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Ghana could realize 47.9 billion cedis from waste management and sanitation

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A new study by the Institute of Statistical, Social and Economic Research (ISSER) has revealed that Ghana’s informal waste sector, long overlooked and largely unregulated could generate billions of cedis annually if properly structured and supported. 

Researchers argue that waste management should no longer be viewed solely as a sanitation challenge but as a strategic economic sector capable of driving job creation, improving public health and contributing to energy production.

Presenting the findings at a policy dialogue in Accra, ISSER Director, Prof. Peter Quartey, said the economic logic is compelling.

“We have treated waste as a liability for decades. The evidence now shows it is a high-value economic resource,” he stated. “If we invest deliberately and bring informal operators into a structured system, this sector can generate billions annually for the Ghanaian economy.”

The report estimates that Ghana currently loses more than GHS 6.2 billion each year due to inadequate sanitation and waste management systems. These losses stem largely from healthcare costs associated with preventable diseases such as malaria, cholera and pneumonia, as well as productivity losses from illness-related absenteeism.

According to the study, sanitation-related diseases contribute to over 107,000 premature deaths annually and account for nearly 32 million lost work and school days.

ISSER’s modelling contrasts this “business-as-usual” scenario with a higher-investment approach aligned with lower-middle-income country benchmarks. Under this scenario which proposes spending approximately GHS 1,028 per tonne of waste managed, projected benefits would significantly outweigh costs.

Researchers estimate that every cedi invested at scale could generate returns of up to GHS 556 through reduced healthcare expenditure, increased labour productivity and expanded recycling and energy value chains.

A major focus of the study is the contribution of informal waste workers including tricycle (aboboyaa) operators, scrap dealers and community recyclers who currently form the backbone of waste collection and material recovery in many urban areas.

This, the study recommends targeted capital investments in high-risk urban and peri-urban communities, expanded recycling infrastructure, incentives for private sector participation and structured financial and social protection schemes for informal waste workers.

Researchers conclude that with political will, regulatory reform and sustained financing, Ghana’s informal waste economy could evolve into a multi-billion-cedi growth engine — transforming a long-standing sanitation burden into a national asset.

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Source:
www.gbcghanaonline.com

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