Onitsha, Anambra State, can lay claim to the unenviable title of
world’s most polluted city, according to a data collected between 2011
and 2015, just released by the WHO.
According to the WHO, an air quality
monitor there registered 594 micrograms per cubic metre of microscopic
PM10 particles, and 66 of the more deadly PM2.5s.Onitsha’s figures are nearly twice as bad as notoriously polluted cities such as Kabul, Beijing and Tehran and 30 times worse than London. Onitsha, say academics, is a textbook example of the perils of rapid urbanisation without planning or public services creating a sustained pollution assault on its water and air.
As a tropical port city which has doubled in size to over 1 million
people in just a few years, it is frequently shrouded in plumes of black
diesel smoke from old ships; it has no proper waste incineration
plants; its construction sites and workshops emit clouds of dust and its
heavy traffic is some of the worst in Nigeria.
A recent study of Onitsha’s water pollution found more than 100
petrol stations in the city, often selling low-quality fuel, dozens of
unregulated rubbish dumps, major fuel spills and high levels of arsenic,
mercury, lead, copper and iron in its water. The city’s many metal
industries, private hospitals and workshops were all said to be heavy
polluters emitting chemical, hospital and household waste and sewage


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