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IPCC’s 63rd Plenary in Peru explores contributions to Seventh Assessment Report

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The representatives of member governments and observer organisations of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) will be meeting in Lima, Peru, from October 27 to 30, 2025.

The Panel, comprising 195 member governments, is expected to continue discussions on the workplan of the Working Group contributions to the Seventh Assessment Report, as well as on the draft outline and workplan of the Methodology Report on Carbon Dioxide Removal Technologies, Carbon Capture Utilisation and Storage. 

Jim Skea
Jim Skea, IPCC Chair

The 63rd Session of the Panel, hosted by the Peruvian government, will also consider proposals for Expert Meetings and Workshops to be held in its current cycle as well as the IPCC’s programme and budget, among other business.

The opening session of the meeting will take place on Monday, October 27, 2025, at ESAN Convention Centre in Lima. During the opening, the Plenary will be addressed by IPCC Chair Jim Skea, Peru’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Ambassador Hugo de Zela, Deputy Minister of Strategic Development of Natural Resources for Peru’s Ministry of Environment, Raquel Hilianova Soto Torres, and Director of Climate Change Division of the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) Martin Krause.

The delegates will also see the video messages from Celeste Saulo, the Secretary-General of the World Meteorological Organisation and Simon Stiell, the Executive Director of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.

IPCC assessments provide governments, at all levels, with scientific information that they can use to develop climate policies. IPCC assessments are a key input into the international negotiations to tackle climate change. IPCC reports are drafted and reviewed in several stages, thus guaranteeing objectivity and transparency.

Comprehensive scientific assessment reports are published every five to seven years. The IPCC is currently in its seventh assessment cycle, which formally began in July 2023.

South Africa: Firms appeal offshore oil exploration court ruling

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In a pivotal development in the fight for environmental justice, Shell and the South African Minister of Mineral and Petroleum Resources have applied for leave to appeal the recent judgment of Judge Mangcu-Lockwood of the Western Cape High Court, which found the environmental authorisation for offshore oil and gas exploration in Block 5/6/7, to be unlawful.

The case was initially filed by The Green Connection and Natural Justice, in a bid to defend the rights of coastal communities to sustain their ocean-dependent livelihoods, protect their food security and shield them from the deepening impacts of climate change.

Western Cape High Court
Western Cape High Court, Cape Town, South Africa

Following an online hearing on October 16, 2025, Strategic Lead at The Green Connection, Liz McDaid, says: “This appeal attempt is disappointing but not surprising. It is clear that the oil and gas giants, together with government, are determined to push ahead despite the court’s recognition of serious environmental and procedural shortcomings. We will continue to stand firm for the rights of coastal communities and the protection of our oceans because the High Court’s ruling correctly highlighted serious procedural and environmental flaws in the approval process for Block 5/6/7.”

The Green Connection’s Community Outreach Coordinator, Neville van Rooy, adds: “For the people living along our coasts, this could be a serious development because thousands of coastal families who depend on small-scale fishing for their livelihoods may face immediate and long-term harm if the project proceeds. Any offshore drilling accident, including a “well blowout”, could devastate marine life and fisheries along South Africa’s west coast, with oil potentially drifting into Namibian waters via the Benguela Current. These are just some of the reasons why we keep raising our voices – loudly and clearly – to ensure that these risks are not brushed aside.”

The Green Connection says that this case may be part of a broader pattern in which fossil fuel companies and government authorities appear to repeatedly sidestep environmental safeguards, making court rulings, such as this one, a crucial defence for both people and the planet.

“Beyond the potential local impacts, we cannot ignore that production from this block could directly increase greenhouse gas emissions, possibly accelerating climate change. Climate change impacts could have a ripple effect on small-scale fisheries and the overall wellbeing of coastal communities,” adds van Rooy.

The Green Connection and Natural Justice now await judgment on whether the appeal can proceed and, if so, whether it will be heard by a Full Bench of the Western Cape High Court or the Supreme Court of Appeal.

Katsina ranks second in Nigeria’s 2025 Climate Governance Performance Ranking

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Katsina State has been ranked second in the 2025 Subnational Climate Governance Performance Rating and Ranking – an independent, research-based assessment developed by Professor Chukwumerije Okereke and the Society for Planet and Prosperity (SPP).

This, according to the promoters, marks one of the most significant recognitions of subnational climate leadership in Nigeria. Katsina’s leap of 23 places from the previous year is said to demonstrate tangible improvements in governance capacity and policy innovation directly informed by this evidence-based evaluation framework.

Katsina
Katsina State official being awarded following its second placement in the 2025 Subnational Climate Governance Performance Rating and Ranking

The rating, launched in Abuja on October 14, 2025, by the Federal Ministry of Environment in partnership with SPP, the UK FCDO’s Partnership for Agile Governance and Climate Engagement (PACE), the African Climate Foundation, and others, assesses all 36 states across five governance pillars: institutional structures, policy frameworks, budgeting, implementation and monitoring, and public engagement.

Professor Mohammed Al-Amin, Special Adviser to the Governor on Climate Change, noted: ““This recognition heartens us. Coming in second among all Nigerian states is a clear signal that Katsina’s Green Growth Agenda is yielding results. Our administration is deeply committed to climate governance, not only in policy formulation, but also in practical implementation and transparency. We want climate action to translate into real, visible improvements in the lives of our people.

“The recognition validates our reforms and the technical guidance we’ve drawn from the Climate Governance Performance framework. It shows that evidence-based research can translate directly into institutional and policy change at state level.”

Professor Al-Amin highlighted the key areas of progress that contributed to the state’s strong performance and how these actions were premised on the rating and ranking methodology published by SPP in collaboration with the Federal government earlier in 2024.

Key Research-Informed Impacts

  • Institutional Strengthening: Guided by the performance indicators developed through the national Climate Governance Ranking research, Katsina established climate governance desks across ministries and created formal coordination mechanisms with local governments.
  • Policy Uptake: The 2024 Katsina State Climate Resilience and Green Economy Policy was designed to align with performance benchmarks highlighted in the Rating methodology, showing direct research-to-policy translation. One of the landmark policy innovations inspired by the ranking was the passage and implementation of the Katsina State Climate Resilience and Green Economy Policy (2024).
  • Budgetary Reform: Noting the high marks allocated to climate finance, we pushed very hard to drive climate-related funding which subsequently rose by 30% in 2025 – a measurable outcome linked to the project’s budgeting criteria and follow-up capacity-building workshops led by the research team.
  • Implementation and Public Accountability: The launch of Katsina Climate Watch, a digital transparency platform, mirrors the project’s call for improved visibility and citizen engagement in climate projects.

Governor Dikko Umaru Radda praised the result describing it as: “A testament to our administration’s proactive approach to governance, innovation, and environmental responsibility.”

He said this was a perfect example of “how collaborative research and data-driven policy can drive real transformation in governance and public service delivery.”

Minister of Environment, Balarabe Abbas, commended the top-performing states, urging others to adopt the Ranking framework as a “map for reform and learning.”

SPP submitted: “Katsina’s achievement demonstrates how rigorous academic research can have direct and verifiable impacts on public policy, institutional design, and environmental outcomes. The state’s adoption of evidence-based recommendations from the Subnational Climate Governance Performance Ranking illustrates a model of research-informed decision-making now influencing both federal-state collaboration and peer learning among subnational governments.”

Over 3,000 climate litigation cases reshaping global climate policy – Report

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Climate litigation is now being pursued across more countries than ever before, according to a report published by the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) and the Sabin Centre for Climate Change Law at Columbia University. 

The report reveals how legal action is addressing issues such as greenwashing, carbon offsets, and energy-intensive data centres.

Climate Change in the courtroom: Trends, impacts, and emerging lessons is the fourth edition of a series first launched in 2017. Drawing on data from the Sabin Centre’s Climate Change Litigation Databases, the report examines key trends, pending cases, and court decisions.

Climate litigation
Climate litigation

“Climate litigation has evolved into a powerful global tool for advancing climate action, and accountability,” said Inger Andersen, Executive Director of UNEP. “Transforming our energy, mobility, housing, and food systems must be a collective effort, through ambitious and science-based policymaking. Independent judicial systems are essential to ensuring this transformation is both just and effective.” 

As of June 30, 2025, a cumulative 3,099 climate-related cases have been filed in 55 national jurisdictions and 24 international or regional courts, tribunals, or quasi-judicial bodies. This continues a trend in climate-related cases filed by 2022 (2,180 cases), 2020 (1,550 cases) and 2017 (884 cases). While cases from the Global South still represent less than 10 per cent in 2025, their share is steadily growing. 

Since the first recorded climate litigation case nearly four decades ago, the field has expanded and matured. Litigation now covers virtually all aspects of climate governance, and similar patterns are appearing in litigation on related crises such as biodiversity and pollution. 

The report highlights significant decisions from around the world including the landmark and recent Advisory Opinion of the International Court of Justice, which clarifies States’ obligations in addressing climate change. Courts are increasingly recognising the scientific basis for climate-related claims, including through attribution science that links specific extreme weather events to greenhouse gas emissions. These rulings help define global norms and obligations.

At the same time, the report also identifies anti-climate litigation is on the rise, with lawsuits aimed at deregulating environmental protections or deprioritising environmental, social, and corporate governance issues in investments. Particularly concerning is the increase in lawsuits against public opposition to high-emitting projects, which target climate advocates, journalists, and civil society organisations.

UNEP: Better data driving action on methane emissions

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Government and industry responses to UNEP’s more than 3,500 satellite methane alerts climbed from one to 12 per cent in the past year. Nevertheless, action must accelerate to minimise global temperature rise and achieve the Global Methane Pledge goal of curbing methane emissions 30 per cent by 2030, according to a new UN Environment Programme (UNEP) report.

Historically, emission inventories have underestimated methane emissions, making real-world data a critical tool to track and reduce this potent driver of global warming. The fifth edition of the UN Environment Programme’s (UNEP) International Methane Emissions Observatory (IMEO) publication, An Eye on Methane: From measurement to momentum, finds that member oil and gas companies of IMEO’s Oil and Gas Methane Partnership 2.0 (OGMP 2.0) are set to track one-third of emissions from global production using real-world measurements.

Methane emission
Methane emission: Gas flare site

And while government and company responses to alerts from IMEO’s Methane Alert and Response System (MARS) have grown tenfold over the previous year, nearly 90 per cent remain unanswered.

Atmospheric methane continues to be the second biggest driver of climate change after carbon dioxide, responsible for about one-third of the planet’s warming.

“Reducing methane emissions can quickly bend the curve on global warming, buying more time for long-term decarbonization efforts, so it is encouraging that data-driven tools are helping the oil and gas industry to report on their emissions and set ambitious mitigation targets,” said Inger Andersen, Executive Director of UNEP.

“But to keep the Paris Agreement targets within reach, the important progress on reporting must translate into cuts to emissions. Every company should join the Oil and Gas Methane Partnership 2.0, and both governments and operators must respond to satellite alerts – then they must act to reduce emissions.”

Industry transparency growing, but action must follow

The OGMP 2.0 is the world’s global standard for methane emissions measurement and mitigation in the oil and gas sector – and provides the foundation of methane regulations in the world’s largest buying market, the European Union.

Over the past five years, OGMP 2.0 membership has more than doubled to 153 companies in the countries, covering 42 per cent of global oil and gas production.

In total, one-third of global oil and gas production reports, or will soon report, emissions at OGMP 2.0’s Gold Standard – meaning emissions are tracked with real-world measurements. This positions a large amount of the global industry to effectively measure – and thus mitigate – emissions.

Of the companies that reported emissions data, 65 companies, representing 17 per cent of global oil and gas production, achieved Gold Standard. Some 50 companies, representing a further 15 per cent, achieved Gold Standard Pathway – meaning these companies are on track to soon reach Gold Standard reporting. Another 22 companies reported emissions data but did not meet Gold Standard requirements.

Methane alert responses rising, but not fast enough

Through MARS, UNEP has sent over 3,500 alerts about major emissions events across 33 countries. These alerts are based on satellite monitoring and artificial intelligence-supported analysis.

While last year only one per cent of MARS alerts received a response, this year the response rate rose to 12 per cent. This engagement with the system is yielding results. IMEO has documented 25 cases of mitigation action in ten countries since MARS was launched in 2022, including across six new countries during the past year. However, with nearly 90 per cent of MARS alerts ignored, governments and companies must increase their response rates.

The MARS system is also expanding to cover methane emissions from coal mines and waste sites – sectors where measurement is scarce, but targeted mitigation opportunities exist.

IMEO stepping up support

IMEO is stepping up its Steel Methane Programme, which targets emissions from metallurgical coal used in steelmaking. Metallurgical coal adds a quarter to the climate footprint of steel, yet these emissions can be mitigated at just one per cent of the cost of steel. Despite the availability of low-cost solutions – like oxidation and drainage systems – metallurgical coal methane remains largely overlooked in steel decarbonisation efforts.

The programme will bring new transparency to the sector through a Steel Methane Transparency Database of mine-level emissions that combines empirical studies, satellite data and industry partnerships.

Finally, IMEO has supported 46 peer-reviewed methane science studies across six continents. These studies have filled knowledge gaps, including by testing new technologies for measuring emissions from oil and gas facilities and quantifying emissions from metallurgical coal-producing regions. IMEO is also developing estimates for methane emissions from rice and livestock through country-wide baseline studies.

“Methane is one of the most potent greenhouse gases. Tackling it is among the fastest ways to slow global warming. Europe’s groundbreaking methane regulation reflects our determination to cut emissions through credible data and transparency. Market operators are increasingly on the lookout for cleaner fuels and verifiable emissions information is key. Credible data from UNEP’s IMEO enables standards and partnerships that make accountability the norm across global energy supply chains,” said Dan Jørgensen, European Commissioner for Energy and Housing.

“Methane mitigation is an urgent global challenge, and it begins with accurate, actionable data. Japan’s CLEAN initiative is encouraging information exchange among industries and drive reductions across the gas value chain in partnership with Oil and Gas Methane Partnership 2.0, while satellite missions like JAXA’s new GOSAT-GW will turn space-based observations into mitigation on the ground through UNEP’s Methane Alert and Response System. The Government of Japan expect IMEO to contribute to accelerating global action on methane emission reductions through collaboration with governments, industries, and civil society,” stated Takehiko Matsuo, Vice-Minister for International Affairs of the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry, Japan.

Tinubu approves tenure extension for surveyor-general, Adebomehin

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President Bola Tinubu has approved a two-year tenure extension for the Surveyor-General of the Federation, Mr. AbuduGaniyu Adebomehin.

The extension, effective from Jan. 5, 2026, was announced in a statement by Presidential Spokesperson, Bayo Onanuga on Wednesday, October 22, 2025, in Abuja.

According to the statement, the move follows the recent transfer of the Office of the Surveyor-General of the Federation (OSGOF) to the Presidency.

Abuduganiyu Adebomehin
Surveyor General of the Federation, Mr Abuduganiyu Adebomehin

‎”Adebomehin had launched key reforms in geospatial data systems, which the President wanted to see fully implemented.”

Tinubu directed Adebomehin to consolidate the reforms during the extension period.

He emphasised national priorities such as land management, highway infrastructure coordination, erosion control, and related strategic programmes.

Adebomehin was first appointed surveyor-general by late president Muhammadu Buhari, effective Jan. 5, 2022.

By Muhyideen Jimoh

Lagos tasks LG chairmen on street trading, waste management

The Lagos State Government has urged the Local Government (LG) chairmen to work out modalities to tackle street trading and waste pollution for a cleaner environment.

The Commissioner for Environment and Water Resources, Mr. Tokunbo Wahab, made this known in a meeting with all the chairmen at the Protea Hotel, Ikeja, on Wednesday, October 22, 2025.

While speaking with journalists after the meeting, Tokunbo said it was aimed at ensuring a cleaner environment in the state.

Tokunbo Wahab
Commissioner for Environment and Water Resources, Mr. Tokunbo Wahab

“We just had a meeting with all the LG chairmen, state wide, to work out a collaborative working relationship with respect to the environment, transport, drainage, street trading issues, and water management.

“The meeting is for us to have their input, and their input is to enable us to know where the gaps are so that we can collaborate with them at the local level.

“We need to also inject new life into the Lagos Waste Management Authority’s system. Hence, we appeal to our LG chairmen to assist,” he said.

The Chairman of Conference of 57 LG Chairmen, Mr. Sesan Olowa, in his reaction, appealed to the state government to partner more with the LGs at ensuring a cleaner environment.

“The major challenge here as to waste is collection and transportation. So, when you look at the value chain, you see a lot of gaps within it.

“In my local government, Ibeju-Lekki, we procured 20 tricycles, and the first two months, we were able to pick 12,000 bins of bags from our streets.

“So, we discovered that serious inefficiency within the value chain is a major challenge. LGs definitely have the capacity to clean up Lagos.

“But we won’t be able to clean Lagos if we don’t have where we take our waste to,” he said.

He added that the ministry should begin to look at how to create different hubs in Lagos where wastes can be taken to.

“Today, we have several youths across Lagos who are jobless, I think, if we have this waste management revolution, we can use it to create a lot of jobs for our youths.

“We need a lot of support from the state to work together,” he said.

While responding, Wahab assured the chairmen that the state would do everything in its power to ensure Lagos was free from environmental infractions.

Present at the meeting were LG and Local Council Development Area chairmen alongside management and staff of the Ministry of Environment and Water Resources.

By Olaitan Idris

Reps C’ttee vows to unearth alleged unrepatriated $850bn oil, non-oil export proceeds

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An ad hoc committee of the House of Representatives has pledged to probe and unearth alleged Nigeria’s unrepatriated $850 billion oil and non-oil export proceeds between 1996 and 2014.

Chairman, Ad hoc Committee to Investigate Pre-Shipment Inspection of Exports and the Non-Repatriation of Crude Oil Proceeds, Rep. Seyi Sowunmi (LP-Lagos), made this known on Wednesday, October 22, 2025, in Abuja.

Addressing newsmen at the inauguration of the committee, Sowunmi said that recent allegations suggested a significant breakdown in compliance by relevant stakeholders.

Oil
Oil

“It is alleged that operators in the oil and gas industry failed to repatriate an estimated 40 to 45 per cent of Nigeria’s crude oil export proceeds, amounting to approximately 850 billion dollar between 1996 and 2014 in clear contravention of the law.

“Even more worrisome is the disparity among export-earnings data reported by government agencies such as the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), the Department of Petroleum Resources (Now NUPRC), the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation and the National Bureau of Statistics, as well as the inconsistencies between Nigerian and international bodies such as OPEC data.

“The non-oil export, especially solid minerals from mining activities and production and export of commodities allegedly have high non-compliant export earnings reports.

“The House of Representatives, in support of the Renewed Hope Agenda of President Bola Tinubu, set up this committee to investigate the massive revenue leakage stated above.

“This committee will conduct investigative public hearings to determine the exact amount of oil, gas and non-oil export proceeds unrepatriated since 1996,” Sowunmi said.

The lawmaker said that the committee would also ascertain why government agencies were in the habit of reporting conflicting export-earnings data, engage experts for forensic reconciliation of export-proceeds accounts and investigate the management and utilisation of funds under the Nigerian Export Supervision Scheme.

According to him, the committee will be guided strictly by evidence, data driven, transparent, and verifiable documents and  not speculation.

The lawmaker said that Nigeria must receive, in full and promptly, every dollar legally due from its exports.

Sowunmi, however, stated that the success of the committee would depend on the collective support of Nigerians for the benefit of the country.

“Our measure of success is not publicity, but verifiable financial recovery to the Federation Account.

“This is a whole-of-system exercise. Operators must supply shipment-to-receipt trails; regulators must reconcile production, certification, and forex returns.

“Financial institutions must provide account-level evidence of repatriation within time. Where breaches are discovered, appropriate civil and criminal sanctions shall be applied,” he said.

The chairman pledged to provide periodic factual updates and publish non-sensitive documents, where necessary.

Sowunmi urged the media to focus on verifiable progress and avoid premature figures that could mislead the public.

He said that the committee would actively utilise existing whistle-blowing channels, guaranteeing confidentiality and possible rewards for credible information from industry staff members, inspection agents, bankers and concerned citizens.

The lawmaker urged all stakeholders, corporate and individual, to cooperate fully with the committee, saying that the inquiry was non-partisan, but to protect and strengthen the country’s economy.

By EricJames Ochigbo

NUPRC, PTDF reiterate commitment to ethical governance in hydrocarbon sector

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The Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) has reaffirmed its commitment to promoting ethical governance as the foundation for sustainable growth in Nigeria’s and Africa’s hydrocarbon industry.

Mr. Gbenga Komolafe, Commission Chief Executive, NUPRC reaffirmed the commitment on Wednesday, October 22, in Abuja at the 2025 International Conference on Hydrocarbon Science and Technology (ICHST) organised by the Petroleum Training Institute (PTI).

Komolafe was represented by Dr Kelechi Ofoegbu, Executive Commissioner, Corporate Services and Administration, NUPRC

Gbenga Komolafe
Gbenga Komolafe, Chief Executive, Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC)

In a keynote address titled “Ethical Governance: The Bedrock of Africa’s Hydrocarbon Future,” he said that the prosperity of Africa’s energy sector depended on resource endowment and also the quality of governance driving its utilisation.

“When we speak about Africa’s hydrocarbon future, it is not merely about how many barrels of oil we can producandl

“It is fundamentally about whether we can govern these resources in ways that build trust, attract investment and safeguard the environment,” he said.

He said that ethical governance had enabled Nigeria to record progress in reducing gas flaring through its flare gas commercialisation initiative.

According to him, the initiative is aimed at achieving total flare-out by 2030.

He said the initiative had transformed the image of the Niger Delta from one characterised by wasteful flaring to one of renewed opportunity and economic empowerment.

He also cited the Host Community Development Trusts (HCDTs), established under the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) 2021, as an example of governance reforms delivering tangible benefits to oil-producing communities.

“In villages that once knew only resentment, schools are now under construction, clinics are opening and roads are being built.

“These are not acts of charity, but legal entitlements guaranteed by governance,” he said.

The NUPRC boss said that under the administration of President Bola Tinubu, Nigeria had embarked on a new path anchored on transparency, accountability and fairness in the oil and gas sector, through the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA).

He said key initiatives undertaken by the commission to promote transparency and accountability included development of 25 new upstream regulations in consultation with the Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (NEITI) and industry stakeholders.

He listed others to include the launch of the Public Register of Petroleum Concessions and Beneficial Ownership database, Transparent conduct of the 2022 and 2024 licensing rounds through open digital platforms.

Others are the empowerment of indigenous oil firms, now contributing over 30 per cent of Nigeria’s total oil output, and implementation of the Metering and Measurement Audit Initiative to ensure that every barrel produced is accurately recorded.

According to Komolafe, these reforms have strengthened investors’ confidence and demonstrated that “what wins investment is not geology but governance”.

The Petroleum Technology Development Fund (PTDF) also reaffirmed its commitment to building human and institutional capacity to drive Africa’s hydrocarbon transformation anchored on innovation, environmental stewardship and sound governance.

The Executive Secretary of PTDF, Ahmed Aminu, said that Africa must reposition itself as a supplier of hydrocarbons, and also as a hub for innovation, supported by strong policies and skilled manpower.

Aminu was represented by Mr. Olayinka Agboola, General Manager, Strategic Planning and Documentation Department, PTDF.

He said that PTDF was advancing Nigeria’s energy-transition goals through scholarships, research funding, and partnerships that strengthen technical competence and knowledge transfer.

“Our task is to shift from mere resource extraction to sustainable, inclusive value creation grounded in environmental stewardship, sound institutions and robust local content,” Aminu said.

He said that PTDF’s partnership with PTI reflected a shared vision to nurture a new generation of professionals and innovators who will anchor Africa’s energy transformation.

The theme of the conference is, “Transforming Africa’s Hydrocarbon Sector: Balancing Growth, Environment and Governance”.

By Emmanuella Anokam

WaterAid, DP World launch Lagos scheme to drive access to water, hygiene services

A major stride toward ensuring equitable access to safe water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) services was taken in Lagos as WaterAid Nigeria, in partnership with DP World, formally launched the Advancing Inclusive Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene (AI WASH) Project. The event, held in Lagos on Wednesday October 22, 2025, marked the beginning of a collaborative effort aimed at improving public health, gender equity, and environmental sustainability across selected communities.

Representing the WaterAid Country Director, Evelyn Mere, Iorkumbor Emmanuel, Head of Grant Strategic Partnership and Head of Strategy Performance Effectiveness and Learning (SPEL) at WaterAid Nigeria, reaffirmed the organisation’s commitment to deepening access to clean water and sanitation facilities through strategic collaboration with government and private partners.

AI WASH
Participants at the launch of the Advancing Inclusive Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene (AI WASH) Project

“WaterAid has found a dependable ally in the Lagos State Ministry of Environment and Water Resources,” Emmanuel said. “They have provided the leadership and direction that continues to guide our work. Our focus is to demonstrate models that work in Ojodu and Ikorodu North LCDAs – models that can be scaled up across Lagos State.”

He further announced that WaterAid had secured fresh funding from InfiWall Logistics, supported by PepsiCo Corporation, to sustain interventions in Lagos communities and schools over the next 12 months.

“Today marks a very special milestone as we introduce the AI WASH project, aligned with WaterAid’s vision of achieving universal access to safe water, sanitation, and hygiene by 2030,” Emmanuel noted. “This partnership signifies inclusivity and shared responsibility, ensuring everyone has a role in creating a healthier Lagos.”

Emmanuel emphasised WaterAid’s strategy of “saturation and sustainability”, ensuring that interventions do not end with infrastructure delivery but extend into long-term management and behavioural change.

He disclosed that a five-year investment plan has been developed for the participating Local Council Development Areas (LCDAs) to help local authorities plan, budget, and sustain facilities.

“Sustainability is not an afterthought; it begins now,” he explained. “Local councils must start budgeting for the repair and replacement of facilities, not just commissioning new ones. Our goal is 24/7 access to clean water in every community.”

He added that WaterAid’s behavioural change campaign targets schools and households as change agents, promoting hygiene education and discouraging open defecation.

Babatunde Akinwunmi, Deputy Director, Office of Drainage and Water Resources, who represented the Lagos State Commissioner for Environment, commended WaterAid’s impact across the state.

“We appreciate WaterAid’s consistent inclusion of DP World as a funding partner,” Akinwunmi said. “Virtually all schools and primary health centres in Ikorodu and Ojodu LCDAs have benefited. However, we must now move from provision to sustainability. We expect more ownership and maintenance from the councils and communities.”

He urged that the successful model be replicated in other LCDAs across the state, emphasising that the sustainability of existing facilities should take priority before new expansions.

In his remarks, Mayor Ameen Olawale Ibrahim Apanisile, Executive Chairman of Ikorodu North LCDA, expressed appreciation to WaterAid and DP World for their support, pledging his council’s commitment to sustain the gains made.

“We are complementing WaterAid’s efforts by preaching maintenance and ownership to our communities,” he said. “If people take care of these facilities, more projects will come. But if they neglect them, resources that could go into new projects will be spent on repairs. Ownership is the key.”

Representing the Lagos State Ministry of Basic and Secondary Education, the Director of Basic Education Services lauded the tangible improvements the WASH initiatives have brought to schools across Lagos.

“For helping our schools overcome water scarcity and sanitation challenges, we are grateful,” he stated. “We have introduced monitoring systems to ensure proper maintenance and accountability. WaterAid’s impact is visible and commendable.”

Speaking on behalf of the WaterAid fundraising team, Ruth Agwulobi reiterated that the AI WASH Project seeks to advance inclusive and sustainable WASH services for improved health and equity, with a strong focus on women, girls, and vulnerable populations.

“Our goal is simple – every woman, girl, and family deserves safe access to water, sanitation, and hygiene,” she affirmed.

The AI WASH project is expected to serve as a blueprint for sustainable and inclusive WASH programming in Lagos State, combining technical expertise, private-sector funding, and government leadership to ensure long-term impact.

Emmanuel concluded: “We are not just bringing money; we are bringing solutions—and asking the government and communities to bring their commitment. Together, we can make safe water and sanitation a reality for all.”

By Ajibola Adedoye