Tag: pollution

  • World Water Day: Group seeks end to plastic pollution

    AN organisation Earth Day Network (EDN) has launched  a campaign to stop plastic pollution as part of activities marking the World Water Day.

    The World Water Day is  observed on March 22 yearly to highlight the importance of freshwater and advocate the sustainable management of freshwater resources.

    According to the EDN, plastic particles abound in drinking water and, with the “End plastic pollution” campaign, it hopes that the trend would end soon.

    Exploring how microplastic pollution gets into the drinking water, the group notes that microplastics (extremely small pieces of plastic) are in almost all water systems in the world – streams, rivers, lakes, and oceans.

    It notes that 83 percent of the samples of tap water tested from major metropolitan areas around the world were contaminated with plastic fibres. In another study, EDN adds, 93 percent of water samples from major bottled water suppliers from around the world showed signs of microplastic contamination, including polypropylene, nylon,and polyethylene terephthalate (PET).

    The EDN said: “The ways microplastics enter our water supply are surprising. Microplastics emanate from clothing, cosmetics, car tyres, and paint chips, among other sources. They’re also created from plastic items as they erode into smaller and smaller pieces.

    “You might think that water purification systems run by cities and companies remove these microplastics, but you would be wrong. Plastic fibres are so tiny that they seem to be able to pass through the filtering systems used to purify the water from streams or rivers that goes into our homes and water bottles. They are also small enough to be easily transported by the wind.

    “Since we seem to be drinking water contaminated with microplastics, what impact does this have on our health? We know that plastics contain chemicals added during the manufacturing process and that plastics absorb other toxins from the water. We know that those chemicals, when consumed by humans, have been associated with some health issues.

    “You’ll be surprised to learn the ways plastic in drinking water can potentially harm the people who drink it!”

    The group urges individuals, organisations and educators to learn more about the issue and organise friends, family, and community to put an end to plastic pollution.

  • Nigeria records 65, 000 deaths annually due to air pollution – Saraki

    Nigeria records 65, 000 deaths annually due to air pollution – Saraki

    The Senate President, Dr. Bukola Saraki has said the nation records almost 65, 000 deaths annually due to exposure to household pollution.

    Saraki blamed this to the rising incident of deforestation and use of woods for cooking, especially among rural communities.

    The Senator, who spoke at the 2017 Clean Cooking Forum, organized on Tuesday in partnership with the Federal Ministry of Environment pledged to support legislations that will promote use of clean cook stoves.

    He noted that the rural villages consume between 1.9 kilogram to 4 kilogram daily of firewood, contributing adversely to health status of about 170 million people.

    The Senate President, who was represented by Senator Audu Ibrahim, however disclosed that entrepreneurs, who venture into production of clean cook stoves, should get needed encouragement and assistant in order to make the clean stoves accessible and affordable.

    He said: “Globally, there are over 4 million deaths every year due to household air pollution and 24 per cent of global black carbon emissions come from cooking smoke. In Nigeria, household air pollution is the third most significant risk factor for health after malaria and HIV/Aids, killing almost 65, 000 people every year – more than half of whom are children.

    “This form of biomass energy use for cooking no doubt justifies the development of a sustainable clean cook stove program in Nigeria.”

    “Nigerians consume between 1.9kg to 4kg/day/capital of firewood depending on household size. When applied to the country’s population currently put at about 170 million people, the country’s consumes more than 500 million kilograms of firewood daily.

    “This is indeed enormous for the forest to bear. Indoor pollution, black carbon emission, tree felling and other associated livelihood trade-offs from the use of traditional cooking methods are issues that affects urban and rural populations particularly that of women and children,” he added.

    Earlier, in his remarks, the Minister of State for Environment, Ibrahim Jibril expressed dissatisfaction over the rate of tree felling in the country.

    He said in Kano State only, about 20 trailers loaded with logs are being used to transport woods across the country on daily basis.

    The Minister, who called for change of attitude among the people, said the mangroves are being destroyed as a result of deforestation.

    He said there was need to provide a sustainable solution without necessarily harming the ecosystem.

    According to him, the new gas policy would reduce the trend of deforestation, usage of fuel woods and promote clean energy.

    “We need to scale-up use of clean energy and make it attractive for the benefit of everyone especially the rural dwellers. It will contribute to our Nationally Determined Contribution (NDCs),” the Minister added.

  • Experts meet to tackle mercury pollution

    More than 150 countries have met in Geneva to tackle mercury pollution.

    Mercury is one of the most dangerous chemicals to human health and the environment. It is a neurotoxin with a global reach. The heavy metal is released into the environment as a result of human activities. In the environment, it enters the food chain, accumulates in the body and can harm the brain, heart, kidneys, lungs and immune system of persons of all ages.

    Mercury is, particularly, harmful to unborn children and infants whose nervous systems are under development. Damage to the brain cannot be reversed. There is no known safe exposure level for elemental mercury in humans, and effects can be seen even at very low levels.

    The Parties to the Minamata Convention on Mercury, which took effect on August 16, will implement the new global treaty, which includes banning new mercury mines and phasing out existing ones; regulating the use of mercury in artisanal and small-scale gold mining, certain industrial processes and the production of everyday items such as certain compact fluorescent lamps, batteries and teeth fillings; as well as controlling the emissions of mercury as a by-product from a range of industrial sectors – including coal combustion.

    “This convention will save lives,”  Erik Solheim, Head of UN Environment, said.

    “People are being poisoned and it’s time for this to stop. Now the work begins to remove it from our industrial processes and keep it out of our bodies and our fragile ecosystems.”

    Thousands of tonnes of mercury are emitted each year through releases to air, land and water. Mercury may be released naturally through the weathering of mercury-containing rocks, forest fires and volcanic eruptions. However, the most significant emissions come from human activities, particularly coal burning and artisanal and small-scale gold mining. Mining exposes up to 15 million workers and their families in over 70 countries to being poisoned by mercury, and this includes child labourers.

    Like other heavy metals, mercury persists in the environment and builds up in human and animal tissues. Exposure to mercury occurs mainly through ingestion of fish and other marine species contaminated with methylmercury, its most toxic and bioaccumulative form. People are also exposed to elemental or inorganic mercury through inhalation of mercury vapour during occupational activities or spills or through direct contact from mercury use.

    Mercury pollution is a global problem as it vaporises and can therefore be transported through the air over long distances far removed from its original emission source, polluting air, water and soil. As mercury is an element it is indestructible, and the Convention therefore also stipulates conditions for its interim storage and sound disposal once it becomes waste.

    The Minamata Convention stipulates phase-out of manufacturing, import and export of these mercuryadded products by 2020. Several health care facilities in countries like South Africa, Brazil and the Philippines have demonstrated that phase out is feasible. Countries have been promoting the use of alternatives/mercury free medical devices, lessening exposure of the health professionals and the general public to mercury.

    The Minamata Convention contains provisions that relate to the entire life cycle of mercury, including controls and reductions across a range of products, processes and industries where mercury is used, released or emitted. It also addresses primarymining of mercury, its export and import, its safe storage and its disposal once it is waste.

    Under the Convention, countries are to:

    Control mercury emissions from key industries (including coal, waste incineration, non-ferrous metals, and cement production); Ban new mercury mining and close existing mercury mines after a period of time; Control trade in mercury; Work to reduce the use of mercury in artisanal and small scale gold mining – the largest source of mercury pollution; Promote international cooperation on mercury monitoring and innovation.

    The UN Environment’s new report titled: “Global Mercury Supply, Trade and Demand” confirms artisanal and small-scale gold mining as the world’s largest source of mercury emissions (primarily in Africa, Asia and Latin America) followed by coal fire. The major mercury uses continue to be in artisanal and small-scale gold mining and for the production of vinyl chloride monomer, with these two applications responsible for over 60 percent of global mercury demand.

  • Lagos warns hoteliers against noise pollution

    The Lagos State Government has warned hoteliers to desist from inconveniencing residents with noise pollution.

    Commissioner for the Environment Dr Babatunde Adejare made the call at a stakeholders’ meeting organised by the Lagos State Environmental Protection Agency (LASEPA).

    He said severe punishment will be handed to any offender of noise pollution.

    He implored them to reduce noise in the residential area, create a parking space for their costumers instead of parking by the roadside.

    LASEPA General Manager Adebola Shabi urged the association to abide by the rules and regulations provided by the government.

    Mr Tayo Eddo, who spoke in behalf of the hoteliers, promised that the association will do their best to sustain the synergy between them and the government.

  • Oyo govt to sanction churches, mosques, others for noise pollution

    Oyo govt to sanction churches, mosques, others for noise pollution

    •Three churches sealed as pastor harasses commissioner

    Oyo State Commissioner for Environment and Water Resources, Chief Isaac Ishola, at the weekend narrated his ordeals in the hands of the General Overseer of a new generation church while attempting to seal off the church for violating environmental laws.

    The commissioner said the General Overseer allegedly molested, harassed and insulted him on the church premises to prevent the sealing of the church.

    Three churches were reportedly sealed off for alleged noise pollution and violating the government’s prescribed noise level.

    Speaking with The Nation in his office at the weekend, the commissioner warned against violation of noise regulation laws.

    He noted that the ministry would no longer tolerate what he called the impunity among religious bodies that were fond of exceeding the prescribed noise level.

    Ishola said: “…I was insulted and harassed (at the weekend) by a pastor, the owner of one of the sealed churches. He refused to comply with the state noise regulations. The pastor refused to attend a meeting when called. In fact, the pastor came out, pounced on me and said I could not seal the church because if I did, it would close my destiny. And I told him that I am a Christian too, but ‘you cannot use Christianity to disturb the peace’ of others…”

    The commissioner urged religious bodies to remove speakers mounted on their buildings, saying doing so violated government’s laws regulating noise in the environment.

    According to him, anybody who refuses to comply will be arrested and the premises sealed, in line with the laws regulating noise in the state.

  • Dangers of noise pollution

    SIR: Most of us, in reality, are partially deaf. And the major cause is noise pollution, an evil which causes many health and social problems. Noise pollution is an unwanted, disturbing sound that causes a nuisance in the eye – or ear – of the beholder.

    Operators of commercial grinding machines, music shops, hawkers who use megaphones, noisy vehicles, motorcycles, barking dogs, overly loud music from within the home an noisy aircraft, among others, are harbingers of noise pollution. Then the location of worship centres which use noisy public address system in residential neighbourhoods, especially at odd hours of the day or night, has compounded the problem.

    Sustained noise over a period of time can engender deafness in the form of gradual losses in hearing. This is the most common loss among the young ones who enjoy listening to music from the Walkman-type radios, CD players, as well as MP3s. The problem may not have been noticed here, but in those countries where those products come from, it is already an issue, even if the manufacturers are still putting up an argument that it is not their products but wrong use that causes hearing loss.

    How does noise-induced hearing loss occur?

    Loud noise assaults the delicate hair cells of the inner ear. Noise-induced hearing loss typically occurs gradually and without pain. After exposure to loud noise, a person may experience ringing in the ears or difficulty in hearing. This is called a “temporary threshold shift.” After a few hours (or in some cases, a few days), this temporary shift in hearing can become permanent. Once permanent hearing has occurred, it is not possible to restore hearing.

    And this is where the danger is: noise-induced hearing loss is permanent. One is not saying here, however, that hearing loss is the only effect of noise pollution. Annoyance and aggression, (quick temper), hypertension, high stress levels, sleep disturbances and other harmful effects such as forgetfulness, severe depression and, at times, panic attacks are all traceable to noise pollution.

    As the nation spends a huge portion of its health budget yearly fighting these health problems, it amounts to sparing cause and fighting effect. It means what we are doing is curing without paying attention to prevention. Yet prevention, they say, is better than cure.

    We need to wake up to the realities of modern nationhood. There is an urgent need to realize that noise is as potent as other forms of environmental pollution, be they air, water or physical pollution. Time has come for the government, through the Ministry of Environment at the state and federal levels, to start addressing the issue of unwanted noise. The Ministry of Urban Planning must be part of it because a lot of noise emanates from urban planlessness in the sense of allowing unregulated siting of worship centres in purely residential neighbourhoods.

     

    • Tina Fawole,

    tinafawole@yahoo.com

  • Pollution: community sues Eni

    The Ikebiri community of Bayelsa State has instituted a legal action against Italian oil giant, ENI, over an oil spill dating back to 2010, which has not been addressed.

    The oil giant, which operates in Nigeria through its subsidiary, Nigerian Agip Oil Company (NAOC), is responsible for the spill, which was allegedly caused by equipment failure.

    The community, supported by Friends of the Earth, Europe, and Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth, Nigeria, is calling for adequate compensation and clean-up of the community.

    The head of the Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria, Godwin Ojo, regretted that the spill, if it had been well managed, would not have spread to a huge expanse of the Ikebiri swampland. He said although the leakage was closed in 2010, with NAOC claiming to have cleaned up the site. He, however, explained that going by the community’s account, the leaked oil in the surrounding area was simply burned, without their consent. To date, no adequate compensation has been offered, or clean-up completed.

    “This act of impunity and recklessness of the oil companies against the environment and people of the Niger Delta of Nigeria must come to an end,” Ojo said.

    In similar vein, the traditional ruler of Ikebiri community, Chief Francis Temi Ododo, said: “Our community cannot  wait any longer. We have had the ENI’s pollution for too long, damaging our fishing, our farming and our lives. We are now looking to the Italian courts for justice for our people.”

    The extractive industries campaigner for Friends of the Earth Europe, Colin Roche, agreed with the community’s position. “For far too long the communities of the Niger Delta have had to live with the pollution of their land, their water, and their air by oil companies who’ve put profit before their lives. ENI should now live up to its responsibility and clean up the mess it has made and compensate the community for having to live with their destruction.”

    According to Ojo, to date, eleven million barrels of oil have been spilled in the Delta, twice the amount spilled during the Deepwater Horizon disaster in the Gulf of Mexico.

  • Bayelsa community decries lake pollution

    Members of Ikarama community in Yenagoa Local Government of Bayelsa State have decried the pollution of Oya Lake by the oil drilling operations of Shell Petroleum Development Company (SPDC).

    They accused SPDC of carrying out improper clean-up of the lake polluted by an oil spill, which allegedly occurred from the company’s Ikarama-Rumuekpe pipeline.

    Mr. Ayibatari Francis, who spoke on behalf of the community, told News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Yenagoa the crude, which leaked into the lake, affected aquatic life.

    He urged the oil firm to initiate the clean-up of the lake, saying it was the only source of drinking water for residents and their means of livelihood, as they were mostly fishermen.

    ”This is a lake where we fish; we also drink water from the lake and use it to cook.

    ”Members of our community, who have farms adjacent to the lake, relied on water from the lake for their domestic use, prior to its pollution.

    “After the pollution, occasioned by an oil spill from Shell’s facility; people can no longer drink water from the lake or fish.

    ”There are safety concerns about the condition of the water in the lake and its (lake’s) environment.

    ”This is why we want Shell to return to the site and remove stains from the water, while treating the soil and lake to make them free from pollutants that are traceable to crude.

    “This is necessary to enable us resume fishing in the lake and eat fish without fear of health implications,” Francis said.

    Pastor FearGod Kologa, another resident, said they learnt Shell did not carry out remediation of the polluted lake due to seismic activities near the lake late last year.

    He said SPDC officials and officials of National Oil Spill Detection and Response Agency (NOSDRA), who visited Oya Lake last month, confirmed the presence of oil slick.

    “They witnessed the situation at the lake. Oya Lake is polluted; we expect Shell to do remediation so that we can go back to our lake,’’ Kologa said.

    SPDC’s Media Relations Manager Mr. Precious Okolobo said the firm carried out a clean-up of Oya Lake between July and October 2013 when the oil spill occurred.

    He said the company recently noticed traces of oil in the area.

    Okolobo said SPDC and NOSDRA officials inspected the site, adding that a report on their findings was expected to be released soon.

    “A crude oil spill occurred on the 14th Okordia-Rumuekpe trunk line at Ikarama on December 7, 2008, which a joint investigation team, on January 15 and 16, 2009, attributed to sabotage.

    “The spill, which impacted SPDC Joint Venture’s Right of Way and nearby third-party areas, was cleaned-up and certified by regulators on May 31, 2010.

    ”However, following complaints that the adjacent Oya Lake was also impacted, SPDC conducted another assessment on February 27, 2013, with the participation of members of the host community and representatives of a non-government organisation (NGO), Shareholders Alliance for Corporate Accountability (SACA).

    ”SPDC was not able to trace the source of the latest spill at Oya Lake, but began a clean-up on July 31, 2013, with the regulators visiting the site for close-out on October 9, 2013.

    ”Besides, NOSDRA officials have inspected the site and are expected to come out with a report on their findings anytime soon,” the media relations manager said in an email response to a NAN enquiry.

  • ‘Protect waterways against pollution’

    The rate of pollution, illegal fishing and dumping of haz-ardous wastes in the territorial waters is on the increase.

    A member of the Fishery Society of Nigeria (FISON), Gbolahan Adetona, said the country needed to work with its foreign partners to develop the capacity to tackle the problems.

    Adetona said dumping of toxic waste in the maritime domain and crimes on the coastline required the Federal Government and the Nigerian Maritime Administration and Safety Agency (NIMASA) commitment to building capacity.

    Adetona said security experts around the Horn of Africa had developed theories over the increasing hazardous wastes dumping and piracy

    He said Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Thailand had set the stage for cooperation among states, in information exchange and mobilisation of resources.

    Another member of the group, Mrs Lola Adebajo, observed that the insecurity in Africa’s waterways had forced insurers to hike rates for ships passing through the region.

    Specifically, coastal and inland states had seen their vital trade links threatened by pirates, a situation that led to rising costs that their populations must bear.

    “As at now, there are no clear answers as to the best ways to ensure maritime security, nor are there clear answers as to what percentage of resources nations should allocate to maritime security to best facilitate the goal of furthering development,” she said.

    Since piracy is not the only threat to maritime security, another FASON member, Mr Sesan Olanipekun, advised the government to adopt best practices that can be implemented.

  • Community, cement firm bicker over pollution

    Community, cement firm bicker over pollution

    Except urgent steps are taken, the sleepy community of Maiganga in Gombe State may be up in arms against Maiganga Coal Mining Company Limited, and its parent firm, Ashaka Cement PLC (AshakaCem). The Community is accusing the firm of pollution.

    In a September 26 petition, signed by its Chairman, Gibar Sobtar, and sent to the Minister for the Environment, the community alleged that the firm’s mining activities have made life unbearable for the people.

    The situation, it claimed, was exacerbated by the failure of the government and the firm to fulfil their pledge to relocate the community and provide it with potable water.

    “Our collective outcry against the dangerous and increased hazard of coal mining in our community is not unknown to you, and to the wider world.  It has become imperative to lodge this further petition, as satisfactory steps are not being taken to mitigate the existential hazards we are confronted with.  An worse, we are alarmed by the seeming expansion of coal mining activities in our community, which has evidently aggravated the environmental degradation, pollution and other adverse consequences of the exploitation of coal resources in our community,” the petition read in part.

    According to Sobtar, on more than two occasions, inhabitants of the community, including men, women, youth and even children, have had to organise mass demonstrations, targeted at drawing attention to an alleged inhuman treatment the community has continued to suffer from the AshakaCem.

    He is sad that in spite of the several promises made by the mine operator, nothing has been done. For instance, he explained that in 2007, AshakaCem promised to relocate residents of the community to a safer area; construct an eight-kilometre road linking the village to the main road; build a good school and a skills acquisition centre for women and the youth.

    Regrettably, nine years after, he said, the company has continued to renege on her promises. So far, only 66 houses of the 300 houses envisaged have been built, with only one borehole and an already dilapidated two blocks of classrooms. Of the three boreholes, only one is functional.

    “It is a litany of broken promises. Even the houses they built for us are of very low quality.  In less than eight years of relocation, the houses have started collapsing.  The few standing ones have cracked walls and looks like anthills,” Sobtar noted in the petition, adding that the community is further enraged by the continued denial of the AshakaCem, which claims that her cement is of high quality, and that houses built by it does not collapse.

    Yet, more annoying to the Maiganga community is the confiscation, encroachment, or land grabbing by the firm without compensation. The petitioners maintained that their farmlands were taken over by the company and we were not well compensated. The failure, neglect or refusal to provide speedy and adequate compensation for the farmlands remain a critical failure of the firm.

    “This is largely the grievance that prompted the demonstration of July 2014.  This matter still remains unresolved. The increasingly shrinking farmland or the dispossession of our community of their valuable farmland has added to increasing unemployment, and pauperisation of our people.  Our people have been farming on the land for hundreds of years before the mining company discovered coal on our land.  We have been displaced as a consequence. The dispersal and dispossession of our people continues, even as mining activities continue to bulldoze its way relentlessly into the surrounding community.

    ‘’The Mining Company, a subsidiary of Ashaka Cement, promised to employ at least 80 per cent of their unskilled workforce from the community, but the company has reneged on that promise as well.  At present, to the best of our information, the company employs only five people from the community on permanent and pensionable basis.  This is double jeopardy. They take away our farmlands, and also deny our people employment in the mine,” he said.

    The community is further worried that the activities of mining is taking a toll on her environment. They explained that during mining activities, significant volumes of earth are displaced, and the resulting rock waste can be harmful to the environment. They contend that surface mines has removed acres of vegetation and altered topographic features of their community, such as hills and valleys, leaving soil exposed for erosion resulting from ecological disturbances to pollution of air, land and water, instability of soil and rock masses, and radiation hazards.

    Though the community is still oblivious of the health hazards that may be occasioned by oral mining have not been sufficiently explained to the community, nonetheless, the borehole built for the community, does not produce clean water. Sobtar noted that information by environmental experts has it that colour change in the community’s drinking water suggest that, LarfargeAfrica, the parent company of AshakaCem, has not caused its shaft to the prescribed level of thickness that would have prevented the coal belt methane from escaping into the water table.

    Within the European Union (EU), Sobtar said, such would never happen because the thickness of the shaft is one of the three basic conditions that must be met regarding coal mining.

    Closely connected to the water issue is where the coal mining confronts agriculture, the core of the community’s livelihood.  This is at two levels.  The first level is the drastic decline in yield which the community traces to the fine dust from the mine which settles on the land, inhibiting productivity generally, and pollution in particular.

    “Furthermore, mining in the area has not only changed the pattern of the land but has greatly contributed to degradation of the environment; the effect can be clearly seen in the loss of arable land for agriculture as well as change in the land cover feature such as vegetation and farm lands which are converted into   mining ponds,” the chairman explained.

    Sobtar said several engagements with the firm’s top management, including the managing director, had only yielded unfulfilled promises. This is why the community is seeking the intervention of the federal and state governments to, as a matter of urgency, intervene and save the people from a perceived “injustice by the management of Ashaka Cement Company.”

    The negligence of Lafarge in failing to caste its shaft to the prescribed level of thickness that would have prevented the coal belt methane from escaping into the water table, is anything but a disgraceful double standard, considering that the French firm would not do the same thing in the EU or North America.

    Maiganga residents further see the proposal by Lafarge to build a coal fired power plant as an “insensitive, irresponsible, corporate arrogance of adding salt to injury.”

    Sobtar explained that this corporate hypocrisy is even more poignant considering Lafarge’s home country, France, hosted the Global Conference on Climate Change last December .

    “The environmental degradation is a looming disaster. The fiendish type of ecological cancer that plagued the Niger Delta as a consequence of oil pollution has reared its demonic hydra head in the Northeast of Nigeria. The landmark accord signed following deliberations at COP 21 commits nearly every country to lowering plant-warming greenhouse gas emissions to help stave off the most drastic effects of climate change is being celebrated. France’s corporation, Lafarge, is in Nigeria violating those agreements,” the community said.

    Much as the Climate Change obligations makes marginal allowances for developing countries, it triggers a fundamental shift away from investment in coal, oil and gas as primary energy sources toward zero-carbon energy sources like wind, solar and nuclear power.

     

    We’ve settled them, say Lafarge, AshakaCem

    When contacted, Lafarge’s Head of Communication, Mr. Ademola Ojolowo, said the inhabitants of the areas involved are predominantly farmers, living in thatch houses. Their proximity to the proposed coal mine, he explained, necessitated their relocation to a place of choice (community and local government) away from the coal mine and while AshakaCem built and provided modern houses for them. He listed the concerned villages to include Maiganga, Jauro Kelvin (Lakatangarin) and Garkoyel. This was done before start-up of the quarry operations.

    Ojolowo said the exploration and land acquisition were carried out between 2006 and 2007; while the Gombe State Ministry of Land and Survey, Akko LGA and AshakaCem team conducted the house to house census of the affected communities and landed properties. The exact number of houses found in the original village as at the census period was built and distributed to the people of Maiganga.

    According to an email received from the management of AshakaCem, the Gombe State Ministry of Lands & Survey carried out the necessary assessment and recommended due  compensation to the farmland owners, based on the official rates, which was paid in full by AshakaCem to all identified and deserving land owners in addition to matching bonuses.

    A compensation analysis allegedly prepared by the Gombe State Ministry of land and Survey in July 2007, indicates that in Akko emirate zone (Kayelbaga and others) a total compensated farmlands was 283. In the same period, Pindiga emirate zone (Maiganga and others), 117 were compensated.

    So far, Ashakacem claims to have provided several social amenities, including three boreholes, women skill centre, built and equipped maternity clinic, electrification of the entire village, two blocks of two classrooms each to Maiganga village as part of its CSR. Other villages such as Lakwalak, Kalkulum, Kayelbaga, Piu and Tudunkuka, the cement firm claims, have also benefited in terms of block of classrooms, maternity clinic, road, electrification and boreholes.

    In terms of local employment, the community youths, AshakaCem insists, have benefited immensely by being gainfully employed in its mining operation. Of the 35 permanent staff employed by AshakaCem in Maiganga, local content accounts for 27; while of the 92 contract staff, 85 are local indigenes.

    In May, last year, AshakaCem and the local communities signed a five-year agreement. AshakaCem explained that the Federal Ministry of Mines and Solid Minerals had written and raised some observations on the documents, and was in the process of finalising the reviews.

    “Associating health challenges being faced by some individuals with our operation may not be correct in many contexts, unless proven scientifically. AshakaCem is committed to Zero Harm and the well-being of people within and around our operations. We have a moral duty to protect the people working for and around us by caring for the people and the environment,” the statement read, adding that in doing this, the firm ensures the efficiency of its processes for continued profitability and achievement of its set goals.

    The firm assured that it will continue to take proactive steps towards protecting and preserving the quality of its environment using global standards as a benchmark and staying committed to its Clean, Green, Zero Harm (CGHZ) objective and Sustainability Ambitions. It said key components of the firm’s environmental policy as an organisation include reclamation, back-filling and tree planting.

    “These are integral part of our operations which we carry out from time to time and without prompting,” the statement concluded.