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EHCON declares public health emergency over emissions-related diseases

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EHCON declares public health emergency over emissions-related diseases
Officials of the Environmental Health Council of Nigeria (EHCON) at the news briefing in Abuja

The Environmental Health Council of Nigeria (EHCON) has declared a public health emergency over environmental diseases linked to greenhouse gas emissions nationwide.

The council’s Registrar and Chief Executive Officer, Dr Yakubu Baba, confirmed this on Monday, January 19, 2026, at a news conference in Abuja.

Baba said the declaration aligned with President Bola Tinubu’s Renewed Hope Agenda to strengthen environmental public health nationwide.

Environmental Health Council of Nigeria (EHCON)
Officials of the Environmental Health Council of Nigeria (EHCON) at the news briefing in Abuja

He said EHCON was raising a national alarm over the silent but rapidly escalating burden of emission-related diseases.

According to him, environmental diseases from greenhouse gas emissions represent one of the greatest silent public health threats of this period.

“Declaring a state of emergency is not an exaggeration; it is a necessity. EHCON stands fully prepared, alongside partners, to lead this urgent response.

“The health of Nigerians today and tomorrow depends on actions taken now. We call on government, industry, communities and the media to support this initiative,” Baba added.

He said the council was also raising awareness about the health burden of combustion-engine pollution across the country.

Baba said the emergency declaration was necessary as Nigeria faces rising, preventable deaths from pollution-induced diseases daily.

He attributed the situation to unregulated reliance on combustion engines, weak emission controls, rising healthcare costs and loss of productive human capital.

Baba warned that failure to act decisively would overburden the healthcare system and undermine national development.

“Our investigations reveal environmental diseases linked to air pollution are increasing beyond the long-term public health impact of COVID-19,” he said.

He said many Nigerians who neither smoke nor drink are increasingly diagnosed with acute and chronic respiratory infections.

Baba listed associated conditions as lung and other environmentally induced cancers, cardiovascular diseases, systemic inflammation and climate-related dust exposure.

“These are linked to prolonged exposure to black carbon, particulate matter and toxic emissions from generators, heavy vehicles and industrial operations,” he said.

He added that marine engines, port activities, mining and petroleum operations worsened the largely invisible but devastating emergency.

Baba said emergency actions included intensified inspections of high-emission facilities and transport corridors, alongside mandatory compliance audits.

Other measures include sanctions under the 2024 Environmental Health Provision Rules and targeted emission-reduction interventions.

He said EHCON would deploy 70,000 environmental and public health response staff nationwide for surveillance and rapid response.

Additional measures include regulating fuel additives, mandatory emission testing for generators and vehicles, and phased restrictions on highly polluting engines.

Baba said the response would reduce pollution-related deaths, improve air quality and strengthen environmental public health governance.

He added that enhanced compliance would boost national resilience against environmental health threats.

By Felicia Imohimi

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