Ambassador David Pepple with some management and staff of Sovina Model Primary School, Elelenwo where he went on campaign against plastic waste on Friday

12-Year Old Ayomide Begins ‘Neighborhood 2 Neighborhood’ Plastic Hunt in PH

By Amaechi Okonkwo, Port Harcourt

Twelve year old Ambassador David Pepple, a Junior Secondary School student of Victory Christian College in Elelenwo, Port Harcourt, Nigeria has commenced his Neighbourhood-2-Neighbourhood Plastic Hunt/Campaign aimed at curbing plastic waste in the environment.

Pepple last week carried his campaign to his alma mata, Sovina Model Primary School, Elelenwo, where he challenged pupils of the school to support him in the campaign by simply donating their plastics waste to him for recycling.

He told the pupils that plastic wastes are the greatest waste challenge in the world, adding that as his contribution to tackling the challenge, he began a series of charity waste to wealth artistic creations, exhibitions, inventions, animations, campaigns and road shows. 

He said he had worked with local and international organisations which had hosted, collaborated and partnered with him and his foundation, Ambassador David Pepple and Ayomide and Ibitamuno Children Foundation, to solve this challenge.

He listed some of the organisations to include Society of Nigerian Artist (SNA), Wider Perspective Limited, Salvation Ministry, Alliance Francaise Port Harcourt, Port Harcourt Chambers of Commerce, Industries, Mines and Agriculture (PHCCIMA), Centre for Creative Development Strategies (CCDS) in collaboration with the Embassy of France in Nigeria.

“I am developing an app to help curb the indiscriminate dumping of plastic waste material in the environment and to enable people donate plastic waste to me. Another app I am developing is an emergency response app to curb incidents of child abuse in the society.

“I am an African mathematics ambassador, a charter class graduate of The Emerging Africa (THE) Leadership and Entrepreneurship Academy; I was also selected for the Cadbury Bournvita Tech Boot Camp 2021 edition.

“Few years ago I discovered that plastic waste is the greatest waste challenge in the world. To tackle the challenge, I started a series of charity waste to wealth artistic creations, exhibitions, inventions, animations, campaigns and road shows”.

I am here for my special programne tagged Neighborhood 2 Neighborhood Plastic Hunt/Campaign. The essence of this project is to create awareness, educate, inform and sensitize people on the importance of proper plastic waste management. I am also collecting plastic waste for recycling to enable me fund my charity initiatives, so far I have recycled over 3.5 tonnes of plastic waste and still counting”.

He reeled out to the pupils several statistics on plastics wastes and why they should support him in his fight to curb the global challenge of proliferation of plastics waste.

Plastic waste, Pepple said, constitute the greatest environmental waste challenge in the world today as only 9% of all plastic produced are recycled, adding that plastic waste is one of the major causes of global warning.

According to Pepple, who describes himself as a waste to wealth artist/recycler, bead maker, animator, child rights and environmental rights ambassador/advocate, inventor and philanthropist, every year up to 5 trillion disposable plastic bags are used, with 50% of the total in single use.

He said; “We throw away enough plastic to circle the earth four times every year. Plastic waste is responsible for killing over 1 million sea birds and other sea creatures. 

“Over 8.3 billion metric tonnes of plastic waste has gone into the oceans since 1950’s, most of this was generated in the last 20 years and only 23% has been recycled”.

On how to tackle plastic waste he proposed ‘waste segregation,’ which he explained would make for easy recycling at the appropriate place and with right method.

He also proposed the 3Rs in plastic waste management entailing ‘Reuse, Reduce and Recycle,’ explaining that ‘reuse’ involves where plastics can be used severally, ‘reduce’ means reducing consumption of a thing or using an environmental friendly alternative, while ‘recycle’ means turning what you have to other useful things.

He urged the pupils that plastics waste management is everybody’s business, saying “let’s secure our future; donate plastics to me to fund my charity initiatives”.

In her comment, Miss Queeneth Nwanekezie, head of administration, Sovina Model School, Elelenwo, Rivers State, described Master Pepple as very brave, adding that she admires him for that.

“He’s still a young child and at this age already looking at life this way and having this perception is very impressive and we are glad that he is doing this.

“Just like he said, he was our student who graduated from the primary section and through the years he was with us, he was an exceptional child so I’m not exactly surprised that he is doing this and trying to find a need and to solve it. To me that is what success is. This is not the first campaign he has being involved with. 

“Some years ago, he did something with Indomie that helped to raise money for medical assistance for his brother abroad and we were very impressed and happy with him. His younger brother had a health challenge and as a result of his campaign and several things he did the boy received some help. And today he is looking at plastics.

“And we all know that proliferation of plastic waste is a major problem because it doesn’t decompose and so constitute a lot of nuisance everywhere and then for him to go into this campaign, getting the plastics and sending them for recycling is helping to solve a global challenge.

“We really commend him for that and we pray for him as well that he will continue to increase in his endeavour, make a huge success and make a change in the world, make a change for himself and his family, as well. So we are very glad and we will continue to support him in any way we can”.

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