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Samuel Oteng is the A/R EPA Director

About six sensors have been installed in some communities in Greater Kumasi in the Ashanti Region to monitor air quality and generate real time data to inform policy decisions.

The move forms part of plans by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to improve air quality in Greater Kumasi.

Air quality sensors are devices used to detect contaminants in the air, such as particulates, pollutants and noxious gases that may be harmful to human health.

This is part of an initiative by EPA’s monitoring capacity.

Preliminary data from Clean Air Fund-funded initiative is already showing some pollution trends and helping to identify pollution hotspots in Kumasi.

The six sensors have been installed in places like Santasi Roundabout, Sepe Dote, Adum, Asokwa, Kaase and Suame Magazine.

The Ashanti Region Director of  EPA, Samuel Oteng, said every city needed to have air quality sensors within five to 10 mile radius.

In Kumasi, the EPA has a number of sensors but they are not enough to provide adequate data for the city.

A network of low-cost sensors spread across the city would aid in closing the data gaps that exist.

“Beyond having sensors to collect data, the capacity of technocrats needs to be built to understand and interpret the data and make use of it.

“When the air quality data is aligned to economic and health impact, and used as basis to build awareness among the public, we would be making good progress,” he said.

“For now, we are developing a sense of what is happening in Kumasi but we need more localised data to engage with policy makers on next steps,” he added.

Mr Oteng explained that as cities grew, they struggled with issues of poor air quality and that Kumasi, one of Africa’s fastest growing cities, and one of the fastest growing economies, was an example.

He said fumes from not over-aged and poorly maintained vehicles, emissions from industries, indiscriminate burning of refuse, deforestation, wood fuel used for cooking, and shrinking green spaces were some of the major causes of air pollution.

Mr Oteng said without a rethink of development paradigm, which placed health and environmental prudence at its centre, growing cities inhabitants’ health, well-being and socio-economic prospects would worsen.

This, in turn, would hamper economic growth and prosperity.

“We have well crafted environmental laws and structures for delivery, but there is a huge gap in enforcement. This has occasioned some of these problems. The law must work,” he said.

“There are things we can easily begin to do to reduce pollution and reestablish the country’s leadership in the sub-region for environmental stewardship.”

He said the country had comprehensive activities on adaptation and mitigation under the nationally determined contributions for climate change and that there was the need to prioritise those that could generate snowball effect on air quality and health.

By Benjamin Aidoo|3news.com|Ghana

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