Ghana flagEnvironment & Sustainability Guide · Ghana

Environment & Sustainability Guide in Ghana

Air quality, green spaces, and environmental policies

Ghana faces environmental challenges from climate change including rising temperatures and frequent floods, with stable air quality but limited data on PM levels. Water access has improved but pollution persists in urban areas. Forest cover has declined from 42% in 2000 to around 21% today due to deforestation. Government policies target renewable energy growth and disaster preparedness, though sustainability metrics like recycling rates remain underdeveloped.

Air Quality Index

0510
Moderate
6.0/10(AQI: N/A)
Stable trend

Air quality in Ghana shows stable trends over the past 6 months per database records. Urban areas like Accra face moderate pollution from traffic and biomass burning, with PM2.5 levels often 20-40 µg/m³. Government monitoring through EPA-Ghana tracks improvements from regulations, though rural areas remain cleaner.

Water Quality

0510
Moderate
5.5/10

Water quality in Ghana varies; 58% of population has access to safely managed drinking water as of 2022. Urban pollution from mining and agriculture contaminates rivers, with GWCL treating supplies but rural areas rely on unsafe sources. E. coli detected in 30% of surface waters.

58% safely managed per JMP 2023; treatment advised for surface water.

Recycling System

Recycling infrastructure in Ghana is emerging with informal sector dominance; formal rates low at under 5%. Plastics and e-waste collection growing via private initiatives, but national coverage limited without database metrics.

Recycling Rate: %

Green Spaces

Ghana has 21% forest cover, down from 42% in 2000 due to agriculture and logging. 7 national parks and reserves like Mole and Kakum protect biodiversity, covering 4.7% of land.

Forest Coverage: 21.0%
National Parks: 7
Protected areas total 13% of territory per IUCN; reforestation targets 2M hectares by 2030.

Environmental Policies

Ghana's policies include the National Climate Change Policy (2013) and Environmental Protection Agency Act. Paris Agreement commitments target 15% emissions reduction by 2030. Renewable Energy Act 2011 sets solar/wind targets.

Key Policies:
  • National Climate Change Policy
  • Renewable Energy Act 2011
  • Plastic Waste Management Policy
Renewable Energy: 10% renewables in energy mix by 2030; currently ~1% electricity from hydro/solar.

Natural Disaster Risk

MODERATE

Ghana's primary risks are floods and droughts; coastal erosion from sea level rise. NADMO coordinates responses with early warning systems.

floodsdroughtscoastal erosion
Climate Change Impacts: Temperatures rose 1.0°C from 1961-2020, with 0.3°C/decade recently (GCCA). Flood frequency tripled since 1980s; 2022 floods killed 21, displaced 40,000. Precipitation erratic, down 10% in north; sea levels up 3-5mm/year impacting Accra.

Sustainability Initiatives

Renewable Energy

Ghana's Renewable Energy Master Plan targets 10% renewables by 2030 via solar mini-grids and hydro expansion; 100MW solar installed by 2024.

Waste Management

National Plastic Action Partnership reduces single-use plastics; recycling hubs in Accra process 5,000 tons/year.

Reforestation

Green Ghana Project planted 25M trees since 2020 to restore forest cover.

Wildlife & Nature

Cross River GorillaCritically Endangered
African Forest ElephantCritically Endangered
Pygmy HippopotamusEndangered