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Sewage treatment plants are part of modern efforts geared at solving waste management problems across the world. Unfortunately for some Lagos residents, it has become a living nightmare that haunts them daily. In this report, ALFRED OLUFEMI chronicles the pathetic plight of a community under the chokehold of a state-owned dysfunctional sewage plant that yields bountiful profit to the detriment of residents’ health.

From the beckoning voices of commercial motorcyclists scouting for passengers trying to outwit each other, to the roadside sellers plying their trade unhindered, there is no doubt that the boisterous, giant gate leading to the Abesan Low-Cost Housing Estate, Ipaja, in the Mosan-Okunola Local Council Development Area, is a converging point for those serious with the business of making a living.

Going by this scenery, life appears normal but it does not depict the dark, agonising reality on the ground, which plays out daily inside the estate.

The busy, boisterous gate leading to the Abesan Estate. 

Behind the façade of well-laid residential homes is the Lagos State Wastewater Management Treatment Plant, a thriving, hazardous business process threatening both humans and the environment.

Based on Investigations findings, the nauseous smell from untreated wastewater, discharged frequently by operators of the facility, which hangs thickly in the air throughout the day, has made life a torment in and around the estate.

This is even as the wastewater has permeated and polluted water bodies.

Beautiful turned ugly

The sprawling Abesan Low-Cost Housing Estate is acclaimed to be one of the legacies of the first civilian governor of Lagos State, the late Alhaji Lateef Kayode Jakande.

Like others commissioned in the 80s, it was designed and built to ensure that low-income earners have a place of their own upon retirement.

For effective sewage management, treatment plants were constructed at Abesan, Oke-Afa, Amuwo- Odofin and Iponri Low-cost housing estates to serve as central sewage systems rather than have individuals construct their sewage.

The Lagos State Wastewater Management Office, the agency responsible for the proper disposal of wastewater, on its website, noted that the plant in Abesan and others were constructed to usher in an era of contemporary wastewater management in the state.

“Sewage has for a long time been known and considered a potential health risk and environmental nuisance in Lagos State,” it stated.

Large oxidation ditch used to process wastewater before it is breakdown and emptied into water bodies (Lagos state wastewater management office)

Also, in a handbook published by the agency, it was stated that Lagos state, with a population of over 23 million people generates an estimated 2.21 million cubic metres of untreated wastewater daily, which poses a health risk.

However, the inability to adequately manage this hazardous human waste was boldly admitted and documented.

“Currently, there is a huge deficit in meeting the wastewater treatment in the state and so a lot of wastewater is being discharged into the environment daily,” the handbook revealed.

How sewage treatment, management works

Sewage, also known as wastewater or effluent waste, is a polluted form of water generated by human activities that include faecal matter from the toilet faucet, urinal, kitchen, bathroom, laundry and soak away leachates.

According to Britannica, a website that contains carefully edited articles on significant topics, sewage treatment facilities use physical, chemical and biological processes for water purification.

It further noted that a treatment plant is where wastewater is filtered, disinfected and converted into purified water for use, adding that once properly treated, it can be used for irrigation, fire-fighting and groundwater recharge, among others.

In a research published by the University of Montpellier on its website, countries like Australia, California, Cyprus, Spain, Florida, Israel, Jordan, Malta and Singapore, have set a target of meeting 10 to 60 per cent of their water needs through the reuse of treated wastewater.

A journal published by the University of Shanghai for Science and Technology in China, noted that since wastewater consists of a high quantity of inorganic and organic wastes, it is pertinent to have it treated before being discharged into water sources.

The article, likewise, highlighted various stages of wastewater treatment, starting from the preliminary to the tertiary stage.

It explained that while the preliminary treatment has to do with the removal of large materials or coarse solids usually found in raw water, the primary, secondary and tertiary stages, focus on disinfecting and processing the wastewater for reuse.

“The efficiency of primary treatment is to remove around 60 per cent of suspended solids from sewage. Secondary treatment takes place after the removal of floating and settled materials from the sewage which aims at removing suspended and dissolved biological matter.

“The efficiency of secondary treatments is to remove around 90 per cent of suspended solids from sewage. The tertiary treatment takes place after secondary treatment and aims at removing those sewage constituents which were not removed in prior stages,” the research stated.

Based on interviews with environmental experts and government officials, coupled with findings from credible research works, it was gathered that the Abesan plant was designed to treat wastewater from different sewer lines from the estate up to the secondary level, which involves proper disinfection.

To achieve this, a large oxidation ditch and machines were provided.

However, residents told our correspondent that as of 2014, most of the machines installed for sewage treatment had broken down, leading to the pollution of groundwater and the release of nauseous pollutants into the air.

“They stopped processing the waste. Before, the water that comes out of the plant was clean. Now, the waste is just discharged directly into the river. We have complained several times to the state government but no one cares to listen,” said Deborah Ayeni, whose wine shop is located close to the plant.

The 34-year-old, who revealed that she has been living in the estate for over 10 years, lamented that the poignant air which usually envelops the environment was unhealthy for humans.

Further describing the discomfort residents have endured over the years, Ayeni said, “By the time they start to discharge the waste, it will be difficult to stay outside. Just imagine if this is done during the dry season when, because of heat, people have to stay outside to get fresh air.”

Collapsed sewage plant

President of the Abesan Estate Residents’ Association, Elder Michael Kehinde, corroborated Ayeni’s claims  about the total collapse of the plant.

President of the Abesan Estate Residents Association, Elder Michael Kehinde, said the sewage system in the estate collapsed long time ago and they have been living with its negative impacts. 

He noted that residents, who ordinarily should benefit from the wastewater plant, have resorted to digging soakaways to adequately accommodate waste.

Kehinde revealed that most of the sanitary sewer lines had been blocked, thereby causing an overflow of wastewater.

He said, “Let me state that the sewage system in this estate has collapsed. If you go to some parts of the estate, you will see effluent waste flowing everywhere. The leaks caused by blockages are so many and people are complaining.”

According to Wikipedia, a sanitary sewer is an underground pipe or tunnel system for transporting sewage from houses and commercial buildings to a  sewage treatment plantor disposal. Sanitary sewers are a type of gravity sewer and are part of an overall system called a “sewage system.”

Failed promise

During a tour of the estate, our correspondent discovered that further deepening residents’ woes, is the fact that the plant has been turned into a dump site for wastewater collected from areas outside the estate like Agege and Egbeda, despite its dysfunctional state.

Speaking on this, the estate residents’ president said, “The terminal is not functioning as it should, but it has not stopped sewage trucks from dislodging human waste brought from other areas.”

Kehinde chronicled how attempts by the state government to revamp the moribund treatment plant worsened their plight.

He said, “There was an attempt to carry out repairs on the plant during Fashola’s administration. The work was awarded but the contractor didn’t complete it. I don’t know why. As a result of that, it became worse than it used to be.”

Checks by PUNCH Investigations showed that the state government had pledged to rehabilitate sewage treatment plants across the state, including that of Abesan, but reneged in its promise.

According to a 2014 report published in a national daily (not PUNCH), the Fashola-led administration announced plans to build new treatment plants and have the old ones revamped.

“The former governor revealed that aside from upgrading the existing wastewater treatment plants at Abesan in Ipaja; Oke-Afa in Isolo; Iponri in Surulere; Alausa in Ikeja and Amuwo-Odofin, 5, 250 kilometres of sewers need to be laid,” the report stated.

Providing insights into how the Abesan treatment plant became decrepit, Olufemi Adesogan, a lecturer at the Civil Engineering Department, University of Ibadan, blamed it on poor maintenance culture.

Adesogan, had in 2015, surveyed the state of sewage treatment facilities across the country.

He said, “The infrastructural breakdown of sewer lines and the plant is due to man-made factors and epileptic power supply. You can’t talk about sewage treatment without water and electricity. They are interwoven. They were not properly maintained.”

Decrepit facility

During the course of this report, PUNCH Investigations, while carrying out the spot assessment of the wastewater plant, was able to, with the use of spyware, assess the extent of the decay at the facility and witnessed an illegal mode of operation, detrimental to humans and the ecosystem, in place.

Inside the old, decrepit Abesan sewage treatment plant.  (Alfred Olufemi/PUNCH Investigations)

It was learnt that while the state government remained the owner of the treatment plant, its management was contracted to a private company.

However, this change of ownership, according to residents, only worsened the state of the facility and turned it into a shadow of its former self.

Surrounded by thickets, structures inside the plant appeared old and had weather-beaten, grey-coloured paint.

Parts of its perimeter fence had collapsed, while there were indications that the entrance gate was forcefully removed from its hinges.

Parked haphazardly at the front of the plant were 13 sewage-hauling trucks waiting to be hired.

The trucks, our correspondent would later learn, are owned by individuals in the business of sewage evacuation.

As our correspondent approached the facility, it became clearer that the place had been turned into a business hub for Point of Sales operators, food sellers and varying artisans.

Inside the facility, he watched as two men dislodged wastewater from a haulage truck into a concrete box.

Two men cleaning up a tanker after dislodging wastewater from it. (Alfred Olufemi/PUNCH Investigations)

Close to the box was a container where nylons, plastics and other solids separated from the wastewater were discarded.

PUNCH Investigations gathered that the box is where the primary treatment takes place.

However, instead of sending the toxic wastewater to the next stage, where it undergoes secondary treatment, it was discharged in its raw state into the Abesan River, which is at the back of the plant and has tributaries linked to several communities

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