According to a GNA report, Vice President Dr Mahamudu Bawumia has disclosed government’s intention of using cassava flour to produce biodegradable plastic bags in an effort to help the country deal with the current sanitation challenges with non-compostable plastic bags that can take up to 1000 years to decompose..
The vice president said an entrepreneur has already approached his outfit with a proposal. He has given the assurance that government would pursue the idea aggressively since it was in line with the government’s industrialization agenda.
He added that government was exploring avenues to re-establish a jute factory in Kumasi in the Ashanti Region since the Ghana Cocoa Board had been importing jute bags for bagging cocoa beans, noting that, the ones that would be manufactured locally, could be much cheaper than those imported.
Vice President Bawumia made the remarks when contributing to a panel discussion at this year’s Ghana Economic Forum held in Accra on the topic: “Building a competitive economy for sustainable growth”.
The two-day event served as a platform for captains of industry to debate on key issues affecting the Ghanaian economy and proffer innovative ideas to resolve them.
The Vice President noted that for the nation to move beyond aid, there was the need to produce and add value to her raw materials, and said the the Akufo-Addo-led government was gradually departing from the conventional approach to development and adopting new policies that would accelerate economic growth.
He cited the Infrastructure Barter Arrangement Government entered with the Sinohydro Corporation of China as a classic example, noting that, that arrangement was a novelty.
Under that arrangement, Government of Ghana would use her share of the refined bauxite to pay-off the cost of infrastructure that would be provided by the Sinohydro Corporation.
“We have to think about new paths and new ways of doing things and it’s really that thinking that is driving a lot of the things we’re doing.