We revisited Agbogbloshie in urban Accra yesterday. Having 9 days in Tamale, learning the Dagbani context, was important. It honed and shaped our thinking. Wahab and his 2 cousin/friends could focus their Dagbani translation on our questions, rather than siphon off the translation for American and Italian reporters. As importantly, we had 9 days to think about the questions we didn't think to ask on the first day.
Since it was Agbogbloshie, of course there was yet another documentary being filmed that day... Justin from New York said he's a masters degree film student. That's basically all he'd tell us.
This time we got to the wire-burning "hot spot" via the long and windy route. We saw much, much more of the scrap metal site and trash dump. It is indeed impressive in the context of a city of 1 million residents. Of course, this city has closer to 5 million. Recyclers will get my point... there has to be a lot of stuff still out in the city somewhere, waiting for a decision maker to let it be recycled.
The white photojournalist had Awal (Howell) set up along the canal, sitting on a TV housing, with his back to the tire fires east of him. We took a vantage point under the sun canopy where the scrap burners and hanger-abouters rest and have lunch.
Agbogbloshie as a scrapyard has little to do with wire burning, and the wire burning has much more to do with automobile wire than with "e-waste". But those wire fires, while a very small part of the equation, attract thrill seekers - unemployed teenagers and #greatwhitesaviors like me and "Justin".
The site, seen from above, is mostly scrap automobiles, motorcycles, and bus recycling,. It's not the largest electronics dump in the world, not even in the top 100. Given the number of African households who have had electroncs for decades, there should be much more e-scrap. "E-waste" is a very small part of the scrap, apparently because Africans are still holding onto it, "speculating" that used electronics they don't use now will be sellable to someone. Today's Agbogbloshie is probably the tip of an iceberg as decades of reuse and repair will eventually cascade from a next generation of smart phone users.
Since it was Agbogbloshie, of course there was yet another documentary being filmed that day... Justin from New York said he's a masters degree film student. That's basically all he'd tell us.
This time we got to the wire-burning "hot spot" via the long and windy route. We saw much, much more of the scrap metal site and trash dump. It is indeed impressive in the context of a city of 1 million residents. Of course, this city has closer to 5 million. Recyclers will get my point... there has to be a lot of stuff still out in the city somewhere, waiting for a decision maker to let it be recycled.
money shot |
Agbogbloshie as a scrapyard has little to do with wire burning, and the wire burning has much more to do with automobile wire than with "e-waste". But those wire fires, while a very small part of the equation, attract thrill seekers - unemployed teenagers and #greatwhitesaviors like me and "Justin".
The site, seen from above, is mostly scrap automobiles, motorcycles, and bus recycling,. It's not the largest electronics dump in the world, not even in the top 100. Given the number of African households who have had electroncs for decades, there should be much more e-scrap. "E-waste" is a very small part of the scrap, apparently because Africans are still holding onto it, "speculating" that used electronics they don't use now will be sellable to someone. Today's Agbogbloshie is probably the tip of an iceberg as decades of reuse and repair will eventually cascade from a next generation of smart phone users.