It seems like we are the first organisation ever to deliver to our auditor’s books of accounts – box files of vouchers and of reports – in environmentally friendly kikapus – bags made out of dry palm leaves.
I deduce this from our auditors began to identify us as those who brought their records in kikapus.
In some circles, particularly among Ugandans who are culturally dislocated, it is ‘classlessness’ for one to carry in a kikapu books of accounts and financial records of an organisation of high repute, such as CPAR Uganda Ltd.
The CPAR Uganda Financial Year starts on the first day of April and ends on the last day of March. On Monday, 10th August 2015, as its Managing Director, I delivered to our external auditors our books of accounts and financial records for our financial year ended 31st March 2015.
I do not mind being referred to as the ‘one who brought financial records in a kikapu’. I buy into the philosophy of Nobel Laureate Wangari Mathaai (RIP) of everyone doing their little things. Every little bit counts – we will only overcome environmental pollution if we do our little bits.
My little bit is to reduce on my use of non-bio-degradable materials.
Into the pre-audit meeting, I clarified to our auditors that the cost savings we had made were not necessarily because of poor performance, for example, such as non-implementation of activities.
I explained that one of the ways in which we saved costs, for example, was by re-using/recycling paper. We have loads and loads of paper that is printed on one side, so we took the decision, for example, to print our accounting forms on such paper as opposed to buying fresh paper.
Put in the context of Uganda, Government has created for itself an unnecessary dilemma on the issue of saving our environment from plastic waste. After such a long struggle by environmental advocates for it to ban the use of polythene bags as shopping bags, early this year we celebrated when the ban came through. Read more …
But a few months into phasing in the ban, Government seems to have bowed to pressure from ‘investors’ who care less about our environment but more about their own economic bottom line.
Take for instance these complaints from ‘investors’:
We are in a dilemma because on the one hand we have been told to invest in recycling capacity and appeal for amendment of the law to accommodate those efforts, and on the other we now see NEMA ordering a ban without considering the fact there is a process in progress to harmonise the law with the reality on the ground,” complains Mr Naim Sabra, treasurer of plastics industry lobby the Uganda Plastic Manufacturers and Recyclers Association (UMPRA). We have established a plastic waste value chain that people are now fighting for plastic waste so much that it is now difficult for recyclers to find enough, he adds (source).”
So in Mr. Sabra’s logic, Government should allow the continued production of environmentally dangerous material just so that he can recycle it or what?
Sadly, it seems the Government seems swayed to agree with Mr. Sabra.









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