ABSTRACT
Environmental pollution and the needs for awareness creation are relevant
to man’s life. This has led to the deterioration of man’s resource which are
renewable and nonrenewable. This study creates awareness for environmental
pollution to evaluate the level of people affected. Questionnaire and oral
interview were used to gather information for this study. Most
of the respondent was between the ages of 25-35 years, while the least were
between the ages of 15-20 years. In the occupation section, most of the respondents
were traders with 42% and least were students with a percentage of 23%. The
academic level of the respondent shows that 31% are graduates and the least are
those with primary and secondary qualification with 23%. 55% of respondents
disagreed that the government provided a better way to create awareness on the
process of waste management in Onitsha, while 45% of the respondents agreed.
93% of the respondents agreed that pollution have a negative impact in the
environment, which 7% of the respondents disagreed the fact that pollution
doesn’t have any great impact within the environment. The result revealed that
the impacts of pollution on the environment are as follows; frequent illness
and sudden death, outbreak of epidemic, odorous environment, death, outbreak of
air, and water born disease, suffocation and reduction in soil fertility.
Table of contents
1.1 Background of the
study
1.2 statement of the
problems
1.3
Objective / Aim of the Study
1.4
Significance of the Study
1.5 Research Questions
1.6
Limitation of the Study
1.7
Scope of the Study
1.8 Justification of the
Study
1.9 Definition of Terms
2.1 What is environmental pollution?
2.1.1 Environment
2.2 What is
pollution?
2.3 Consequences
of Environmental Pollution in Anambra state, Nigeria.
2.4 Causes of
environmental pollution
3.1 Study Site
3.2 Research Design
3.3 Sample and Sampling Technique
3.4
Population of the Study
3.5
Methods
of Data Collection
3.5.1 Observation
method
3.5.2 Questionnaire
3.5.3 Oral Interview
3.5.4
Validity of the Instrument
3.6 Zones
in Onitsha
3.7
Instrument for Data Collection
3.8
Method of Data Analysis
Data
presentation and analysis
CHAPTER
FIVE: DISCUSSION OF FINDINGS, SUMMARY, CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATION
5.1 Discussion
of Findings
5.2
Summary
5.3
Conclusion
5.4 Recommendations
References
Appendixes
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
1.0 Introduction
The accumulation
of waste can rightly be said to be a four-runner of present day environmental
problems. The revolution was followed by the industrial revolution which was as
a result of man's quest to master his environment. The causes of this environmental
problem have been identified as population growth and industrialization,
overloading our environment with pollutants like noxious substances of our
daily household, industrial and agricultural waste (Chukwuneke,2005) If refuse
is not properly disposed, it could lead to an out- break of diseases which
could be very hazardous to human health [Morten, 2007]. For instance, sewage
being one of the major pollutants of the land and river could cause disease to
man and also disturb aquatic ecosystem by killing the aquatic organisms such as
fishes. Poor disposal of human excreta and urine creates an atmosphere for the development
of pathogenic organisms that cause disease. Human excreta produces offensive
smell and attracts flies which can easily transmit disease to people. Science
Teachers Association of Nigeria [STAN, 2004] observed that when substances are
introduced into air and water which makes them harmful to be used, they are
said to be polluted, noting that such harmful substances are called pollutants.
Pollution is an act or process which leads to the defilement or uncleanliness
of the conditions under which are lives (Akpuaka, 2005). There are various
types of pollution. Theseinclude, pollution of water, air, land, radioactive,
vibration, noise and thermal pollution.
Education is
being a veritable tool for social transformation and development. It is a
dynamic instrument of change, which can be used to bring about redness, correct
imbalance in development and make for the quick development of economic, political,
sociological and human resources [FRN, 2004]. However, changes occur as a
result of the cumulative effect of well-developed curriculum,
[Amokaye, 2012].
The illiterate Nigerians may not change unless they become informed through appropriate
curriculum and educational communication of alternative modes of thinking and behaviors.
The need to
educate the Nigerian society on the value and importance of Sustainable environment
informed the development of pollution education curricular for primary and post
primary education. Miller [2006] stated that the 1996 national curriculum review
conference which appraised the curriculum of the Nations Educational system in
Kaduna was unanimous in noting the absence or deficiency of environmental
education element in the various school syllabuses. In Anambra state, the story
is not different. Therefore, there is need for the government to see how to
create environmental awareness and protection through the instrumentality of
education.
It has been observed in recent times that the role the
environment play to a nation’s development process cannot be relegated to the
background. Apart from being the physical surrounding for natural habitats, the
environment provides the basis for human exploits for agricultural, industrial,
commercial, technological and tourism development of a society. For this and
several other reasons, environmental issues now occupy a centre stage in
academic discourse and other public both at the national and international
levels. Recorded evidence has also shown that the environment represents a wide
range of the external circumstances, conditions and the things that affect the
existence and development of an individual, organism, group and/or society
(Uwaka 2008).
In Nigeria for instance, environmental issues did not
gain official prominence until the 1988 Koko toxic waste dumping saga which
also brought to the fore the exigent need to establish the Nigeria Federal
Environmental Protection Agency (FEPA), Federal Ministry of Environment and
other relevant agencies, ostensibly to tackle environmentally related issues,
in the country. These include issues such as environmental pollution,
sanitation, depletion of ozone layer, desertification, flooding, erosion,
poverty, bush burning, deforestation, soil conservation etc. All these
mentioned above are a pointer to the fact that issues of environment and infact
environmental pollution which forms the basis of this paper has taken a centre
stage in the nation’s (Nigeria’s) development process.
Environmentally minded scholars: Ocheri (2003), Gbehe
(2004), and Aja (2005) have associated environmental pollution with human
activities and albeit persistent human interaction with the environment.
Research has also shown that as the population of a country grows/increases
with attendant pressure on the environment especially in the wake of improved
technologies, environmental abuse and pollution is nevertheless heightened with
corresponding effects on lives of people and other living organisms, (Ocheri,
2003). It has been observed further that man through industrial, agricultural
and the ever increasing urbanization process, security and terrorist activities
tend to directly and/or indirectly pollute the environment. (Milller 2006) in
his observations, in tandem with the foregoing agree that unrestricted use of
pesticides, insecticides, herbicides and indiscriminate dumping of refuse,
excreta and animal dung as well as spillages from refineries, large scale bush
burning etc. are perceived as some of the leading factors of environmental
pollution in Nigeria. Structurally therefore, the paper is divided into
sections. Following this section (introduction) is section 2, and it dwells on
conceptual clarification of environmental pollution. Section 3 discusses the
theoretical framework, section 4 is environmental pollution in Nigeria and its
attendant consequences on human’s life, organisms and the country Nigeria, and
section 5 is the need for awareness creation for sustainable development.
1.2
Statement of the problem
Onitsha, the
biggest city in Anambra state of Nigeria was just a small burgeoning township
withfew buildings about the year 1940 (kelvin,et al 2004). Presently, Onitsha has grown to a very big city.
There was no
zoning in Onitsha with the result that you find market places, residential
buildings, mechanic workshops, banks, industries, kiosk etc, citing at the same
area causing disharmony in the environment. There are refuse dumps beside
residential building, poor refuse and sewage disposal, stagnant dirty ponds and
pools here and there, poorly constructed and blocked drains with the result
that water cannot flow out. All these create unnecessary eyesore and health
hazard to Onitsha inhabitants and visitors. This is not good for the growth and
development of Onitsha. At the instance of these, the present research work
goes to study the impact of pollution on the environment with emphasis on the
role of education in creating environmental awareness and protection in Onitsha
metropolis.
1.3
Objective / Aim of the Study
The aim of this
study is to evaluate the need for awareness creationthat will navigate and build
a strategy to human health.
Objectives:
i.
The objective of this study is to create
an awareness that will help to examine the process of pollutionin Onitsha metropolis.
ii.
To evaluate the cause and source of
pollution in Onitsha.
iii.
To examine areas in Onitsha that is
aligned with the highest waste generation that causes pollution.
1.4
Significance of the Study
This study will
be of significance in several ways:
Firstly, it will
help the government to have firsthand on awareness creation for waste disposal
on the lives of the people in Onitsha and also help in reviewing their former
strategies with the view of achieving health for all at low cost.
Secondly, the
study will help to innovate the citizens to acquire the knowledge on how to
keep the environment cleaner and to secure human health for a better future.
Thirdly, the
study will also help the citizens, teachers, health educators to unleash more
on the need to keep good health and neat environment in the community.
1.5 Research Questions
i.
What impact have the creation of
awareness to examine the process of pollution in Onitsha done?
ii.
Do the government provide a better way
to create an awareness on the process of waste management in Onitsha?
iii.
Hasthe maximum waste disposed on
your community affected a lot of life health?
iv.
What are the rules and regulation stated
by government to help reduce the mend of waste disposal in Onitsha?
v.
Have the government provided a better
means to educate the community in the awareness of waste management?
1.6
Limitation of the Study
The study was
aimed to notify whether the people around Onitsha metropolis that participated
on need of awareness creation on waste disposal to help the community and to
help a healthy environment. The study covers some known areas in Odoakpu,
Awada, Woliwo, Fegge, and Inland Town in Onitsha metropolis.
1.7
Scope of the Study
This work focuses on the environmental
pollution the need for awareness creation in Onitsha. Anambra State.
1.8Justification
of the Study
To manage waste properly it
is important to understand the environmental pollution the need for awareness
creation in Onitsha metropolis. This study therefore hopes to provide empirical
data on the environmental pollution, the need for awareness creation in the
study area.
1.9 Definition of Terms
In the course
of this study certain operational technical terms were unavoidably used in the
write-up to express some views. Those terms have however, been defined therefore
the quick understanding.
Influence: The impact made by something through unseen or
intangible means.
Population: A group of individuals of the same species
inhabiting in a specific area.
Pollution: Contamination or unaccepted change in physical, chemical
or biological condition in the environment, which exert may exert harmful
effects on the quality of human life. Including effects on their animals,
plants industries as well cultural and aesthetic assets.
Urbanization: This refers to the population shift from rural to
urban residency, the gradual increase in the proportion of people living in
urban areas, and the ways in which each society adapts to this change.
Department | Environmental Science |
Project ID Code | ENSC0001 |
Chapters | 5 Chapters |
No of Pages | 51 pages |
Reference | YES |
Format | Microsoft Word |
Price | ₦4000, $15 |
|
|
Contact Us On | +2347043069458 |