The 5Rs for Waste Management of Abandoned Infrastructure in Nigeria
摘要
This chapter focuses on how the 5Rs concepts can be adopted to resuscitate abandoned infrastructure in Nigeria while curbing the challenges faced in the Nigerian environment. Sustainable development is intended to meet present needs without compromising the needs of the generations to come. However, the innumerable number of incomplete and abandoned infrastructure projects in Nigeria brings into question the government’s aspirations toward sustainable development in Nigeria. Abandoned infrastructure harms the economy, society, and the environment. These infrastructures cluttered the entire environment of Nigeria, and many authors tagged the country as the world’s junkyard for abandoned infrastructure, full of hide-outs for nefarious activities. The menace constituted by this abandonment also includes a threat to public health, creating an abode for pests, and a waste of useful, scarce, economic, and material resources. The initial concept of the R system of sustainability was 3Rs: reduce, reuse and recycle, which are alternatives for waste management that progressively gained attention in the 1970s. Nevertheless, a new concept of dealing with waste includes multiple 5Rs systems consisting of a rethink, reduce, reuse, refurbish, and regulation. These new concept attempts to promote waste management required to be done effectively. This chapter illustrates how the Rs concept could sustainably address the waste generated by abandoned infrastructure in Nigeria through semi-structured interviews. Eight (8) construction professionals, including architects, project managers, engineers, quantity surveyors, and contractors, participated in the interview. The interviews were transcribed and analysed through qualitative content analysis. The findings revealed the need for the government to rethink how best these structures can be put to use, reduce the development of excess infrastructure, and salvage projects by refurbishing and reusing them. The possible implication of the findings initiated a paradigm shift in sustainable development that is not just for Nigeria only, but globally.