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Germany restricts professional fisheries in protected areas of North Sea

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Federal Environment Ministry (BMU) and Federal Ministry of Agriculture (BMEL) in Germany have developed tangible proposals for restrictions on professional fisheries in the marine protected areas of the North Sea. These were transmitted to the EU Commission as a “joint recommendation” and concern the Natura 2000 sites in the Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ).

Svenja Schulze
German Environment Minister, Svenja Schulze

The BMU and BMEL recommend measures to protect the threatened species and habitats occurring there. These include, for example, porpoises and seabirds, reefs and sandbars. They are expected to contribute to reaching the goal by 2020 of bringing the marine environment back to a “good state”.

Environment Minister, Svenja Schulze, said: “The endangered species and habitats of our oceans and oceans, such as porpoises, the red-throats and the red-throated divers, need better protection. For marine protected areas to live up to their name, restrictions on local fisheries are necessary. By submitting proposals for this, we have now created the prerequisite for the EU Commission to issue corresponding regulations.”

The proposed measures concern the Natura 2000 sites “Doggerbank”, “Borkum Riffgrund”, “Sylter Außenriff” and “Eastern German Bight”. These together cover about 28 percent of the area of ​​the foreign trade zone. Within these areas, certain fishing techniques in professional fisheries are to be prohibited or limited in time on part-areas. Rules are proposed for the use of gill nets and trawl nets to better protect marine mammals and seabirds, as well as reefs and sandbars and the species dependent thereon.

The submitted recommendations are coordinated with all affected EU member states, which exercise non-German flag fishing rights in the German EEZ. The next step is now for the EU Commission to make the recommendations binding in the context of a regulation.

The EEZ refers to the area beyond the territorial sea, ie the sea area at a distance of 12 to a maximum of 200 nautical miles from the coastline, where the adjoining coastal State can to a limited extent exercise sovereign rights and jurisdiction. The responsibility for these protected areas in the EEZ lies with the German government, while the territories in the territorial sea (up to 12 m) are the responsibility of the federal states.

The Natura 2000 Guidelines (the Fauna-Flora Habitat Directive and the Birds Directive) identify species and habitats for which protected areas must be designated in order to achieve an ecologically coherent network (NATURA 2000).

Germany, it was gathered, has an obligation to establish measures for the preservation or restoration of the so-called “favourable conservation status” of these species and habitats. The fisheries sector is defined under the rules of the “Common Fisheries Policy Regulation”. The “joint recommendation” should therefore be submitted to and coordinated with all economically affected EU Member States.

If an agreement has been reached with all the countries concerned, then the “joint recommendation” can be submitted to the Commission, which then binds it by a regulation. For fisheries management in the Natura 2000 sites in the EEZ of the North Sea, this agreement took place in December 2018/2019.

LAWMA threatens to close Ladipo Market over indiscriminate waste disposal

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The Lagos Waste Management Authority (LAWMA) said on Friday, February 8, 2019 that it might close Ladipo Market in Mushin, till further notice, if the waste situation continued unabated.

Ladipo Market
Ladipo Market

LAWMA’s Public Relations Officer, Mr Obinna Onyenali, said that the attention of the authority had been drawn to the unwholesome environmental practices being carried out by traders at the Ladipo Market.

Onyenali said that such practices had resulted to indiscriminate dumping of waste and degradation of the environment.

He said that the authority had, in recent times, doubled its efforts to ensure that business transactions in all Lagos markets were conducted in a clean and safe environment.

According to him, the authority has doubled its efforts through timely deployment of trucks for waste evacuation and sweeping of the markets.

“However, these efforts are being tainted by the activities of mischievous persons who would rather dump their waste indiscriminately on the roads than patronise their assigned Private Sector Participation (PSP) operators.

“LAWMA condemns in strongest terms this unwholesome act, being perpetuated by the traders of Ladipo Market, as it exposes the environment and the people that do business there to various health dangers.

“The authority seizes this opportunity to urge the merchants at the market to turn a new leaf or face the consequences of the Law.

“If these heinous acts against the environment continue unabated, the market will be shut till further notice, ‘’ he said in a statement.

Onyenali said that LAWMA wanted all markets to comply with the Environmental Laws of the state, which was essential for building a cleaner and healthier environment that everyone would be proud of.

“The Authority appeals to all residents in the state to always imbibe the habit of effective waste management by bagging their waste for easy evacuation by their assigned PSPs,’’ he said.

By Florence Onuegbu

Tanzania won’t lift ban on export of live wild animals

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The government of Tanzania on Friday, February 8, 2019 ruled out lifting its blanket ban on export of live wild animals, Ministry for Natural Resources and Tourism, told the National Assembly.

Constantine Kanyasu
Constantine Kanyasu

“We are working to review the Wildlife Conservation Act 2009 to be able to impose total ban on the export of wild animals.

“The ban which has been in place for three years will not be lifted,’’ Constantine Kanyasu, the Deputy Minister for Natural Resources and Tourism, told the House in the capital Dodoma.

The minister said the government had in 2016 imposed the ban on export of live wild animals following exporters’ violation of the Wildlife Conservation Act No. 5 of 2009. 

Past four years were warmest on record, confirms WMO

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In a clear sign of continuing long-term climate change associated with record atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases, 2015, 2016, 2017 and 2018 have been confirmed as the four warmest years on record.

Petteri Taalas
WMO Secretary-General, Petteri Taalas

A consolidated analysis by the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) of five leading international datasets showed that the global average surface temperature in 2018 was approximately 1.0° Celsius (with a margin of error of ±0.13°C) above the pre-industrial baseline (1850-1900). It ranks as the fourth warmest year on record.

The year 2016, which was influenced by a strong El-Niño event, remains the warmest year on record (1.2°C above preindustrial baseline). Global average temperatures in 2017 and 2015 were both 1.1°C above pre-industrial levels. The latter two years are virtually indistinguishable because the difference is less than one hundredth of a degree, which is less than the statistical margin of error.

“The long-term temperature trend is far more important than the ranking of individual years, and that trend is an upward one,” said WMO Secretary-General, Petteri Taalas. “The 20 warmest years on record have been in the past 22 years. The degree of warming during the past four years has been exceptional, both on land and in the ocean.”

“Temperatures are only part of the story. Extreme and high impact weather affected many countries and millions of people, with devastating repercussions for economies and ecosystems in 2018,” he said.

“Many of the extreme weather events are consistent with what we expect from a changing climate. This is a reality we need to face up to. Greenhouse gas emission reduction and climate adaptation measures should be a top global priority,” said Mr Taalas.

The globally averaged temperature in 2018 was about 0.38°C (±0.13°C) above the 1981-2010 long-term average (estimated at 14.3°C). This 30-year baseline is used by National Meteorological and Hydrological Services to assess the long-term averages and inter-annual variability of key climate parameters, such as temperature, precipitation and wind, which are important for climate sensitive sectors such as water management, energy, agriculture and health.

WMO will issue its full Statement on the State of the Climate in 2018 in March. This report will provide a comprehensive overview of temperature variability and trends, high-impact events, and key indicators of long-term climate change such as increasing carbon dioxide concentrations, Arctic and Antarctic sea ice, sea level rise and ocean acidification.

The final statement will include information submitted by a wide range of United Nations agencies on human, socio-economic and environmental impacts as part of an effort to provide a more comprehensive, United Nations-wide policy brief for decision makers on the interplay between weather, climate and water and United Nations global development goals.

The year 2019 has kicked in where 2018 left off

Australia had its warmest January on record, with heatwaves unprecedented in their scale and duration. Tasmania had its driest January on record, with destructive bushfires. There has been a long-term increase in extreme fire weather, and in the length of the fire season, across large parts of Australia, according to its Bureau of Meteorology.

Intense heatwaves are becoming more frequent as a result of climate change.

Extreme heat in the southern hemisphere contrasted with extreme cold in parts of North America in January. “The cold weather in the eastern United States certainly does not disprove climate change,” said Mr Taalas.

“The Arctic is warming at twice the global average. A large fraction of the ice in the region has melted. Those changes are affecting weather patterns outside the Arctic in the Northern Hemisphere. A part of the cold anomalies at lower latitudes could be linked to the dramatic changes in the Arctic. What happens at the poles does not stay at the poles but influences weather and climate conditions in lower latitudes where hundreds of millions of people live,” he added.

Group plans publication on sustainable settlements

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The Physical Planning Renaissance Initiative (PPRI), a non-governmental organisation (NGO) established to advance urban planning agenda, is to debut its magazine in the second quarter of 2019.

Physical Planning Renaissance Initiative (PPRI)
L-R: TPLs Moses Ogunleye, Tunji Odunlami, Bunmi Ajayi, Waheed Kadiri, Toyin Ayinde, Wale Alade, Ayo Adediran and Michael Simire, at the PPRI Formal Inaugural Meeting held on Thursday, January 10, 2019 at the Joseph Awogbemi House, Lagos NITP Secretariat, Alausa, Ikeja

The publication, named “Planning Renaissance”, will be an online magazine in the first instance. It is aimed at educating and informing the gamut of stakeholders in the industry on matters of human settlements development at the national, continental and global levels.

Waheed Kadiri, foremost African town planner and Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the organisation, said the publication was initiated in order to offer opportunities for dissecting issues of livability or sustainable living and proffering solutions to them.

“We are concerned with filling the gaps in the sector. We need a publication that will address matters plaguing settlements, where all angles are considered, and alternatives views offered. It will be a publication that policy makers, practitioners in the built environment sector, members of the academia, investors and others will find very stimulating,” he said.

Already, a board of editors comprising seasoned media guru and top-grade academic has been constituted to anchor the publication.

The founding members of the PPRI are Yacoob Abiodun, Bade Falade, Bunmi Ajayi, Waheed Kadiri, Toyin Ayinde, Moses Ogunleye, Tunji Odunlami, Wale Alade, Ayo Adediran and Michael Simire.

Under the aegis of the PPRI, the experts have set out to not only highlight the essence of planning and what they do as professionals, but also to galvanise the public to further stimulate their interest in participatory planning.

Experts predict Africa’s natural resources will diminish by half

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Some West African environment experts say Africa’s stock of environmental resources is expected to diminish by over half within the coming decades.

Deforestation
Deforestation

The experts said this at the maiden edition of the conference on Conservation and Environmental Management for West African NGOs on Wednesday, February 6, 2019 in Abuja.

The theme of the two-day conference is: “Conservation-Collaboration beyond National Boundaries in the Sub-region’’.

Dr Muhtari Aminu-Kano, the Director-General, Nigerian Conservation Foundation (NCF), said the conference would afford partners the opportunity to deliberate on sustainable solutions to common conservation challenges within the region.

“The region is endowed with rich biodiversity populated by numerous species of flora and fauna, unfortunately this unique range of biodiversity are now among the world most threatened.

“The consequences of such a large-scale loss of biodiversity are dire as it will ultimately affect the capacity for economic development, social advancement and exacerbate climate change.’’

Aminu-Kano said that aims of the conference included identifying priority areas requiring urgent need for conservation intervention as well as the need for technical assistance from ECOWAS Secretariat.

According to him, others are to explore areas of possible support for NGOs through closer collaboration with the ECOWAS platform.

“Meet peers and share experience about what works and what doesn’t and identify synergies and ways of working together to help in future tasks.’’

Mr Kwame Awere-Gyeke, the Technical Advisor, West Africa Biodiversity and Climate Change Programme (WABICC) under USAID, said the conference came at the right time.

“At WABICC, we work with all stakeholders to provide opportunities for cooperation and development to ensure that humans live in harmony with nature.

“We must foster closer engagement with ECOWAS environment policy development process for proper action,’’ Awere-Gyeke said.

Mrs Thandiwe Chikomo of Birdlife International, West Africa Sub-regional Office, Dakar, said Birdlife was working with people toward the sustainable use of natural resources.

“BirdLife Africa Partnership is a growing network of 24 organisations striving to conserve birds, their habitats and global biodiversity.

By Ebere Agozie

Agency lays emphasis on water safety in Sokoto

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The Sokoto Rural Water Supply and Sanitation Agency (RUWASSA) has begun training of communities on water safety plans to protect water contamination from point of production to consumption.

Aminu Tambuwal
Governor Aminu Tambuwal of Sokoto State

Mr Tijani Aliyu, the Head of Sanitation, Sokoto RUWASSA, said this on sidelines of the Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) in Emergency Working Group visit on Cholera Assessment and Monitoring in Sokoto on Wednesday, February 6, 2019.

He said that the agency had been working in partnership with UNICEF to expand access to potable water and sanitation, especially in rural communities, saying hygiene promotion was focused on.

“We have trained some community members to be natural leaders and WASH Committees to train their populace on how to protect their water from being contaminated from sources to point of consumption.

“We realise that most of the communities take water from hand-dug wells, without cover, so we are training them on how to lift their water sources from surface points to an acceptable standard.

“This is because it may be contaminated from run-offs as the rainy season sets in, some are open, some water points may be contaminated from waste water coming from open defecation sites.’’

Aliyu said that the agency was implementing the programme in two pilot local governments of Tangaza and Binji, saying with support of the state government and availability of more funds, it would be extended to eight local governments.

He said that at Dange Shuni local council, community members were being trained on community-led total sanitation to ensure people to took ownership of their hygiene by constructing and using their toilets.

He said that there was the need to promote behaviour change to ensure that communities would begin to see the need to stop open defecation practice and resort to toilet use.

He said that this would go a long way to meet the open defecation-free target by 2025.

Aliyu said that the team was working with other stakeholders to intervene to forestall outbreak of cholera, saying this was evident with the provision of hand-pump boreholes, hygiene promotion materials.

He said that some water sources had also been reactivated with testing of some unimproved water sources to see what could be done to rehabilitate them to further improve water supply and reduce outbreak of cholera.

The WASH in Emergency Working Group was established in 2012 when the country experienced serious devastating flood that affected 85 milion people in 14 states.

The group has since remained active, especially in the North-East where IDPs exist and have responded immediately on outbreaks.

The group membership cuts across WASH sector players from Institutions, Development Partners, International and Local NGOs, CSOs responding to WASH issues in the North East, with UNICEF as its co-lead.

By Tosin Kolade

UNHCR to plant 20m trees in Uganda to curb deforestation

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The UN Refugee Agency in Uganda says it plans to plant 20 million trees in 2019 to plug the deforestation by Refugees in the East African Country.

Tree-Planter
Tree planting

Joel Boutroue, representative of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) in Uganda, on Wednesday, February 6, 2019 told reporters that the refugees hosted by Uganda have caused massive deforestation, noting that each refugee cuts on average about 20 trees annually.

Uganda, according to the refugee agency figures, hosts about 1.2 million refugees, with majority coming from South Sudan, Democratic Republic of Congo, Burundi and Somalia.

Boutroue expressed optimism that over time the afforestation measure would be able to cover up the destruction caused by the refugees.

“We would like to do more, if possible, to offset the deforestation that has been already done,’’ he said.

Boutroue said there is tension among some refugee host communities over the deforestation carried out by the refugees. He said planting trees would defuse the tension and promote the coexistence between the refugees and the host communities. 

Climate change fuelling wild weather in Australia, report says

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An increase in the severity and frequency of extreme weather conditions in Australia in 2018 is “a new norm driven by climate change,” a report said on Wednesday, February 6, 2019.

Amanda McKenzie
Climate Council chief executive, Amanda McKenzie

“Temperatures nudged 50 degrees Celsius, bushfires ravaged rainforests and people were at increased risk of cardiac arrests because of heatwaves,’’ the Sydney-based environmental group Climate Council said in its report.

It comes as hundreds of people wait in evacuation centres after 10 days of torrential rain and flooding in north-east Australia, while month-long bushfires have ravaged almost 200,000 hectares of land in Tasmania.

The report, titled “Weather Gone Wild,” said extreme weather events were being influenced by climate change, “as they are occurring in an atmosphere that contains more energy than 50 years ago.”

“Heatwaves are starting earlier, becoming longer, hotter and occurring more frequently,’’ the report said,

It added that there were twelve times more hot temperature than cold temperature records set in Australia between 2000-14.

The report also said extreme weather events were “very costly” as insurance companies paid out more than 1.2 billion Australian dollars (870 million dollars) in 2018 in claims linked to them.

Climate Council chief executive Amanda McKenzie said Australia’s conservative government, which has been in power for five years, has obstructed action on climate change while extreme weather worsens.

“It’s unconscionable.

“We are experiencing climate change right now across Australia, from flooding in Townsville to bushfires in Victoria and Tasmania,’’ she said.

Climate change is set to be a key political issue in national elections scheduled to be held before May.

NESREA advises Gombe residents to stop burning waste openly

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The National Environmental Standards and Regulations Enforcement Agency (NESREA) on Wednesday, February 6, 2019 cautioned residents of Gombe State against open burning of wastes, to protect the environment.

Gombe
Gombe

Mr Daniel Wuave, the Gombe State Coordinator of NESREA, gave the advice in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Gombe, the state capital.

He said the burning of residential trash, which is becoming a norm in some parts of the state, portend grave danger to the quality of air available for human existence.

“Stop burning residential wastes. The issue of waste burning is attitude-related. This is because in Gombe State, the government has engaged waste management consultants to clean up the state.

“They go around to collect waste at designated locations and keep the city centre and major streets clean. With that, the government has done its own in providing the necessary environmental facilities.

“In spite of this arrangement, people still prefer to burn their trash in residential areas; so, you see that it is about their attitude and not the failure of government,” he said.

He noted that many residents burnt wastes because they did not know that the smoke it generated was toxic to human health and the environment.

“Carbon dioxide and other chemicals from burning pollute the air quality in our environment, which results to serious health effects in the long run.

“It also affects the environment negatively as the ozone layer is being depleted, and all these consistent actions add to the issue of climate change. The soil and underground water are also affected,” said Wuave.

He recommended the planting of trees by residents in their environment to improve the quality of air, noting that it was the cheapest method of improving air quality and reversing air pollution.

By Uwumarogie Peter