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Globally, around 2 billion tonnes of waste are produced annually, polluting waterways, filling cities, and littering vast areas, including Ghana. In Ghana, over 1.1 million tonnes of plastic waste are generated each year, with only about 5% being collected for recycling. Without intentional measures, the waste problem will worsen.
In December 1960, the Government of Ghana appointed a University Commission to advise it on the development of university education, in connection with the proposal to transform the University College of Ghana and the Kumasi College of Technology into an independent University of Ghana. [23]
This is a list of polytechnics institutions in Ghana. These institutions are not accredited degree granting institutions.
SMU Ghana was established in 2007 by KnowledgeWorkz Ltd - Ghana as Ghana's maiden Authorized Study centre of Sikkim Manipal University, India. It is Located at the Ring Road Central opposite Provident Towers in Accra. SMU Ghana Learning Centre offers bachelor's and master's degrees programs in the following departments:
The Wa Technical University (formerly Wa Polytechnic) [1] is a public tertiary institution in the Upper West Region of Ghana. [2] Program run are: Pharmacy technology / dispensing technology; Agricultural engineering; Mechanical engineering; Building technology / estate management; Industrial arts; Civil engineering; Information communication ...
The Ghana Society for Medical Physics is Ghana's representative body for all medical physicists in the country. The organization's purpose is to unite and support its members in Ghana. [1] It was set up in January 2011 to advance the use of principles of physics in medicine. The Society is the governing body for all medical physicists in Ghana ...
Zenith University College is a privately owned university in Ghana established in December 2001. [1] At first Zenith was a tutorial college for some foreign universities. [2] Zenith opened as a tertiary educational institution in November 2005, and was accredited to offer diploma, undergraduate and postgraduate programmes in Ghana. [1]
In 1963, the NRC merged with the former Ghana Academy of Sciences, a statutory learned society. Following a review in 1966, the academy was reconstituted into, essentially, its original component bodies, namely a national research organization redesignated the CSIR and a learned Society, designated the Ghana Academy of Arts and Sciences. [2]