ESPA welcomes Sanitation and Pollution Levy. Calls for Sanitation Fund

The Environmental Services Providers Association (ESPA), has welcomed the proposed 10 pesewas Sanitation and Pollution Levy (SPL) announced by the government in this year’s Budget Statement and Economic Policy.
The SPL now awaiting parliamentary debate and approval is 10 pesewas on the price per litre of petrol/diesel under the Energy Sector Levies Act (ESLA).
Member of Parliament for Suame Constituency, and Leader of Government Business, Osei Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu announced the new policy when he delivered this year’s National budget to parliament on behalf of the Finance and Economic Planning Minister Designate, Mr Ken Ofori Atta, who is currently out of the country.


Good news

Reacting to the announcement, the Executive Secretary of the ESPA, Mrs Ama Ofori Antwi, commended the government for the initiative. She explained that if well implemented, such a policy would provide  sustainable financing of sanitation and other related activities for players in the industry, and significantly bridge the lacuna that currently exists in funding environmental sanitation activities.
The ESPA and other stakeholders in the sanitation sector have for sometime now advocated for the establishment of an environmental levy.
“The announcement is therefore, extremely encouraging for us. We believe that it is coming at the right time when most of our members are facing stiff financial challenges in their daily operations as a result of the unwillingness of residents to pay for sanitation services rendered to them by our members”.
It is our expectation that the SPL will help create an enabling environment for the private sector and therefore, foster competition for improved environmental sanitation services.
Environmental sanitation remains a powerful force for human development as it affects the quality of life with respect to improved health and wealth”, she added.

Sanitation Fund

Mrs Ofori Antwi, reiterated the need for the establishment of a Sanitation Fund to be administered by a National Sanitation Authority to ensure an equitable and timely disbursement of funds that will be accrued from the SPL.
Currently, waste management companies contend with high initial investment cost, high customs and import duties, long haulage to final disposal sites, inadequate final disposal and recovery sites.
The SPL is expected to shore up government revenue to enable it tackle critical infrastructure needed for an improved environmental sanitation in the country.
Some of the infrastructure mentioned included the re-engineering of Kpone Landfill and Waste Treatment Plant in the Greater Accra region and Oti landfill in the Ashanti region.