cost Ghana no less than $300 million.

 

She disclosed this when a team from Knutsford University and the Climate Communications Network called on her in Accra on Wednesday.

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The meeting was to congratulate Prof. Klutse on her appointment and to discuss areas of collaboration, including climate change education.

 

Prof. Klutse said the EPA had received proposals from ten companies expressing readiness to restore polluted water bodies to their original state.

 

She stated that the authority was assessing the bids based on technology, application methods, potential environmental impacts, and cost.

 

“We want to be careful to do the due diligence of each and every application that has come,” she said.

 

Illegal mining, commonly known as ‘Galamsey,’ has severely degraded forests and polluted vital water sources.

 

The water sector in Ghana faces significant challenges, particularly from illegal mining activities that contaminate freshwater sources, making them unsafe for drinking and agriculture.

 

Pollution levels in major rivers within the Southwestern Basin are critically high, with turbidity levels far exceeding permissible limits.

 

Turbidity levels from galamsey activities have been recorded as high as 14,000 nephelometric turbidity units (NTU), far above the five NTU limit set by the Ghana Standard Authority for drinking water.

 

Restoring the affected water bodies would involve desilting sediment and clearing heavy metals, such as mercury, to make the water safe for drinking, domestic use, and aquatic life.

 

Prof. Klutse said the proposals included financial arrangements, with one option being for Ghana to pay 100 percent using its carbon credits, or share the cost with development partners.

 

“The plan is to settle on the technologies and start at the same time. We will then go ahead to protect the water bodies with armed guards.

“This is to prevent a situation when the water is cleaned and then we get them polluted again,” she said.

 

Prof. Klutse said the government would employ water guards in communities “who stand by the river bodies, all along the river bodies to protect the water bodies.”

 

“People can go to fetch as it is clean and then use it like we usually do. But not to allow mining activity or any other pollution of the river,” she said.

 

Asked about measures to end mining in forest areas, Prof. Klutse explained that under the Environmental Protection Act, 2025 (Act 1124), no company had been granted a mining permit to mine in any forest area.

 

She hinted that parliament had started a process to enact a new law banning mining in forest areas.

 

Mr. Frank Adjei-Ntekor, Acting Registrar at Knutsford University, said the university was ready to collaborate with the EPA to run educational training for journalists to help them disseminate accurate and credible information on environmental issues.

GNA

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Esther Sampson

Esther Sampson

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