Tag: climate change

  • When climate change comes knocking: The Benin City example

    When climate change comes knocking: The Benin City example

    Since the coming together of countries to chart a path for global climate in 2015, the topic of climate change has gained much relevance and the spotlight in national discussions. Nigeria, who happens to be a signatory to this contract did not pay the due attention to implementing the resolutions met at the conference until climate change came knocking at the borders of the country. The incidents of recurrent flooding, typhoons and evident temperature increase are fast becoming a norm in the country. This has pushed the government and policy makers to pay the necessary attention to climate action in the past months. This saw Nigeria been represented by a train of delegates headed by the Honourable minister of state for the environment , Ibrahim Usman Jibril in COP23 that was held in Bonn, Germany last year November. The president alongside key players in the country politics were also participants in the One planet summit hosted in Paris, France a month after. These activities of the government has put ‘climate stories’ in the league of main stream issues in the country but the implementation of the Paris agreement of 2015 still remains an uncompleted task leaving the citizens at the mercy of climate change.

    A perfect case study of this theme is Benin City. Benin City, the capital of Edo state is an ancient town globally known for its dexterity in bronze casting and home to the most revered royalty in Africa- Oba of Benin. It is the fourth largest city in Nigeria with its population equaling that of Luxembourg, Cape Verde and Seychelles put together. The prevalence of flooding in this elephantine city can be easily attributed to its high greenhouse gas emission and carbon usage.  Benin City plays host to the International center for bronze casting that attracts millions of tourists across the world. This monument unfortunately contributes a large quota to the high carbon emission in the Niger Delta region. Artisans make use of coal at high temperature to mold and cast sculptures. Speaking with Chris, a sculptor in Igun, He clearly spelt out the tedious process involved in bronze sculpturing. He explained that coal is used to generate heat for melting the wax used in carving the bronze to desirable shapes and structures. He even joked that there is no fair person in Igun because the heat generated does a lot of damage to the skin of the artisans. He further stated that the Governor of the state promised to provide ultra-modern facilities that would aid cheap, clean and timely bronze artefact production but they insisted on sticking to the archaic method claiming it was passed to them by their forefathers and must be transmitted to their children without adulteration from the westerners.

    This high level of carbon emission has left Benin City stranded with endless flooding when it rains which has led to an inevitable loss of lives and properties, devastating health effects, traffic congestion, relocation of industries and manpower, cut-off in power supply and a low internally generated revenue (IGR). In recent times, Benin residents have had unforgettable experiences that would not be quick to erase from their memory such as the massive flooding that occurred on Saturday 7th October, 2017, sacking thousands from their homes and causing millions of naira in damages to properties. Amongst the worst affected places was the Edo State headquarters of the Independent National Electoral Commission in Benin City. A section of the building’s perimeter fencing collapsed after two hours of heavy downpour, pushing in muddy waters inundated vehicles, files, computers and card reading machines. Another incident was when the landlords of Anigboro Street and its environs in Egor Local Government Area of Benin city sent a Save Our Soul (SOS) to the state governor, Mr. Godwin Obaseki, in August 2017 appealing to him to come to their aid before their houses and property were swept away by flood in the area.

    The residents of Uhunmwode community in Benin City are another set of people with a first-hand experience of climate variability especially with regard to food crop production which is a common sight in the area. Farmers are beginning to notice the impacts of climate variability on their food crop production. They found out that climate variability/change has caused poor crop yields, reduced soil fertility, increased flood, poverty and food shortage. Food crop agriculture in Uhunmwode does not only provide food for the inhabitants of the area, but also for nearby local government areas and cities. However, the recent changes in patterns of climate/weather elements are a huge challenge to food crop production in the area. For the crop farmers in the community, climate has greatly varied over recent years with rainfall decreasing and air temperature increasing. This combination is not in any way healthy for crop production, especially for farmers who are dependent on rain for their farming, as in the Uhunmwode community. Also, onset of rain in the area, according to the farmers has shifted. This also in no small measure will adversely affect food crop production, as adjustment may be difficult, especially where what will happen the next farming season is not known.

    These incidents have seen the birth of organisations that are geared towards sustainable development and climate justice in the mega city. A vivid example is the Borokinni Joshua Initiative, a non-profit that centers on climate action. They flagged a campaign in Benin City tagged #SafeClimate4Africa in collaboration with the Nigeria society of Victoria (NSV). The campaign featured awareness-raising, school tours and round table discussions. The team of five visited Patricia Private School (Ikpoba hill) and Torch Bearers Academy (Ikhueniro), in November 2017 to sensitise and intimate the staffs and students of these institutions on climate change which spread across various topics such as; Carbon pricing, Mitigation and Adaptation of cities, Greenhouse gases, deforestation among others. They aired their views on radio stations and online websites, stressing the role of Benin residents in ensuring a safe climate for all. Their focus lies strongly on improving education, awareness-raising and human and institutional capacity on climate change mitigation, adaptation, impact reduction and early warning.

    • Borokinni, a climate activist and final year student of the University of Benin, writes from Benin City.

     

  • Buhari seeks global support on climate change

    Buhari seeks global support on climate change

    President Muhammadu Buhari on Tuesday in Paris, France, appealed to the international community to support Nigeria’s commitment to reducing the negative effects of climate change.

    In a submission to the One Planet Summit attended by over 60 Heads of State and Governments, as well as representatives of non-governmental and private organisations, the President said “we cannot implement our Nationally Determined Contribution without adequate financial, technical and capacity building support from the developed countries.

    “Since the adoption of the Paris Agreement, we have been strengthening our national efforts towards the implementation of the Agreement and the Marrakech Call for Action and Nigeria had already ratified the Paris Agreement in May 2017.”

    In a statement issued by his Special Adviser on Media and Publicity, Femi Adesina, the President, however, said the country’s “Nationally Determined Contribution to reduce our emission by 20 per cent by 2020 and 40 per cent by 2030 cannot be attained alone.

    “Having just come out of recession we are under no illusion of the challenges that we face in Nigeria,” he added.

     

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  • ‘Climate change may affect food produce in 2018’ – FADAMA AF

    The Niger State Fadama III Additional Financing has complained that the changing rainfall pattern caused by climate change this year is having a negative impact on agriculture in the state and the country in general.

    The State Coordinator, Engineer Aliyu Usman Kutigi, expressed fear that this may affect the availability of food produce in 2018, unless the federal government look into ways of turning the challenges posed by climate changes into opportunities.

    Speaking at the two-day training workshop for facilitators, desk officers and farmers in Minna on climate change in conjunction with Yamtokas Nigeria Limited, Kutigi urged farmers and relevant stakeholders in the agricultural sector of the country to turn challenges posed by climate change to boost agriculture and agricultural production in the nation.

    Kutigi, who was represented by the Community Development Officer, Alhaji Abubakar Ndaguye, explained that acquiring knowledge on climate change by farmers is very crucial, adding that the knowledge when put to use improve their agricultural productivity for national sustainable development .

    The coordinator said the workshop with the theme ‘Turning Challenges into Opportunities for Improved Rice and Sorghum production’, was organised for relevant stakeholders in Niger State out of the desire to reposition agriculture, especially under the Fadama II AF Rice and Sorghum value chain for greater positive impact on the state economy.

    “The major objective is for participants to understand the effect of climate change in agricultural production and its challenges, with the intention of turning those challenges into opportunities. The major focus and priority areas of the FADAMA III AF is adding value and supporting all activities under the rice and sorghum value chains in the state.”

    Presenting his paper, Dr. Suleiman Mohammed of the Department of Geography in the Federal University of Technology, Minna, told the participants that climate change could be natural or man-made; lamenting that the activities of man was the major factor responsible for climate change, which cannot be reversed.

    Earlier, the Director of Yamtokas Nigeria Limited said the workshop was organised by the Fadama Project III and his organisation to build the capacity of staff to update them on current global best practice and equip participants with basic knowledge on climate change and how it affects agric and agricultural production.

  • “We have projected IIBC beyond coastal erosion”

    “We have projected IIBC beyond coastal erosion”

    Land reclamation is now on the rise, especially in coastal cities. But the threat posed by climate change, coastal development is now a source of concern to stakeholders in the environment sector. The managing director of ChannelDrill Resources Limited, Mr. Olufemi Akioye, whose firm recently commenced reclamation of a 200 hectare on the Lekki lagoon for development of Imperial International Business City, however allays fears of safety of development on land reclaimed from the lagoon. Akioye spoke with select media houses. MUYIWA LUCAS was there. Excerpts:
     
    Weather events of the past few weeks such as flooding, hurricane and earthquakes have been frightening and there are concerns especially for coastal developments. What are your fears as a developer?
    My fears is not that of coastal developers alone, but a global problem that is now our reality. Bringing it back, home developers must spend money on research because investments in bricks and mortal is a long term investment and people that make these investment wants to give it as an inheritance to their children, so what sort of developer will we be if in 10 years our developments start having serious problems and investors start taking us to court.
    Unfortunately the major reasons for the floods we have experienced recently is more of man-made than that of a natural occurrence and we have refused to take responsibility for that. By man-made I mean the way we block our drainage and canals with dirt’s and waste.  At Chaneldrill, we have no fear whatsoever for our coastal development because we have spent a lot of time, energy and money to engage one of the best marine consultants in the world and we know what is going to happened within our coastal lines for the next 75 years. Our developments are designed to make sure that it is not affected negatively by these unavoidable future occurrence.  It’s a mazing that when we stared people said we are doing too know, now they have seen a glimpse of what is coming.
     
    There are no doubts any longer that climate change is real. How much precaution are you taking on your new city development?
    The issue of climate change is more real than people think, it is also not a European, Asia or an American problem, it is a global issue. The lagoon water level will rise by almost two metres in the next 15-20 years- this is the reality and the government can’t stop it because it is due to the thermal expansion caused by warming of the ocean, since water expands as it warms and increased melting of land-based ice, such as glaciers and ice sheets.
    Do you know that Lagos state actually commissioned an Associate Professor from Hydraulics Research Institute, Egypt “Ahmed Sayed Mohamed Ahmed” to do a hydrodynamic modelling of Lagos and Lekki lagoons? This means that even the state is taking steps to make sure Lagos is way ahead of it and they have shown that they are taking this global threat seriously; an example of that is the new Freedom Road in Lekki that was just finished, and you can see that it is well above all the developments around it.
    So, we, as developers of the Imperial International Business City (IIBC), have taking the best precaution that can be taken based on the recommendation of our marine consultants, Messer Royal HaskoningDHV of Holland and they are one of the best the in world.  They have recommended that because of the inescapable global sea level rise that will continue to rise Imperial International Business City (IIBC) must be reclaimed at 3.5m above sea level and that is exactly what we are doing. So after a life time settlement of the reclamation IIBC will still stand at about 2.9 above sea level. Therefore investors and future land owners of IIBC can be rest assured that their investment is safe. We call it IIBC 75 years flood free strategy and I can assure you that out of all other developments along the Lagos coastal line, at least the ones that we have seen, it is only IIBC and another one on the ocean that can guarantee this safety.
     
    There are fears that the effect of dredging or sand filling in a place has negative impact on other places. To what extent is this true?
    This can only be true if it is not done properly or if it is done without any form of regulation. The present Lagos State administration has regulated all forms of sand taking from dredging to reclamation/sandfilling to sand stock piling. Do you know that you must now do an Environmental Impact Assessment and it must be approved by the Lagos State Government before you can take a grain of sand for stock piling in Lagos State?
    The last administration started the regulations and this present government has taking it to another level. Do you know that people that use to just take sand around Badore and Co are no longer there? In fact it is now so regulated that you can only use some particular type of dredger in some areas. Do you also know that over 60 per cent of the world/ cities that people dwell all around the world are reclaimed? Reclamation n Lagos is well regulated so there is nothing to be scared of.
     
    Your project, the IIBC is one of the coastal developments that are just coming up. What assurance do you have for investors that their investment will be safe?
    IIBC is being reclaimed at over three meters above sea level and we have the best team of global consultants that has ever worked together on any project in Africa. Our reclamation level guarantees investors a 75 years flood free city and all our consultants our top 20 global rating. When our marine consultants said our reclamation height must be above 3meter, I said no way because like most developers I was looking at the cost and how much we will have to sell the land and if the public will be able to pay and also at our return on investment (ROI).
    But they said if we don’t accept their recommendations they will ask that we terminate the contract because when the flood comes and it will come, they don’t want their company name to be associated with such bad image. All the remaining consultants said the same thing. So these world class firms that we have engaged care more about the name and reputation of their firms than money and we are all determined to do the right thing. That is the IIBC quality assurance 
     
    Analysts are saying that these events like the flooding that happened in some parts of Lagos on June 8 this year will have negative impact on property prices. What are your thoughts on this?
    The impact will be negative to some property prices and positive to others. Developments that are at least three metres above sea level will enjoy positive impact while others below that might not. Personally, I will advise any one that is building anywhere within the Lagos Island, Victoria Island, Ikoyi and most especially within the lekki axis to make sure that their foundation is at least 2.5-3m above sea level and if it is a reclamation project, it must be about that same height, unless we want to start having 10-15meters underground drainage like Japan or have an automatic pumping stations at designated area within estates; these pumping stations pumps water to canals that leads to the lagoon or the ocean. That’s the Dutch model and they are well below sea level. Personally, I think that the last June 8 incident is a wakeup call and we must all do the needful; we the citizens have a lot to do, all hands must be on deck for these one. We have to stop dumping dirt in our canals and drainages- that is not the fault of government, it’s something we must do.   
     
     
    Why should an investor put his money in IIBC and not in the other developments; what different propositions are you making?
    One of our major selling point is our reclamation height, IIBC is also going to be an eco-friendly  self-sustaining smart city; we have the best consultants ever assembled to work on any project in Africa. As I said earlier, no other project in Africa has a better team than us. We didn’t do this because we just want to have the bragging right, even though we do have that; we did it because we want this consultants that has worked on such smart and green cities like Mazda City  in AbuDhabi;  Songdo Business  City  in  South Korea; among others to come  and  do the same in Lagos. We have enjoyed unbelievable help and encouragement from the Lagos state Government. Rest assured in the next few years IIBC will be the bench mark for future city development in Africa, universities will use IIBC as a case studies. Actually my job was made easy because I have the best principal ever, someone who is ready to have a thin profit margin If that’s  what it takes to fulfill his vison, that is  Oba Saheed Ademola Elegushi and as if that wasn’t enough am also lucky to have a chairman that understand the place of posterity- Mr Emeka Ndu. So IIBC is the real deal.
  • Ita-Giwa holds forum on climate change

    Ita-Giwa holds forum on climate change

    The Chairman of the Environment Committee of the 2014 National Conference and leader of Seagull Carnival Band, Senator Florence Ita-Giwa, has received support from Heritage Bank and the Nigeria Maritime and Safety Agency (NIMASA) to stage a public enlightenment forum on climate change.

    The discourse with the theme, Climate Change: A Time for Action is scheduled to hold on Sunday, September 10, 2017 at the Ballroom of the Oriental Hotel in Lagos.

    The Senator representing Bayelsa East Senatorial district,  Ben Murray-Bruce, will be the special guest of honour, while environmental activist, and chairman of the Nigeria Conservation Foundation (NCF) committee on awareness and fund raising, Desmond Majekodunmi, will deliver a keynote address.

    Tracing the history of her commitment to environmental matters, Ita-Giwa said she knew very little about the devastation of the environment until she was given the responsibility to chair the committee on environment during the 2014 National Conference.

    She said: “I had the privilege of working with many academics and seasoned environmental activists from the civil society. I humbled myself to learn quickly from them.”

    Ita-Giwa added that she was happy when Cross River State governor, Prof. Ben Ayade, chose climate change as the theme for the 2016/2017 carnival in the state.

    The former presidential aide added: “It is easy to conclude that the street parade and the dance is all there is to the carnival, but that is far from the truth. There is fierce competition among the competing bands. What we have decided to do is to bring home salient messages on climate change as projected by my band, the Seagull Band.”

    According to her, the band has apparently adopted the advocacy for action on climate change, thereby disseminating the message to a wider audience through lecture and stage presentation to a discerning audience.
    Speaking further, she pointed out that “Our carnival band shall also be performing our carnival-winning display tagged ‘Green Revolution’  at the event, in addition to special guest musical performance by leading Nigerian entertainers.”

    She continued: “In 2016, I did not win because the technology that I designed failed. We had created caricatures of world leaders and they were to come up but the technology failed because the generator was faulty and I came second. I was so ashamed of myself, that how can I be chair of the environmental committee, know so much and kind of failed? The carnival is fiercely competitive. First, I had to go and look into that technology that failed and because I am not allowed to do what I did last year, I had to look at new areas.”

    Her theme then was Save the World and what was uppermost on her mind was how to mitigate the effect of climate change. “So we had to address issues like volcano and we thought that it was the most important thing. So, we had to create a volcano king and in the carnival you have the king and the queen. The day for these two is special and no other thing happens on that day. It is the day that you are on stage and the king is supposed to tell your story. The volcano king is to tell the story of volcanoes, thunder storms, lightening and you have to create the costume that would make that happen. You have to create the effects on stage to make it very real and we got this and people could not believe it,” Ita Giwa recalled.

    She added: “We were looking for what would happen in a forest that has not been affected by man; no deforestation, damaging or afforestation and all that. If you are deforesting, you also have to afforest, which we don’t do. We now created what a normal forest would be like. At that time, I was looking for what my Forest Queen would look like. I then went to this supermarket and while I was upstairs in the owner’s office, I saw a painting on his wall and it caught my attention. There I found what my Forest Queen would look like and I called a photographer who lives in South Africa. He is a deep person and I called him to design something for me.

    “The painting had a being in the forest; the head is a woman, like a mother, and it had very green vegetation around her. It was uninterrupted, not touched, not damaged by anything and she is standing there and in one hand she is carrying corn and in another hand, she is carrying something like apple. At her back is a nice palm tree not damaged by man; lots of grass around her and on top of her. You find all the branches overgrown up till her hair and there are lovely birds, one of them perching on her,” she enthused. “The trees cannot be mobile, so we had human beings as trees. They would be doing a 12 kilometre walk. I also had to do a song and we put together KCEEs song, to make una leave the forest alone.”

    The memorable event at which guests will be entertained in an unusual manner and informed in a convivial atmosphere is expected to be a programme that will encourage Nigerians to appreciate environmental issues and climate change.

     

  • Paying for our climate: Nigeria should do more on financing climate goals

    Paying for our climate: Nigeria should do more on financing climate goals

    Over the next 40 years, measures to adapt to climate change already built into the climate system could gulp between $0.7billion and $1.2billion each year, nearing $50billion in total according to the World Bank. While estimates of the level of investment needed by developing countries such as Nigeria varies considerably, Kristen Jack, formerly manager of “Cities and Climate Change” advisory teams at “Adam Smith International’s Nigerian Infrastructure Advisory Facility suggests that these may lie between $180 – $450 billion per year for mitigation and $30 – $100 billion per year for adaptation. To cope with this, Nigeria must exploit alternative funding means.

    Climate finance, as the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) defines it, refers to local, national or transnational financing which may be drawn from various sources of financing – and could be public, private or alternative sources is vital in making significant progress towards climate objectives.

    It often requires large-scale infrastructure and the engagement of large segments of the populations, both of which can require high level of investment. These objectives Mitigation i.e. to limit or reduce emissions of greenhouse gases (GHGs), gases that trap heat in the atmosphere such as carbon dioxide to the atmosphere to reduce the risks and hazards of climate change; and/or Adaptation i.e. to help communities, societies and economies adapt to the adverse impacts of climate change.

    International / Multilateral Funding

    Till date, Nigeria has leveraged $63 million of multilateral funds for climate change projects. This might sound like a lot but the figure according to “Adam Smith International” is broadly equal to that of Rwanda, a country whose population is about 7 percent of Nigeria´s; and just over a tenth of the funding okayed for South Africa.

    Nigeria, unlike a good number of fellow developing nations has met limited success re: accessing available international resources to help meet these needs. This, according to Elijah Awojuola of the Department of Climate Change at the Federal Ministry of Environment is a result of “a lack of understanding of climate finance funding opportunities; difficulties in crafting concept notes and applications that reflect the requirements of providers; and challenges in coordinating activities across the government so as to present a coherent vision of Nigeria’s climate finance priorities…”.

    Local Financing Initiatives

    While much of Nigeria´s inadequate climate financing has been supported by multilateral funding, worthy of mention is that on the local scene some progress has been recorded (ie by the Nigerian government) in the last few years.

    Some of these initiatives according to Mr. Awojuola include the “Clean Technology Fund” which is supporting the development of transformative public transport schemes in the three main economic and political cities of Lagos, Kano and Abuja. Another is the pioneering Climate Finance Unit, also established by the Department of Climate Change and whose task is to enhance knowledge and information on opportunities for climate finance.

    Commitment of the Buhari Administration

    The Nigerian President, Muhammadu Buhari has assured of the country´s resolve to implement policies aimed at addressing climate change. In a report monitored by Business Day (Nigeria), he states thus, “for us in Nigeria, the larger dimension of the challenge goes beyond emission rights. Survival rights are also at stake”. Speaking further he highlights increases in use of climate smart agriculture and diversification of our energy mix through renewable and efficient gas power as part of progress made.

    President Buhari also lamented the current situation re: the Lake Chad Basin which according to him has shrunk to a mere 10 per cent of its original size thus affecting the livelihood of over five million people.

    However to what extent has the government of the day been able to match its words with actions?

     

    The Ogoni Clean up

    Source: Logbaby Global Ventures Limited

    While efforts to develop a cross-cutting project concept to support the climate resilience of some of Nigeria’s poorest and most vulnerable citizens has begun, there is still a lot left to be done – prominent among which includes the clean up of Ogoni Land, a community in the oil-rich Niger-Delta devastated by extensive pollution of their environment owing to massive oil spills among others.

    Fourteen months after the launch of the much talked about Ogoni clean up, which according to UNEP estimates will take 30 years by Nigeria´s Vice President, Professor Yomi Osinbajo, the extensive oil spills and antecedent damages on the environment of the Ogoni communities remain largely untouched. Since the launch of the clean up according to a Vanguard Newspapers report, a governing council and trust fund have been set up, and a project coordinator appointed, yet no equipment has been moved to the sites, residents say.

    The UNEP report on the Ogoni oil spill mentions that before any clean-up of the oil impact environment is done the Ogoni people be provided with potable water as their sources of drinking water is contaminated 900 times above what the World Health Organisation (WHO) considers pollution.

     

    Call to Action

    Nigeria must considerably expand financing sources locally to cover the gaps occasioned by the inadequacy of multilateral funding inflow. This should be addressed at each level of the three tiers of government. Each of these tiers must be mandated to allocate substantial portions of their share of the Sovereign Wealth Fund (founded in 2011 to replace the scrapped Excess Crude Account for the purpose of managing and investing these funds on behalf of government) as well as statutory monthly allocations towards financing the climate – both in joint and single relevant ventures.

    The country must also as a matter of policy, tax the big oil majors who through their harmful activities such as gas flaring continue to emit GHGs with reckless abandon thereby leaving a trail of devastation in the immediate communities where they operate.

     

  • Climate Change: Conservation International meets NASS Clerks on mitigation

    Conservation International (CI) has pledged to assist Nigeria against climate change impacts and better conserve the nation’s environment.

    The international organization, during an interactive session with Clerks of Committees of the National Assembly (NASS) on Environment, Ecology, Water Resources and Transportation, said preservation of the country’s natural habitat became important to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

     

    African Regional Head of CI, Michael O’brian-Onyeka, who partnered Human Rights Advancement Development and Advocacy Centre (HURIDAC), explained that political leaders have significant role to play by creating enabling environment and legislations required to realize the CI set objectives for the country.

    While CI expressed concern at the failure of the country to value the potentials of its natural resources, it however disclosed its readiness to assist the country in carrying out a survey of the nation’s natural capital.

    The CI requested for technical supports for legislative oversights in addition to awareness campaign for communities to appreciate environmental interventions. O’brian-Onyeka added that challenges by the legislative bureaucrats were not insurmountable for CI.

    Noting that Nigeria stand to benefit immensely from CI’s collaboration, he said : “No promises made at this stage, we don’t want to come here with preconceptions, we are here to hear about the challenges and they have listed in order of importance the key list of what they want.

    “We are taking that back look at the list and see what our capacity is and communicate that back to them, we don’t want to create a wring impression here.

    “But honestly, I think we can do all the things they raised because they are critical, the natural capital mapping, the South-South exchange, we have an agreement with Costa Rica to bring legislators.

    “We have done so many countries and it is our belief that Nigeria should benefit from it”.

    The Clerks listed challenges of funding for execution of environment – related policies as well as indifferent attitude of the people to Climate change.

    The Clerks also complained on lack of legislations capable of driving environmental issues.

  • Paying For Our Climate: How much is too much?

    Paying For Our Climate: How much is too much?

    By Eyitayo A. Oyelowo

    Robert Pindyck, a professor of economics and finance at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, says that attempts to make decisions about climate change based on a cost-benefit analysis are doomed to fail because both costs and benefits are uncertain.

    “All we can do is speculate. We don’t really know the costs and we don’t really know the benefits, however, the chance of a catastrophic outcome should be enough to motivate investment to avert climate change even in the face of uncertainty, just as people buy health insurance without knowing if it will pay off.”

    Developing countries are facing a tough time in dealing with the defining challenge of our time- Climate change. Millions of lives in Africa, especially those of countries in the Horn including Ethiopia, Somalia, Eritrea and Djibouti have been subjected to severe environmental issues arising from climate change such as extreme drought and famine. In response to the situation, Ethiopia has particularly taken various steps towards managing the situation through various climate initiatives.

    Basically, climate change, also called global warming, refers to the rise in average surface temperatures on Earth through the release of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases into the air.

    The gases trap heat within the atmosphere, which can have a range of effects on ecosystems, including rising sea levels, severe weather events, and droughts that render landscapes more susceptible to wildfires.

    Climate financing entails the utilization of funds from local, national or transnational sources which may be drawn from public, private and other alternative sources of finance. It is geared towards reducing carbon emissions, the main contributor to climate change.

    But here’s a less asked and probably more important question: How much are we actually willing to pay to do something about it? When economists and policymakers want to assess the benefits of an environmental policy, they often turn to the concept of “willingness to pay.”

    Major reports are concluding that stabilizing greenhouse-gas emissions to avoid catastrophic climate change is possible and can be done at a relatively low cost. But the details of the reports make it clear that when you factor in real-world issues—such as delays in developing and implementing technology and policy—the cost of solving climate change gets much higher. Switching from fossil fuels to low-carbon sources of energy will cost about $44 trillion between now and 2050, according to a report released by the International Energy Agency.

    That sounds like a lot of money, but the report also concludes that the switch to low-carbon technologies such as solar power—together with anticipated improvements in efficiency—will bring huge savings from reduced fossil-fuel consumption.

    Recently, there has been a delay in funds from the Climate Vulnerability Forum (CVF) which met in Paris in 2015. Also, the United State, a major contributor to Climate financing has announced its decision to withdraw from the Paris climate accord as well as stop contributing to the Green Climate Fund- a unique global initiative to respond to climate change by investing into low-emission and climate-resilient development.

    Source: Green Climate Fund

    Green Climate Fund was established by 194 governments to limit or reduce greenhouse gas emissions in developing countries, and to help adapt vulnerable societies to the unavoidable impacts of climate change. Given the urgency and seriousness of the challenge, the Fund is mandated to make an ambitious contribution to the united global response to climate change.

    However, the withdrawal of the United State from contributing to GCF will be more challenging to Countries prone to massive flooding, long drought and extreme weather that scientists have linked to a changing climate. Although several reasons were attributed to the decision, nonetheless, it is highly imperative to sustain climate financing as this will go a long way in ensuring a peaceful resolution of problems associated with climate change.

    These environmental hazards are not peculiar to human beings alone but to animals both on land and in water as well as plants. Natural habitats are destroyed. I could remember as a child growing up in Nigeria, I saw Ducks walk the streets, in fact they were such a beauty to behold especially the ducklings. But in the last ten years, these beautiful birds are only seen in few places.

    Possibly they have gone into extinction and the present generation only gets to see them in text books. Am afraid these birds are going into extinction as a result of a change in their natural habitats. Drought is taking over and ducks are referred to as Waterfowl as they thrive in a pond or body of water large enough for them to swim in or at least submerge their head and shake water over their bodies.

    Climate change is not peculiar to a certain region or country it’s a global issue which requires collective effort to combat. In an ancient Indian proverb “we did not inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrowed it from our children”. So combating climate change requires all hands on deck.

    Financing climate change is the major challenge of Africa. Majority of the countries affected by climate change often address the problem with funds from private investors, international donors or support from developed countries. The climate fund from the Paris agreement in 2015 is yet to be remitted to affected countries. This situation calls for a critical appraisal of dangers inherent in lack of climate financing to threat prone areas.

    The numerous conditions attached to climate funds make them difficult to access, while countries in the continent are crying for funding, the developed countries are claiming that they are supporting the continent financially to tackle the challenge. We need this environmental fund so much to meet the challenges of climate change.

    In actual sense, a failure to invest in taking care of our climate will inadvertently lead to food insecurity and the uninhabitable environment. As that occurs, there will also be a large increase in the movement of refugees.

    For instance, a large number of women and children in Ethiopia find it difficult to cope with Climate changes in their daily life, they are forced to be separated from their husbands with their children. Little wonder, statistics offered by the United Nations in 2015 shows that 10% of refugees from the horn of Africa today are basically climate refugees.

    Also, in certain parts of Ethiopia, the condition of Climate is worsened by the consumption of fossil fuels and emission from the greenhouse gases and according to an Oxfam’s report in 2016, 85% of the country’s population is dependent on Agriculture.

    Source: Jijiga -January 2015

     

    Ethiopia ranks 10th in the list of countries most at risk from climate change in 2014, according to the Climate Change Vulnerability Index, prepared by Maplecroft. The low-level of development and dependence on agriculture are the main reasons for this vulnerability. Consequently, Ethiopian wildlife and farmlands are also affected by environmental degradation and harsh climate.

    Besides, unsanitary approach to waste disposal creates global crises because it does not just affects the population of the country involved but our own very dear ecological system.

    To combat climate change, countries around the world would have to acknowledge climate financing as very essential. Although actual costs can’t be predicted with precision, cost estimates like the ones from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and International Energy Agency do have an important role: they can tell policymakers what to focus on. Climate negotiators have known for some time that acting quickly is important, and reports make this even clear by showing just how much delays can add to costs.

    To achieve sustainable results from climate financing, there is need to take cognizance of mitigation and adaptation for affected areas. Efforts should be made to mitigate the overall effects of climate change and people should also be assisted in building the needed resilience to adapt to changing climatic conditions as the case may be.

    Government establishments should also increase their level of commitment to climate financing and protection so as to cover for the adaptation gaps that have affected the capacity of individuals to cope with climate change over the years. This could be done by funding detailed research projects on climate change so as to better enlighten on effective environmental governance.

    There should be a consistent drive to transcend from current state to a level of low-carbon economy and clean energy. In addition, non-governmental organizations and interest groups should also intensify the advocacy for climate financing towards a clean energy revolution.

    Eyitayo A. Oyelowo is a Journalist and a Climate Justice Advocate in Nigeria.
    oyelowoeyitayoa@yahoo.com

  • Renewable energy: Roadmap for addressing climate change

    Renewable energy: Roadmap for addressing climate change

    At a time power crisis becomes unbearable, clean energy, otherwise known as renewable energy remains the main solution to tackling the intractable problem of unreliable national grid in the country.

    Of course, it bears stating the fact that fossil energy sources such as oil and gas are extensively exploited in Nigeria, most are exported or wasted through leakages or flaring according to the African Development Bank (AfDB) just as the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IIPCC) further asserts that burning of fossil fuel and the attendant increase in GhG emissions fuels global warming.

    Impact of gas flaring

    At 17.2 billion metric-cube of natural gas per year along with crude oil exploration, the Niger Delta accounts for 40% of the gas flared in Africa every year, according to Anslem Ajugwo of the Department of Haematology, Madonna University, Elele.

    Gas flaring, is explained as the venting of gas without burning by scientists. It releases methane, which together with CO2 constitutes an estimated 80% of global warming.

    Sea level rise

    A direct consequence of climate change, sea level rise has continued to cause extensive devastation in states across the country. Recently, loss of lives in Niger state arising from sweeping floods was reported. Similar occurrences have also left a trail of destruction in other states notably Lagos, Rivers and Oyo.

    Power cuts: Regular feature in Nigeria´s power sector

    With an estimated 184 million inhabitants according to the World Bank, Nigeria generates slightly above 4,000 megawatts of power. To put this into further context, South Africa with an estimated population of 82 million generates 34,000 megawatts according to ESKOM, the country´s electricity public utility body.

    Recently, Senator Mustapha Bukar (APC, Katsina North) who doubles as Deputy Chairman, Senate Committee on Power, National Assembly expressed pessimism on the chances of resolving the ugly power situation any time soon.

    He observed that an installed power generation capacity of over 12,000 megawatts notwithstanding, the country has only been able to achieve 4,000 megawatts at any time.

    While lamenting the inefficiency in the system, he said: “Nigeria has an installed capacity of 12,522 Megawatts of power, non-available capacity of 5,300; non-operational capacity of 3,180; meaning the amount…available is just over 4,000 Megawatts out of 12,500.”

    He further added, “We have transmission loss of 228, a distribution loss of 447 Megawatts; at the end of the day, only 3,800 Megawatts reach the consumer. And we have commercial loss of more than 36 percent.”

     

    Solar Panels installed in Edo state, Nigeria as part of a rural electrification project. Photo: courtesy of Quartz Africa

     

    Roadmap

    The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) identifies two response templates to climate change viz: Mitigation of climate change by reducing GHG emissions and Adaptation to the impacts of climate change. Clean energy should be extensively exploited in order to mitigate the effects of climate change as well as reduce power deficits in the country.

    With 17% of Nigeria´s population completely out of the insufficient national grid, the expansion of off-grid power solutions is even more expedient. Fortunately, generating electricity from renewables and clean energy sources like solar, wind and biogas is increasingly cheaper and readily available.

    Solar can bridge major energy deficits in rural areas and particularly in northern Nigeria where comparative favourable weather conditions exist.

    According to the Independent Energy Watch Initiative, the country receives abundant sunshine all year round ranging from 6.70kwh/m2/day of horizontal solar radiation in Borno State to as high as 6.07/kwh/m2/d in the Federal Capital Territory. Furthermore and as Derek Markham of Renewable Energy World observes, another area with big potential is off-grid solar and battery storage for people that don’t have grid power.

    Government renewable energy policy

    Although favourable conditions exist in the country, Nigeria has thus far attracted only little investment. The country has recently introduced reforms aimed at opening up the sector. Mr Nico Tyabji, Climatescope Africa Coordinator, Bloomberg New Energy Finance, in an interview in one of the dailies stated that “apart from the feed-in tariff, Nigeria has a range of policies – from renewable energy targets to soft loans to a biofuels blending mandate to encourage renewables. The problem is that many of them aren’t operational. So the government has a job to do to clarify to the private sector exactly how these things work and whether they’re in force yet, because at the moment there’s a lot of confusion.”

    Call to action

    Beside environmental benefits, clean energy solutions stand to devolve the single grid system, leading to efficiency and sufficiency. This is potentially a win-win situation; hence government must show political will as the enabler to see that Nigeria embraces the clean energy revolution.

  • UK Envoy worried over carbon emissions in Nigeria

    UK Envoy worried over carbon emissions in Nigeria

    • Says Climate Change will drop Nigeria’s GDP to 30 per cent by 2050

    United Kingdom High Commission to Nigeria has expressed concerns over the influence of carbon emissions in Nigeria due to climate change impact.

    Deputy High Commissioner to Nigeria, Harriet Thompson during the event to commemorate World Environment Day (WED), organised by the Federal Ministry of Environment in Abuja advised the country to strive and protect the environment to achieve sustainable development.

    The 2017 WED was themed, “Connecting with nature.” She noted that even though the country is endowed with good vegetation and human resources, “there are challenges about getting right-security, transport access, and facilities and protecting the nature will be key to sustaining it. As a tourist attraction -no one will want to come and see a decayed broken landscape.”

    While quoting the 2011 Climate Change Vulnerability Index (CCVI), Thompson said the country could lose Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of between 6 per cent and 30 per cent by 2050 due to climate change. She further estimated the loss to an amount between $100 to 460 billion.

    “Agriculture and farming, which are the key focus for economic development in Nigeria, give daily opportunity to connect with nature. Nigeria’s focus on rebuilding its agricultural capacity growth would help to provide more employment and earning opportunities .“For 2017, theme could not have come to at a better time than this-

    “For 2017, the theme could not have come at a better time than this, time to rethink just how much time spend ‘in nature’, how much nature nourishes ‎us daily and throughout our lives.

    “Around the globe, billions are fed by nature itself, from the dependence on natural water to the fertile soils in the grounds in which our food are grown. Everyone and everything eat from the surplus of the ground.Unfortunately, those down the food chain are the first to suffer when ecosystems are threatened, from climate change, loss of biodiversity and policies,” Thompson added.

    “Unfortunately, those down the food chain are the first to suffer when ecosystems are threatened, from climate change, loss of biodiversity and policies,” Thompson added.

    She restated commitment of the UK government to tackling global climate change and the Paris Agreement ‘as strong as ever’.

    According to her, UK government would continue to play a leading role internationally and also in delivering her commitments to create a safer and more prosperous future for all.

    In his remark, the Environment Minister, Ibrahim Jibril admitted that the rural dweller that largely depends on nature for their livelihood are most hit by climate change impacts.

    He added that most times they are affected by pollution, and over-exploitation of the natural resources.“Even in the face of many environmental challenges that are confronting our dear country Nigeria; from desertification in the north to coastal erosion in the South East and

    “Even in the face of many environmental challenges that are confronting our dear country Nigeria; from desertification in the north, to coastal erosion in the South East and south- west and decades of Oil Pollution in the Niger Delta – We are reminded that when we come together as one people, collectively we can resolve to protect our environment and the resources we are blessed with,” he said.

    Earlier, Resident Coordinator, Mr. Edward Kallon‎, said the collaboration with Federal government had resulted into the signing of the Paris Agreement and its ratification by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    He said the UNDP Nigeria had commenced work with the ministry to develop the third National Communication to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).

    According to him, this will assist in controlling emissions and the building of information and knowledge regarding national sources of the Green House Gasses (GHGs)‎, and the impacts of climate change on sustainable social and economic development.