World Bank Team with Central Province Permanent Secretary |
By Paul Shalala in Kabwe
The World Bank has kick-started
a five year environmental program aimed at alleviating the suffering of the
people in three Zambian towns which are heavily polluted and whose residents
have been affected by pollution.
The Zambia Mining Environment
Remediation and Improvement Project is funded through a US$ 65.6 million credit
facilitated by the World Bank’s International Development Association.
The project aims at reduce
environmental health risks for people residing in polluted mining areas in
Kabwe, Kitwe and Chingola Districts.
For the past 52 years, mining
has been Zambia’s biggest revenue earner.
The country has largely
depended on minerals, especially copper, for its survival.
The country is the second
largest producer of copper in Africa and the third in the world.
However, this natural
resource has its own challenges.
With over decades of mining
having been done in Zambia, the legacy of mineral extraction has not been good.
In mining towns like
Chingola, rivers and streams have been contaminated by the mines.
This has led to people
getting sick while a handful have died due to pollution.
At an Action Aid-organised
forum for residents of Chingola to speak out about pollution last month, many
residents could not hide their anger.
“We have seen people die, we
have seen people getting sick, we have seen water polluted. But nothing is being
done to stop this pollution,” said Bernadette Mulamba, a Chingola resident and an
environmental activist with the Catholic Commission for Justice and Peace.
A few days earlier, Chingola
Mayor Titus Tembo had complained of Zambia’s largest mining firm Konkola Copper
Mines (KCM) of having polluted the Mushishima stream leading to fish die and
villagers picking and eating it.
“KCM has polluted the.Mushihsima
stream killing fish. Because of poverty, our people are eating the dead fish
and some have become sick, said Mr Tembo.
The story is the same in
Kitwe which hosts major mines.
Here, both air and water
pollution has been reported.
In December last year, the
Kafue river which supplies water to the city of Kitwe was polluted with high levels of sulphate which forced the
Nkana Water and Sewerage Company to switch off water supply to the city which
has over 500,000 residents.
This was followed by the Zambia Environmental Management Agency (ZEMA) instituting investigations on seven mining firms which discharge water into the Mwambashi stream and the Kafue river.
ZEMA inspectors collecting samples at Muntimpa Dam |
ZEMA inspectors took samples from the seven companies and tested them in three separate laboratories but to date, the results are still being awaited.
And in Kabwe, the legacy of
lead and zinc mining is evident.
The town, which is infamously
called a ghost town, is said to be the worst hit city in the world in terms of
lead poisoning.
According to data from the World
Bank Country Office in Zambia, studies done in 2003 – 2006 showed that the
content of lead in soil in certain areas of Kabwe were as high as 26,000 mg/kg
against the acceptable levels of about 10 to 50 mg/kg making the land
unsuitable for residential and agricultural purposes.
With these case studies and
accounts of real pollution in the three mining towns, the World Bank Board of
Executive Directors on 20 December, 2016 approved the credit for the Zambia
Mining Environment Remediation and Improvement project.
The project is expected to
benefit 70,000 people who live in the areas heavily polluted by the mines.
On Saturday, a team of World
Bank officials from the Zambian office and the bank’s international
headquarters in Washington DC visited Kabwe to launch the project.
The team explained why the
Zambia Mining Environment Remediation and Improvement Project is important to
people in the three mining towns.
“Mining Environment
Remediation and Improvement Project will be implemented for five years from
2016 to 2021. The project’s objective is to reduce environmental health risks
on the local population which is associated with mining in criticall polluted
areas of Kabwe and other Copperbelt towns,” said World Bank Country Manager Ina-Marlene
Ruthenberg.
She revealed that the project
will: “Clean up some parts of the old mining town of Kabwe which still has
unacceptably high levels of lead in the soil and high Blood Lead level among
children, resulting from the past lead mining in the area.”
And newly appointed Central
Province Permanent Secretary Chanda Kabwe, who hosted the team in his office,
pledged the Zambian government’s support for the project.
Mr Kabwe, who is just a few
days in the office, spent the past three years as District Commissioner in the
mining towns of Mufulira and Kitwe which are both polluted by mining.
“Having come from the Copperbelt
where I saved in the mining towns, I pledge my support to ensure this project
succeeds. Central Province is predominantly an agriculture area and pollution
affects the crop. This could also affect food security. So we will ensure this
project succeeds so we can fight poverty,” said Mr Kabwe.
The Project will work with
the City Councils in Kabwe, Kitwe and Chingola to ensure that the impact in
terms of implementation is owned by the respective local authorities.
The polluted Shimulala stream in Chingola |
And leaders in the respective
municipalities are happy that the project will alleviate some of the suffering
their people go through.
Kabwe Municipal Council
Director of Public Health Paul Mukuka had this to say: “In the past we have had
JICA (Japan International Corporation Agency) and the Copperbelt Environment
Project doing a number of studies in Kabwe. We hope the coming of the World
Bank project will help save more lives from pollution.”
For Kitwe Mayor Christopher
Kangombe, the project is more than welcome to the country's second largest city.
“We commend the World Bank
for committing US$65.6 million to this project. We welcome this project and
hope it will help us reduce the effects of pollution in Kitwe. We however wait
to learn the scope of work,” said Mr Kangombe.
Kitwe-based Ministry of Mines
Director of Mine Safety Gideon Ndalama will serve as the National Coordinator
for the Zambia Mining Environment Remediation and Improvement Project.
In this role, Mr Ndalama will
work with the World Bank, the three municipalities and the Zambia Environmental
Management Agency.
“This is a locally entrenched
project, we should all own it. This is the only way we will have
sustainability,” said Ndalama.
In terms of benefits to the
local people, this project targets to provide medical interventions to over 30,000
children.
The projects plans to reduce Blood
Lead Level (BLL) by 50% among children under the age of 15.
Over 4,000 of these children
are expected to be tested for BLL by 2022.
World Bank Environment
Specialist Mwansa Lukwesa explains that the health component to the Zambia
Mining Environment Remediation and Improvement project is important because
pollution has effects on people’s health.
“The project will test and
treat children under the age of five and giving them supplements. The issues of
lead poisoning are linked with nutrition because most of the people affected
are poor,” he said.
By the year 2021, the Zambia
Mining Environment Remediation and Improvement Project is expected to reduce
lead contamination in Kabwe by 70 percent.
Further, the project also
aims to empower 500 women and unemployed youths with income generating
activities which will keep them away from jobs that expose them to lead
poisoning.
Due to lack of jobs, some
Kabwe residents have broken locks to the tailing dams and opened them to have
access to quarrying stones.
The Zambia Mining Environment Remediation and Improvement Project is the second environmental program the Bretton Woods institution has funded in Zambia to fight pollution in mine areas.
Between 2003 and 2011, the World Bank funded the Copperbelt Environment Project which produced some findings which the current project aims to build on.
Kabwe was at the center of lead mining from 1902 until the mine was closed in 1994.
Illegal stone quarrying in the former mine has continued and a recent tour by this blogger found some residents conducting driving lessons at the former mine site.
All these activities increase people's exposure to lead.
EDITOR'S NOTE: This story was also produced as a 7 minutes documentary which aired on TV2's Morning Live Program on 19 January 2017 and it was again broadcast on TV1's Newsline program on 20 January 2017. You can watch the documentary which aired on Newsline on this YouTube link: Zambia Mining Pollution Documentary
The Zambia Mining Environment Remediation and Improvement Project is the second environmental program the Bretton Woods institution has funded in Zambia to fight pollution in mine areas.
Between 2003 and 2011, the World Bank funded the Copperbelt Environment Project which produced some findings which the current project aims to build on.
Kabwe was at the center of lead mining from 1902 until the mine was closed in 1994.
Illegal stone quarrying in the former mine has continued and a recent tour by this blogger found some residents conducting driving lessons at the former mine site.
All these activities increase people's exposure to lead.
EDITOR'S NOTE: This story was also produced as a 7 minutes documentary which aired on TV2's Morning Live Program on 19 January 2017 and it was again broadcast on TV1's Newsline program on 20 January 2017. You can watch the documentary which aired on Newsline on this YouTube link: Zambia Mining Pollution Documentary
No comments:
Post a Comment