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Lagos to increase waste evacuation charge by 50%, to prosecute residents without waste bin from October 1

The Lagos Waste Management Authority (LAWMA) has announced plans to increase the charge for waste evacuation by 50% with effect from October 1, 2022.

The proposed price increase is due to high cost of operation by Private Sector Participants (PSP), the cost of overheads especially that of diesel and spare parts for the trucks that waste managers used for evacuation of wastes.

The hint was given by the Managing Director of LAWMA, Mr Ibrahim Odumboni, on Wednesday in Lagos during a news conference on the activities of the agency from January 2022 till date, recent challenges, solutions, as well as sustainability measures that had been put in place.

Odumboni said that faced with the reality of increasing costs, a tariff review was under consideration and the upward price review, adding that an extensive and consultative review of the tariffs to meet these rising costs will commence from September 1.

What the Managing Director of LAWMA is saying

Odumboni said that the cost of Diesel used by PSP operators, which used to be N278 per litre in January, had risen to about N875, representing 300% increase.

He noted that although Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu’s administration planned to support the PSPs in the waste disposal system in the state with fuel subsidy, the increase in waste disposal tariff had become inevitable.

On efforts to meet up with changing demands such as the rising cost of diesel and the demands of clean energy, Odumboni said that LAWMA had begun processes of the dual fuel systems for trucks.

He pointed out that some trucks have already been converted to dual fuel system – 50% diesel and 50% gas for efficiency.

Odumboni said that the authority was considering the use of Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) to power PSP trucks to address the problem of high energy costs.

Lagos to prosecute residents without waste bin

The LAWMA boss said that from October 1, abatement notices would be issued to houses without waste disposal bins, warning that the authority would prosecute any household that did not have a bin from October 1

He said, ”If you don’t have a bin from October 1, you may be prosecuted.’

He said that it was wrong for a compound of several houses to have just one waste bin, adding that sanitary officers will go round from house to house to advocate on the importance of adopting a bin and sorting of wastes.

Odumboni said that in the nearest future, the agency intended to operate a two-bin system, whereas one bin would be for recyclables and the other for organic waste.

What you should know

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