Tag: SDGs

  • Kaduna to spend N1.2bn on SDGs in 2018

    Kaduna to spend N1.2bn on SDGs in 2018

    Kaduna State Planning and Budget Commission has earmarked N1.2 billion for Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) programmes in 2018.

    A document, obtained by the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Kaduna on Tuesday, showed that the commission was allocated a total N3.19 billion, of which N2.76 billion is for capital expenditure and N439.48 for recurrent.

    It is expected that the N2.76 billion would be raised from grants, concessional multilateral loans and credit.

    A breakdown of the capital expenditure indicated that the commission would spend N53 million on SDGs summit and N100 million each on poverty mapping exercise and Kaduna leadership fellows.

    Read also: Kaduna Statistics Bureau to spend N152.97m on surveys

    Also, N45.4 million was earmarked for sector retreat and statewide performance review, N106.62 on review and expansion of monitoring and evaluation platform and N250 million on monitoring and impact evaluation study.

    Similarly, N9.98 million was allocated for the development and review of sector implementation result framework, and N162.6 million on the conduct and review of state and local government plans policy document.

    The document further stated that N11 million would be spent on books for e-library, N310 million on counterpart funding and N100 million as support to World Bank public sector governance reforms and development projects.

    It added that Kaduna Emergency Nutrition Action Plan (KADENAP) was allocated N300 million and that N7.68 million would be spent on the update of Kaduna State in Perspective book.

    NAN

  • SDGs will check poverty, unemployment – Osinbajo

    SDGs will check poverty, unemployment – Osinbajo

    Vice President Yemi Osinbajo on Friday expressed optimism that the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) would help reduce poverty and unemployment in the country.

    He stated this during the inauguration of the Presidential Council on Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in Abuja.

    He said: “Progress on the goal will have a positive effect on poverty and unemployment numbers. It will reduce the number of mothers who die during childbirth and our children who are unable to mark their fifth birthdays and of course on figures of out of school children. It will empower our girls and women and bridge the gender inequality gap.

    “Success with the implementation of the SDGs will have impact on our cities and on the quality of lives of those who live within them.

    “It is therefore clear that the achievements of the goals equal a quantum social economic leap for Nigeria. Failure to achieve the SDGs will have exponential implication on our generation and for those yet unborn.”

    According to him, President Muhammadu Buhari will join other heads of states and governments to adopt the sustainable development goals, towards ending poverty, protecting the planet and ensuring peace and prosperity.

    Osinbajo added: “Audaciously ambitious as the goals maybe appear, they capture the urgency and rage of the major challenges that confronts humanity especially developing nations. They underscore the reality that only global partnership supporting home grown and inclusive solutions stand a chance of achieving the goals. Building on the MDGs, the SDGs open new priorities such as climate change, economic inequality, innovation, sustainable consumption, peace and justice.”

     

  • Nigeria may miss 2030 SDGs goal, UNICEF warns

    Nigeria may miss 2030 SDGs goal, UNICEF warns

    Nigeria may miss SDGs Goal 6 by 2030 if the government does not ensure accessibility to water supply, United Nations Children Fund (UNICEF) specialist Moustapha Niang has said.

    According to Niang, over 15 million Nigerians still drink water from rivers, lakes, ponds, streams and irrigation canals.

    He spoke at the opening of a two-day media dialogue on water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH), organised by the United Nations Children Fund (UNICEF), in partnership with Child Right Information Bureau (CRIB) of the Ministry of Information.

    Niang said 57 million Nigerians lacked access to potable water, adding that more than half of this number live in rural areas.

    Accessibility to safe water, he said, can save the lives of most children under five years, who die annually from preventable diseases, adding that most of the diseases are caused by poor access to water.

    He said if the government did not put in more effort to ensure access to safe water, Nigeria was  not likely to meet the Sustainable Development Goal 6 target.

    “We need to do 20 times more of what we are currently doing in terms of policies and funding in providing safe water to the people.

    “For example, in 1999, 12 per cent of the population had pipe-borne water access to their homes, but this percentage had declined to 2 per cent as at 2015,” he said.

    The SDG Goal 6 aims at ensuring availability and sustainable management of water and sanitation for all.

    In her presentation, UNICEF WASH Specialist Mrs. Martha Hokonya listed the benefits of potable water, urging the media to do the needful in prompting the government to invest in provision of potable water.

    Meanwhile, UNICEF has warned that more than 180 million people lacked access to basic drinking water in countries affected by conflict, violence and instability around the world, as World Water Week gets under way.

    “Children’s access to safe water and sanitation, especially in conflicts and emergencies, is a right, not a privilege,” said Sanjay Wijesekera, UNICEF’s global chief of water, sanitation and hygiene. He added:“In countries beset by violence, displacement, conflict and instability, children’s most basic means of survival – water – must be a priority.”

    People living in fragile situations are four times more likely to lack basic drinking water than populations in non-fragile situations, according to a recent UNICEF and World Health Organisation (WHO) analysis. Of the estimated 484 million people living in fragile situations in 2015, 183 million lacked basic drinking water services.

    In Yemen, a country reeling from the impact of over two years of conflict, water supply networks, which serve the country’s largest cities are at imminent risk of collapse due to war-inflicted damage and disrepair. Around 15 million people in the country have been cut off from regular access to water and sanitation.

    In Syria, where the conflict is into its seventh year, around 15 million people are in need of safe water, including an estimated 6.4 million children. Water has frequently been used as a weapon of war. In 2016 alone, there were at least 30 deliberate water cuts – including in Aleppo, Damascus, Hama, Raqqa and Dara, with pumps destroyed and water sources contaminated.

    In conflict-affected areas in northeast Nigeria, 75 per cent of water and sanitation infrastructure has been damaged or destroyed, leaving 3.6 million people without even basic water services.

    In South Sudan, where fighting has raged for over three years, almost half the water points across the country have been damaged or completely destroyed.

    “In far too many cases, water and sanitation systems have been attacked, damaged or left in disrepair to the point of collapse. When children have no safe water to drink, and when health systems are left in ruins, malnutrition and potentially fatal diseases like cholera will inevitably follow,” said Wijesekera.

    In Yemen, for example, children make up more than 53 per cent of the over half a million cases of suspected cholera and acute watery diarrhoea reported so far.  Somalia is suffering from the largest outbreak of cholera in the last five years, with nearly 77,000 cases of suspected cholera/acute watery diarrhoea. And in South Sudan, the cholera outbreak is the most severe the country has ever experienced, with more than 19,000 cases since June 2016.

    In famine-threatened northeast of Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan and Yemen, nearly 30 million people, including 14.6 million children, are in urgent need of safe water. More than five million children are estimated to be malnourished this year, with 1.4 million severely so.

     

  • Post UNLEASHLAB2017: Why the 17 SDGs matter to you

    Post UNLEASHLAB2017: Why the 17 SDGs matter to you

    The relentless energy of 1000 great young innovators who were engaged by UNLEASH to proffer scalable solutions to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), especially to meet the 2030 deadline of the United Nations (UN), evokes the words of Vincent Van Gogh, a Dutch painter who lived between 1853 and 1890, and said: “Great things are done by a series of small things brought together”.

    Till date, the efforts by member states of the United Nations (UN) and a few private individuals only seem to have succeeded in scratching the surface of the problem because energy wasn’t synchronized towards achieving the 17 Sustainable Development Goals and it might not achieve it before the set deadline of 2030.

    To further confirm this, Camilla Bruckner, Director at the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), Nordic Representative Office noted that it is the first time in history that all countries are represented for one goal.

    She clearly made this known while addressing the diverse audience from 129 countries, stressing that the goal is to achieve the 17 SDGs before the deadline of the year 2030.

    Bruckner noted that nations depend on one another emphasising that “we must work together to achieve these goals”, she said.

    In his remarks at the closing ceremony of UNLEASH at Aarhus in Denmark, Anders Don, Chief Executive Officer (CEO) and Partner, Delloite, Denmark identified trust, courage, co-creation and diversity of thoughts as factors that can “allow us to change the world”.

    Furthermore, strong words of motivation were also spoken by Trisha Shetty, Founder and CEO, SheSays from India, who noted that beyond the fact that there is a problem, “we have a plan. The plan is the SDG and we must follow it through.

    “We have to be resilient in order to achieve our goals. Also, we will treat the SDGs as social development goals and use them to seek results from leaders. We will hold them accountable.

    “The problem looks complex but the solutions don’t have to be. What is important is that the solutions shall be localised and implemented.”

    It is fascinating, however, to note that what this implies is that everyone’s skills, resources as well as failure experiences are required to achieve the desired solutions to save our planet and ultimately, save ourselves. At the moment, if there are about 30million children growing up poor in the world’s richest countries, then, the fate of the children growing poorly in developing countries is only better imagined.

    Reports have it that there are more than 700 million people still living in extreme poverty and cannot afford to have the most basic needs like health, education, and access to water and sanitation. A number of people living in Southern Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa live on less than US$1.90 a day, which is about 70% of the global total. Countries like China, India, Indonesia and Nigeria, are home to about half of the global poor.

     

    In another development, about 44% of the member states of the World Health Organisation (WHO) has reported less than 0ne physician per 1000 population, thereby leading to the death of approximately 830 pregnant women due to preventable causes related to pregnancy and childbirth.

    Therefore, between 2017 and 2030, to be able to reduce this staggering figure to 70 per 100,000 live birth, as planned by the UN, it is no more a matter of ‘I’m not poor. Why should I care about other people’s economic situation’ because our well- being is linked to each other.

    Global reports have shown that the growing inequality is detrimental to economic growth and it damages social unity, increasing political and social tensions and (in some circumstances) driving instability and conflicts.

    It is in this effort that Flemming Besenbacher, through UNLEASH has engaged young persons because Youths’ active engagement in policy-making can make a difference in addressing poverty. This is because their rights are promoted and their voices should be heard. By so doing, inter-generational knowledge is shared and that innovation and critical thinking are encouraged to support transformational change in people’s lives and communities.

    In a presentation at the UN Headquarters in New York City, United States of America, the message to lawmakers and governments includes that they can help create an enabling environment to generate productive employment and job opportunities for the poor and the marginalized, adding that they could formulate strategies and fiscal policies that stimulate pro-poor growth, and reduce poverty.

    It further stated that Private Sector workers, being an engine of economic growth, have a major role to play in determining whether the growth it creates is inclusive and hence contributes to poverty reduction. The UN stressed that the Sector could promote economic opportunities for the poor, focusing on segments of the economy where most of the poor are active, namely on micro and small enterprises and those operating in the informal sector.

    If you are part of the science and academic community, note that Science provides the foundation for new and sustainable approaches, solutions and technologies to tackle the challenges of reducing poverty and achieving sustainable development. The academic and education community has a major role in increasing the awareness about the impact of poverty.

    One of the great challenges of our time is eradicating hunger and malnutrition. Not only do the consequences of not enough – or the wrong–food cause suffering and poor health, they also slow progress in many other areas of development like education and employment.

    The World Health Organisation reports that every day, too many men and women across the globe struggle to feed their children a nutritious meal. In a world where we produce enough food to feed everyone, 795 million people – one in nine – still go to bed on an empty stomach each night. Even more – one in three – suffer from some form of malnutrition.

    Hunger can positively impact our economies, health, education, equality and social development. It’s a key piece of building a better future for everyone. Additionally, with hunger limiting human development, we will not be able to achieve the other sustainable development goals such as education, health and gender equality.

    Healthwise, major progress has been made in several areas, including in child and maternal health as well as in addressing HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases. Maternal mortality has fallen by almost 50 percent since 1990, measles vaccines have averted nearly 15.6 million deaths since 2000 and 13.6 million people were able to access antiretroviral therapy by the end of 2014.

    Ultimately, to save this planet, everyone is needed in whatever capacity is available. The rich man’s physical cash and the poor man’s physical efforts are highly essential. As investors pump in money, implementers and beneficiaries too might take up the personal responsibility not to waste or destroy infrastructures for the greater good of all.

    Also, it will be primarily the responsibility of countries. Reviews of progress will need to be undertaken regularly in each country, involving civil society, business and representatives of various interest groups. At the regional level, countries will share experiences and tackle common issues, while on an annual basis, at the United Nations, the High-Level Political Forum on Sustainable Development (HLPF),  they will take stock of progress at the global level, identifying gaps and emerging issues, and recommending corrective action.

  • UNLEASHLAB2017: 35 Nigerians join global innovators in Denmark to solve SDGs

    UNLEASHLAB2017: 35 Nigerians join global innovators in Denmark to solve SDGs

    The largest gathering of young global innovators has started in Denmark to proffer scalable solutions to seven of the seventeen Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) before the year 2030 deadline of the United Nations (UN).

    Organised by a European organization, UNLEASH, the global innovation lab brings 1000 professionals and global change makers from 129 countries for an integrated and scalable solution to the SDGs starting with achieving Good Health & Well-being for all, End Poverty, provide affordable & Clean Energy, Quality Education, Clean Water & Sanitation, Sustainable Cities & Communities and proactive Climate action.

    It would be recalled that for the United Nations (UN), the 2030 agenda is a plan of action for people, the Planet and posterity. The 17 SDGs and 169 targets demonstrate the scale and ambition of this new universal agenda as they seek to build on the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and complete what these did not achieve.

    Among these professionals are 35 innovative Nigerians whose works have been based on addressing the Goals.

    Helen Nneka Okpala, a Librarian at Nnamdi Azikiwe Library, University of Nigeria, Nsukka, who is also a SAP Solution Architect, ESEFA Lecturer as well as YALI green Champion, noted that she plans to establish a Climate Change Club in Nigerian Schools in order to instill the knowledge of a better society in the minds of students at the higher institutions.

    Also, Oyewole Gbeminiyi who currently running his PhD Research in Industrial and Systems Engineering in South Africa said that he applied so that he could learn and relearn the new and eco-friendly ways of production in order to help save the planet from climate change.

    Gbeminiyi was admitted to the Sustainable Production and Consumption theme for UNLEASH.

    While speaking with The Nation’s correspondence in Hillerod, Denmark, Chiamaka Nwachukwu, a 500L student of the College of Health, University of Lagos (UNILAG), shared her insight as regards what she desires to make out of the innovation lab.

    According to her, “I want to build a strong network of innovative people and develop a worth-while idea as well as execute it.”

    Adebisi Adenipekun, a Pharmacist and President of Light House Global Health Initiative said: “Here in #UNLEASHLAB2017, I want to be able to create a solution to help solve supply chain and drug distribution system challenges in Nigeria.”

    Adenipekun stressed that although the initiative is targeting Nigeria, it is expected to be scalled to address same issue in other parts of Sub-Saharan Africa based on the level of success recorded in Nigeria.

    Other Nigerians on the quest to save the world starting from Nigeria include Adepeju Salu, Obi Nnewuike, Sandra Onwuekwe, Mo Thompson and Olusaola Amusan.

    Others include Boris Nwachukwu, Laz Ude Eze, Olusegun Olukoya, Amb Uju Silver, Abubakar Bashir, Abiola Ajala, Gbemisola Osaduwa, Chinenye Ezeakor to mention a few.

    Among these 35 Nigerians, only 30 are currently schooling or working in Nigeria, whose academic and (or) professional efforts are geared towards a sustainable society. Two others live in Kenya, two are working and studying in South Africa while the other one stays in the United Kingdom (UK).

  • Organisation earmarks N76m to facilitate SDGs implementation

    Civil society organisation (CSO) network, Afrihealth Optonet Association, has earmarked N76 million ($242,000) to facilitate attainment of sustainable development goals (SDGs) in Niger Delta, National Coordinator, Dr. Uzodinma Adirieje, has said.

    Adirieje, in an interview yesterday in Uyo with News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), said the grant was received from the United Nations Democracy Fund (UNDEF), adding that it was dedicated to SDGs implementation in the nine states of the Niger Delta.

    He said the project would target goals three and five – good health and well-being as well as gender equality.

    Adirieje said the project, which will last between January 2017 and December 2018, would concentrate on 81 selected local governments in Niger Delta.

    “The project selects nine local governments from each of the nine states of the region.

    “We focus on gender mainstreaming, good governance, human rights and citizen participation in development.

    “In Akwa Ibom State, we are training 22 community duty bearers to help identify the needs of the communities and ways of providing the needs,” he said.

    Adirieje noted that the project employed the principle of partnership and collaboration by establishing community consultation committee with equal representation of men and women in each project site.

    “Under our advocacy, communication and social mobilisation strategy, we also go to government functionaries and engage them.

    “The project has done advocacy visits to government officials in Abia, Akwa Ibom, Bayelsa, Cross River, Delta, Edo, Imo and Ondo states,” he said.

    Adirieje said the CSO carried out audience research and outreach to communities and assisted them to take ownership of any project sited in their domain, to enhance development.

    “We empower the community folk to take charge and contribute development of their communities.”

    He promised that the work of the network would impact positively on the Niger Delta states before the target year 2030.

  • Fed Govt to establish Presidential Council for SDGs 

    The Federal Government will soon establish a Presidential Council for the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to provide high-level policy guidance, leadership and direction for the realisation of the targets.

    Senior Special Assistant to the President on Sustainable Development Goals Princess Adejoke Orelope-Adefulire said this at the ongoing United Nations High-Level Political Forum in New York while presenting Nigeria’s Voluntary National Review on the Implementation of the 2030 Agenda and Sustainable Development Goals on behalf of President Muhammadu Buhari.

    According to a statement by her Media Assistant, Desmond Utomwen, the Senior Special Assistant said the process for the establishment of the presidential council had already started, adding that two standing committees on the SDGs had been established in both the Senate and the House of Representatives to enhance the legislative and oversight roles of the National Assembly.

    Mrs. Orelope-Adefulire told the UN forum that the Federal Government remained undeterred in making the required progress in achieving the goals of the SDGs in spite of the “challenges of an already ebbing recession, largely degraded crisis in the Northeast, and resolving militancy in the Niger-Delta”.

    She said some of the Federal Government’s ongoing pro-poor and pro-development interventions had made impacts in the fight against poverty like the Social Investment Scheme targeted at the extremely poor and vulnerable; Home Grown School Feeding Programme for public school children; Government Enterprise and Empowerment Programme for unemployed youths and the Women Economic Empowerment programme.

    She listed the N-Power Programme for job creation for the youths and the Conditional Grant Scheme as part of the Federal Government’s efforts to ameliorate the condition of its citizenry.

    “I wish to reaffirm that Nigeria has clearly defined her path to the 2030 Agenda. We count on the strong patriotism and goodwill of the citizenry, the commitment of the stakeholders as well as the support from the global fraternity of nations to ensure that no Nigerian is left behind,” the presidential aide added.

    Mrs. Orelope-Adefulire said Nigeria had increased the national awareness around the goals and put in place mechanisms for identifying and targeting the poor through a “National Social Register’’ in order to ensure that “no one is left behind”.

  • FG to ‘mainstream’ SDGs into national plans – Udoma

    FG to ‘mainstream’ SDGs into national plans – Udoma

    The Minister of Budget and National Planning, Udoma Udo Udoma, on Wednesday reiterated Nigeria’s commitment towards mainstreaming the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) into its national plans.

    Udoma said this at the Annual High Level Policy Dialogue on Development Planning in Africa (HLPD), with the theme: “Mainstreaming the Sustainable Development Goals into National Development Plans’’ in Abuja.

    Udoma, represented by the Permanent Secretary in the Ministry, Mrs. Fatima Mede, urged participants to promote coordination and coherence among African planners in domesticating and mainstreaming SDGs in their national plans.

    He said: “As we make efforts to mainstream the SDGs in our respective national plans, let us not forget to do same for the African-focused Agenda 2063.

    “The point of emphasis must be social development for our people, inclusive economic development for prosperity, inclusive societies and responsive institutions for peace and environmental sustainability for the planet.

    “I challenge you to think through the possible connections and synergies that can be formed across African countries in mainstreaming the SDGs in our national plans.”

    The minister expressed optimism that participants at the end of the forum would be better equipped on best approaches and tools to mainstream the SDGs into their respective national development planning processes.

    NAN

  • Lagos to partner UK, UN to achieve SDGs

    Lagos to partner UK, UN to achieve SDGs

    The Lagos State ministry of Economic Planing and Budget is collaborating with the United Kingdom department for international development and the United Nations Information Center (UNIC) to achieve the vision of Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in Lagos before 2030.

    Against this backdrop, a sensitization seminar has been organised for local government officials in the three senatorial district in the State.

    the seminar is aimed at orientating local government officials on how to cascade the vision of sustainable development goals in their various grassroots catchment.

    Speaking at the seminar which held at the United nations information center for local official at the Lagos central senatorial district, the director of the ministry of economic planning and budget development Mr. Bankole Adetola, stated that the Lagos State government have decided to “take the bull by the Horn”, through mobilization of all key stakeholders.

    He noted that the mobilisation is aimed at curbing the shortfalls of the millennium development goals which ended in 2015.

    [quote font_size=”18″ color=”#000000″ bgcolor=”#dda54f” bcolor=”#dd3333″ arrow=”yes”]The seventeen goals include No Poverty, No Hunger, Good Health, Quality Education, Gender Equality, Clean Water And Sanitation, Renewable Energy, Good Jobs And Economic Growth, Innovation And Infrastructure, Reduce Inequalities, Sustainable Cities And Communities, Responsible Consumption And Production, Climate Action, Life Below Water, Life On Land, Peace And Justice And Partnership For The Goals[/quote]

    “We want to avoid the shortfalls of MDGs which is basically lack of awareness. therefore we have constituted a champions group which have gone through training, and it is now their duty to create massive awareness in their constituencies.

     The Director, UNIC Lagos, Ronald  Kayanja, Described  sustainable development goals as an offshoot of the millennium development goals. According to him, the latter is aimed at consolidating on the lapses of the former, which could not achieve its objective of eradicating poverty in the world.

    Kayanja commended Lagos State government for the partnership and implementation strategy which involves generating data through indicators that review what each unit is doing, and also the sensitization seminar for local government officials.

    MDGs, have seventeen goals, one hundred and sixty-nine target and two hundred and three indicators.

  • ‘FG committed to improving welfare of Nigerians’

    ‘FG committed to improving welfare of Nigerians’

    The Senior Special Assistant to President Muhammadu Buhari on Sustainable Development Goals, (SDGs), Princess Adejoke Orelope-Adefulire Monday assured Nigerians that the Federal government remains committed to improving the welfare of Nigerians through the provision of basic amenities and empowerment initiatives.

    The SSA to the President gave the assurance during the inauguration of SDGs projects in Afikpo South local government area of the State.

    Represented by the Head of Grant Scheme, Mr. Salako Lawrence Adegoke, the SSA who harped on the importance and the need for effective implementation of the 17 SDGs in the rural communities called on the people of the state to protect SDGs facilities in their areas for the benefit of all and sundry.

    Welcoming the SSA to the state, wife of Governor David Umahi of Ebonyi state, Mrs. Rachael Umahi enjoined stakeholders in the state to cooperate with the scheme for the empowerment of the entire Ebonyi people.

    The wife of the Governor who commended the Afikpo South local government Chairman, Barr. Eni Uduma Chima for contributing immensely towards the sustenance of the scheme added that the success of the SDGs was dependent on a strong partnership between the state and the local government areas of the state.

    In a remark, the Chairman of Afikpo South LGA of the State, Barr. Eni Uduma Chima stated that the LGA through the SDGs have been able to empower so many youths and women in all the communities across the LGA noting that the empowerment of his people remains his key piority as a Council boss.

    Chima commended the state government for the prompt payment of its counterpart fund for the sustainability of the project across the state.

    Also, the State Focal person of the SDGs, Mrs. Ngozi Obichukwu applauded the state Governor David Umahi for showing commitment in sustaining SDG in the state but warned that her office would monitor the use of the funds across the six benefiting local government areas.