Tag: Cleaner Lagos Initiative (CLI)

  • Lagos waste wars end as Visionscape, PSPs agree on working arrangement

    The court-ordered negotiation between Visionscape Sanitation Solutions and private sector participant (PSP) operators has ended as both parties shake hands and agree on terms of operations. The waste wars which resulted from disagreements over the Cleaner Lagos Initiative (CLI) saw PSP operators discontinuing residential waste collection in Lagos State. This led to gaps in service delivery making a mutually beneficial resolution imperative.

    This resolution comes after months of negotiations, and barely a week after the PSP operators opted to partner with Visionscape Sanitation Solutions to clear up the backlog of waste in the State.

    Speaking with the media after the exercise on Thursday, a representative from a contributing waste collection operator, Mr. Hafis Kasumu said: “We have decided to support the government in the initiative to get rid of the waste. And also, to partner with Visionscape. So, it is a partnership and we are doing it together.”

    The resolution will see the PSP operators, now referred to as waste collection operators (WCO), continue residential waste collection, while Visionscape Sanitation Solution deepens its work to develop the infrastructure needed to facilitate an effective integrated waste management system. One of these is the critical construction of engineered landfills across the state to prevent environmental disasters like the recent Olusosun dumpsite fire.

    Also highlighted in the new agreement is that Visionscape will serve as the central processing hub of municipal solid waste within Lagos State. The company will engage PSPs on long-term service arrangements and will pay them for their service.

    carry out any intervention required to fill service gaps in public areas.

    This new direction will ensure that all arms of the CLI is able to deliver optimal results that will raise Lagos State’s waste management process to globally acceptable standards.

    With countries like Rwanda already exploring e-waste management facility and commercial composting, it is essential that the State accelerates the development of its waste management infrastructure, which Visionscape has concession of. The company has reaffirmed its commitment to leading the concerted effort towards an environmentally sustainable Lagos State.

    This partnership is expected to start yielding visible results over the next few weeks.

    Read Also: Lagos, PSP operators, Visionscape resolve differences

  • ‘It’s too early to dismiss Cleaner Lagos Initiative as failure’

    ‘It’s too early to dismiss Cleaner Lagos Initiative as failure’

    A civil society group, Greater Lagos Youths ( GLY ), on Tuesday faulted the call for the termination of a contract signed by the Lagos State Government with an environmental utility group, Visionscape Sanitation Solutions, saying it was too early in the day to dismiss the Cleaner Lagos Initiative ( CLI ) as a failure.

    GLY, which is an amalgamation of over 60 youths’ groups drawn from across the 57 Local Government and Local Council Development Areas of Lagos State, said the call was not only misguided but hasty and irresponsible.    

    A group, Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FoEN), had asked the State Government to terminate the contract with Visionscape, alleging unsatisfactory handling of waste in the State.

    But GLY, in a statement by its National President, Kayode Gbadamosi, condemned the position of the group, stating that it was pretending to serve the interest of the larger society, while in reality it was doing the hatchet job for it’s paymasters to service interests which were at variance with the health and sanity of Lagos State.

    According to GLY, “Let it be placed on record that we are not fooled by the call from this group which is akin to the voice of Jacob but the hand of Esau because the breeze has blown and we have seen the rump of the fowl. Also, it is not unlikely that the resurgence of heaps of waste across the State is the handiwork of saboteurs who have now being complemented by the irrational call for its termination.

    “For our information and education, Visionscape Sanitation Solutions is a tested and trusted environmental concern which has proved its mettle in its area of competence in over 13 countries across the globe, so what is this group talking about?”, GLY queried.

    The group said the CLI was introduced to address the challenges in the environmental sector with the focus of aligning the State with top cities in the world having effective and efficient waste management system. 

    “It is a known fact that the former waste management system in Lagos was fraught with a lot of drawbacks that is not in sync with the status of the state as a mega city by the deployment of outdated and faulty compactors which were always breaking down; the short supply of personnel, etc. All these hindered efficient waste management system and constituted environmental hazards across the state.

    “However, with the coming on board of Visionscape Sanitation Solutions, we are beginning to witness a breath of fresh air in the waste management system through the transformation of waste transfer loading stations across the state, beginning with the Tapa Transfer Loading Station while the one in Oshodi is nearing completion. The Ogudu Waste Depot has been completed and the company is currently working on the Epe Landfill, which will be the first Engineered Sanitary Landfill in West Africa, among others,” the group said.

  • Understanding the need for Cleaner Lagos Initiative

    Understanding the need for Cleaner Lagos Initiative

    Having keenly followed comments that greeted the introduction of the new waste management policy of the Lagos State Government encapsulated in the Cleaner Lagos Initiative ( CLI ) and the resurgence of waste on major roads and streets, the question agitating the minds of the people is why the need for the new policy when the previous arrangement appeared to be “working.” Those who genuinely asked the question do so because there was no clear understanding of where the State was coming from as far as waste collection and administration is concerned, and where we should really be to engender a truly clean, hygienic and sustainable environment.

    Before the administration of Governor Akinwunmi Ambode decided to implement the new waste management policy, a study was commissioned to comprehensively look into the issue of the environment. The report showed that the Lagos State Waste Management Authority ( LAWMA ) had about 150 rickety compactors and the Private Sector Participation ( PSP ) operators had some compactors many of which were constantly breaking down on the roads causing traffic gridlock and oozing out offensive stench to residents. All the compactors then put together were benchmarked against the volume of waste generated in the State and the report clearly showed that they were grossly inadequate and effective to evacuate about 13,000 tonnes of waste generated daily in the State.

    Because the compactors were inadequate, people end up dumping waste in drains, canals and at the end of the day, government spend more public expenditure to clear the drains, spend more money to give free drugs in the hospitals to children, and so on.

    Perhaps, the most important aspect of the report was that it revealed the obvious fact which the State had been grappling with and that is the fact that the Olusosun and Igando dump sites were time bomb waiting to explode. Under the previous arrangement, wastes were collected from across the State and dumped at Olusosun and Igando and other dump sites in the State and over the years, the heaps of refuse were mounting on the sites. So, for instance, the first thing you see when coming into Lagos from the major gateway of Lagos-Ibadan Expressway is the heap of refuse at Olusosun in a mega city that wants to be globally competitive and moving towards becoming a smart city. Such arrangement, to answer the agitation of the people, cannot be said to be working. It was just a question of shifting the evil day which will definitely come if not reviewed.

    So, in order to avert the looming disaster, the Ambode administration, after a comprehensive analysis of the report with a team of experts with impeccable and extensive background on environmental management, decided to implement a major paradigm shift once and for all, and join the league of advanced countries with world class holistic environmental management system which eventually brought about the Cleaner Lagos Initiative (CLI).

    Under the new arrangement, the existing dump sites, which apart from being an eyesore and constitute health risk to the State, would be closed down and clinically treated to free up the land space for other befitting and impactful projects. At the moment, work is at advanced stage on the construction of Engineered Sanitary Landfill in the outskirt of Epe, and the project, which is the first in West Africa, will birth a revolutionary waste management in the State in line with global best practices. The are concessions for additional two of such landfills to be built in the State under the Build, Operate and Transfer (BOT) arrangement.

    Credits must also be given to the previous administrations in the State for coming up with the idea of Transfer Loading Stations (TLS)/Material Recovery facilities, but like the mantra of the present administration which is continuity with improvement, the existing of such stations in Agege, Simpson, Oshodi and Mushin are being retrofitted and upgraded to meet up with current realities, while work has already been completed at Tapa Transfer Loading Station and Ogudu Waste Depot by the environmental utility group contracted by the State Government to implement the CLI, Visionscape Sanitation Solutions.                     

    With the previous arrangement, adequate provision was only made for waste collection, without arrangement for other critical infrastructures in the value-chain of waste management such as waste depots, transfer loading stations, material recovery facilities and engineered sanitary landfills, and with the new arrangement, all of which are now being put in place as part of the mandate to provide integrated waste management solutions for the treatment of municipal solid waste and wastewater under the CLI.

    For instance, the TLS performs the fundamental role of driving efficiency into waste collection and transportation services and serves as the middleman in the supply-chain between waste collection vehicles and the final disposal facilities. The TLS will feature a central tipping bay, a waste reception bay, administrative buildings and waste processing, while other facilities including the waste depots and engineered sanitary landfills will provide world class sanitation structure that includes mechanized sweeping, sorting and recycling, innovative waste bins, regular waste collection and more.

    As part of the deal, about 600 brand new compactors are being provided and deployed for waste collection, while the number of street sweepers have been increased from about 7,000 to 27,500 now to be known as Community Sanitation Workers (CSW) and are to be well-kitted for deployment to all the wards in the State with good remuneration packages including insurance benefits. About 1million electronically tracked bins are also to be deployed across the State, while mechanized sweeping trucks are now to clean the major highways with CSW cleaning the streets.

    Before taking the decision to bring in the environmental consortium being led by Visionscape, the State Government reviewed and consolidated all the laws relating to the environment to allow for private sector investment because all the transformation being implemented as highlighted above could not have been done by government alone as it was impossible for government to concentrate all the resources in one sector to the detriment of others.

    Another option opened to government was to increase the tax being paid by residents to implement the reforms in waste management but that would have been insensitive considering the fact that there were enough challenges for people to contend with, hence the need to invite the private sector to invest massively as we have seen in the last couple of months.

    Again, in another demonstrable evidence of thinking out of the box, the State Government devised the strategy to incorporate those who hitherto had been managing waste in the State better known as PSP operators in the new arrangement, with opportunities to grow their businesses by making same bankable. While the PSP operators were asked to collect the large volume of commercial waste generated in the State, Visionscape, on the other hand, is to collect and manage residential waste. Depending on the types of waste generated across the State, the refuse will then go through either the TLS, waste depots, material recovery facilities and then eventually the landfills where those to be recycled or used for other beneficial purposes like power generation will be so used.        

    Another unique and people-centered aspect of the CLI is that Visionscape will only be paid based on the tonnage of waste generated, and so it is in their interest to generate more.

    Still under the new arrangement, LAWMA has been repositioned to perform supervisory role in the sector, while the former Kick Against Indiscipline (KAI) brigade has been rebranded and transformed to a more civil Lagos State Environmental Sanitation Corps (LAGESC) and the agency will ensure that the environment is kept clean at all times in line with the mandate of the CLI. Before now, there were genuine complaints from members of the public on the activities of KAI brigade, especially harassment of people. But LAGESC corps have been trained to be civil in their modus operandi. Specifically, the sanitation corps will police the highways to ensure that people do not dump refuse indiscriminately on roads and also clear the pathways and bridges and dislodge people selling on the road.

    For residents to pay for evacuation of refuse, the government has introduced an annual Public Utility Levy (PUL) which will be minimal and reasonable. The PUL is a property-based charge applicable to all properties within the State. It will replace all the previous waste management levies, while a unit has been created in the Ministry of the Environment known as the Public Utilities Monitoring and Assurance Unit (PUMAU) to coordinate the generation of PUL bill.

    The PUL will be a major contribution to the ongoing efforts by the State Government to address severe challenges that are unique to the State because of the rising urbanization. The money will be held in the Environmental Trust Fund and managed by a Board of trustees to be regulated by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Already, an Executive Secretary has been appointed for the Fund.

    The trustees are under strict obligations to the people of Lagos and will be accountable to the people for every naira spent in line with the overall agenda for a cleaner Lagos.

    At this stage, the compliance and cooperation of all residents is key as the initial challenges with the transition period will soon be over. All hands are already on deck to evacuate waste from the streets and roads pending the eventual full launch of the new initiative. The good news here is that the initiative is on course and at the last count, Visionscape has just taken delivery of another 100 trucks consisting of a series of waste trucks from various rear-end loaders to operational vehicles, which have been deployed to the nooks and crannies of the State for evacuation of refuse. More are still coming and it can only get better in the quest to revolutionize waste management to bring about clean, hygienic and functional environment in the State.

    Opeseitan, a journalist, wrote from Abule Egba, Lagos.

  • Reconstruction of Oshodi/Int’l Airport road begins September- Ambode

    Reconstruction of Oshodi/Int’l Airport road begins September- Ambode

    Lagos State Governor, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode on Wednesday said that work on the proposed expansion and reconstruction of the Oshodi-International Airport Road would commence next month.

    The Governor, who spoke at the Third Quarter Town Hall Meeting, the 8th in the series, held at the Badore Ferry Terminal, Lagos also disclosed that plans are already underway to commence the construction of 181 local government roads next month.

    On the Oshodi-International Airport Road, Governor Ambode said the construction, which has already been awarded, would see the transformation of the road from four lanes to 10 lanes from Oshodi to the International Airport with interchange and flyover that would drop commuters to the Local Airport.

    It would be recalled that in May 2017, Acting President, Professor Yemi Osinbajo approved that the road be handed over to the Lagos State Government for total reconstruction.

    Ambode, who had described the current state of the road as a national disgrace, said that work would begin in earnest come September.

    On the delay in the commencement of rehabilitation of 181 inner roads, Governor Ambode said the development was due to the fluctuation in dollar rate at the time the bid was last opened, but that a new bid would be opened in the next two weeks, while work would commence in September.

    “By the next two to three weeks, I will reopen the advert to get a new cost and all things been equal the job would start on the roads by end of September,” he said.

    Ambode also assured residents that the State Public Works would seize the period of the break of the rainy season to fix all potholes across the State in order to improve drive time for motorists.

    Speaking on the Cleaner Lagos Initiative (CLI) billed to commence next month, Governor Ambode urged the people to be patient with his administration as the plan which is a holistic and comprehensive waste management policy was currently in its gestation period.

    He said once fully operational, waste would be collected in line with international best practices, while all parts of the State would be kept clean always.

    The Governor however urged residents to adopt new attitude to disposing waste and desist from dumping in drainages and canals, assuring that the Government would provide adequate bins to discourage indiscriminate dumping.

    “The question to ask is why are people putting their waste in the drains and canals hoping that somehow the water will flush it away? The answer comes back to government because we have not been able to provide the people with enough bins or places where they can put the dirt.

    “They cannot leave the dirt in the house so they must have a channel to get it out. As government been able to provide enough locations, bins, bags and so on where they can put that refuse and then we can collect it and when we collect it efficiently, as part of their attitude, they will not go back to the canals and the drains. They will only go back to where we have provided for them.

    “Now, so we have enough equipment to clean Lagos? Are we having enough dino bins, plastic bags, compactors that can go round the population of 22million people? The answer before now is no. We are the largest waste producer in the world more than New York. New York produces 10,000 tonnes of waste every day, the waste accounted for in Lagos is 13,000 tonnes per day not to talk of areas that are not documented”.

    “Do we have enough equipment and compactors? We don’t have, but how do we have it? We have not increased the taxes you are paying. The population is increasing and by that fact the waste is increasing and we have not increased revenue. But we need new equipment. Some people were doing it for us before but we all saw the equipment they have been using to clean up the State and the truth is it can never do it right.

    “If we say we want to be a smart city and globally competitive, we must use the approach that allows you to collect waste in a globally competitive way and that is what we have done with the CLI without me punishing tax payers. We have a partnership that provides 500 brand new compactors without me paying one naira yet and with the partnership, we will provide 27,500 sanitation workers in all our wards across the State who will be uniformed and clean Ikorodu, Ayobo the same way they clean Victoria Island and then they will provide bins where our people can now have the culture and attitude to put their dirt in the bins instead of putting it in the canals and drains,” Governor Ambode said.

    In the meantime, Governor Ambode said all the 20 Local Government and 37 Local Council Development Chairmen have been mandated to ensure 24/7 cleaning of the environment, while officials of the State Government would be moving round to evacuate waste.

    As part of the initiatives to enhance commuting within the State, the Governor said new modern bus terminals would be constructed commencing from this quarter in Marina, Ajah, Ojota, Agege, Iju Ishaga and Iyana Ipaja, while as part of the integrated transport system, a Bus Rapid Transit (BRT) would be constructed to connect Badore Jetty to Ajah.

    Governor Ambode also said that his administration has earned the trust of Lagosians in the last 26 months, adding that taxes paid have been judiciously utilised to make life more comfortable for residents in the State.

    He therefore thanked Lagosians for cooperating and helping his administration to translate its visions and plans for the State to reality, noting that without their taxes, it would have been impossible.

    “I urge all other taxable individuals yet to join the tax net to go to the nearest Lagos State Inland Revenue office to register.  Feel free to honour your civic obligations.  We believe we have earned your trust.  Every kobo paid as tax will be judiciously used for the good of Lagosians.

    “Our government feels emboldened by the tremendous support and cooperation you have continued to give us. This was also evident in your action of July 22nd when you voted massively for the All Progressives Congress during the just concluded Local Government elections,” Governor Ambode said.

    He added that the Badore Road would be expanded at its entrance from Ajah Roundabout, while plans are afoot to construct Oke-Ira Nla Road as an alternative to totally eliminate traffic along the axis.

    Responding to complaints by a resident of the axis, Mrs Abiodun Dina on the activities of dredgers who are fond of spoiling the road and parking indiscriminately on the road thereby subjecting people to avoidable traffic snarl, Governor Ambode said in as much as government was not interested in shutting down businesses but he would have to wield the big stick if the dredgers fail to comply with rules of engagement.

    The town hall meeting had in attendance the Majority Leader of the House of Representatives, Hon. Femi Gbajabiamila, Oba of Lagos, Rilwan Akiolu I, members of the State Executive Council, members of the House of Assembly, top government functionaries, party chieftains, traditional rulers, among others.

  • Cleaner Lagos initiative takes off September – Ambode

    Cleaner Lagos initiative takes off September – Ambode

    Lagos State Governor, Mr. Akinwunmi Ambode on Tuesday said that the Cleaner Lagos Initiative (CLI), which is a major reform of his administration to revolutionize the solid waste management sector in line with international best practices will commence in the first week of September.

    The Governor, who spoke at a media workshop in Lagos to sensitize journalists ahead of the take-off, said the initiative would not only change the solid waste management system in the State, but would also engender a sustainable, cleaner and healthier environment for Lagosians, just as he assured that the people would be better for it.

    Ambode who was represented by the Commissioner for the Environment, Dr. Babatunde Adejare, said all was now set for the eventual take off, with the passage of the Environmental Management and Protection Law 2017, the concession of residential waste collection and procession to a reputable and competent multinational Waste Services Company as well as the transformation of the erstwhile Kick Against Indiscipline Brigade to a more civil Lagos State Environmental Sanitation Corps (LAGESC).

    The Governor said in the interim, a temporary intervention programme tagged “Operation Deep Clean”, was already on going with a mandate to evacuate solid waste from dark spots and major locations across the State, urging Lagosians to cultivate the habit of bagging their waste properly.

    “We are going to start the CLI by first week in September and by the grace of God Lagosians would see how we intends to clean Lagos and make it a more beautiful and liveable environment for us.

    “In the meantime, we have thrown up and intervention programme that the Ministry of the Environment, LAWMA and Visionscape is doing called ‘Operation Deep Clean’. The three of them have combined together and are doing this intervention programme supported by our PSP team and even we have started using open trucks for them just to make sure that we don’t have refuse so much on our road.

    “I want to tell Lagosians that don’t dump refuse irresponsibly, bag your refuse, put it in front of your house and I assure you, this Government would come and take them. Don’t worry, where there is no pain, there is no gain, this is just a transition that we are in and by the grace of God come first week in September, we would see the new thing and we would all enjoy it and be happy about it,” he said.

    Besides, Governor Ambode said that the commitment of his administration to ensure the successful implementation of the CLI was driven by the strategic importance of the environment as a bedrock upon which development and economic prosperity rest.

    He also said that the spirited efforts to improve sanitation and hygiene are founded with the determination to provide a level playing field for all investors and inject international best practices into Solid Waste Management sector in the State.

    “This initiative has offered us the unique opportunity to seek private investment from nationally and internationally renowned players in the waste management sector, infuse more efficiency and enhance the standard of living of our people by attaining a cleaner, safer and more secured environment,” the Governor said.

    The Governor, therefore, said the workshop was necessary to deepen the understanding of members of the media and put the CLI in proper perspective with regards to its modus operandi and the expected benefits to Lagosians.

    “The CLI is a reform of the solid waste management sector of the State and that is why we are here. We know that by educating and exposing the media to all the facts about CLI, you would be able to educate the people because their buy-in is very critical and very important and you know we are responsible for them and to them, so therefore, educating them through you is very important,” he said.