The Chemical Tide: Tracking the Toxic Lifecycle of Ghana’s Rivers
As of April 2026 , the environmental crisis in Ghana’s river basins has intensified, driven by record-high gold prices that have pushed artisanal mining to unprecedented levels. The following article synthesizes the current state of the Oti River and the shadowy economics of the chemicals destroying it. The Chemical Tide: Tracking the Toxic Lifecycle of Ghana’s Rivers Ghana, currently Africa's top gold producer, is grappling with a paradox: as global gold prices reached an all-time high of over $4,400 per ounce in late 2025, the country's most vital water bodies, including the Oti River, have faced a near-collapse of their ecological health. The Visible and Invisible Crisis For those living along the Oti River, the pollution is obvious. The water has turned a thick, "chocolate brown" due to extreme siltation . Mining activities churn up riverbeds, raising turbidity to levels that frequently shut down municipal water treatment plants, which are simply not ...