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French Environment Minister quits in major Macron blow

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In a stunning setback to the French government, Nicolas Hulot has announced his resignation. He said he felt “all alone” while trying to advance green policies in the government.

Nicolas Hulot
Nicolas Hulot, a former TV presenter and environmental activist

The Environment Minister on Tuesday, August 28, 2018 made the announcement on France Inter radio, saying it was the result of an “accumulation of disappointments.”

The announcement strikes a major blow to French President Emmanuel Macron, who had pledged to make France a global leader for climate solutions.

 

What Hulot said

  • The French government’s lack of progress on steps to tackle climate change, defend biodiversity and address environmental threats resulted in an “accumulation of disappointments.”
  • “I don’t want to lie any longer. I don’t want to maintain the illusion that my presence in government means that we are meeting these environmental challenges.”
  • “France is doing more than a lot of other countries. Do not make me say that it is doing enough. It is not doing enough. Europe is not doing enough. The world is not doing enough.
  • “I have a bit of influence, but I have no power and no means.”

 

What about ‘Make Our Planet Great Again’?

During his presidential campaign, Macron had pledged to enact ambitious environmental policies in an attempt to advance his image as the antithesis of US President Donald Trump, who pulled the US out of the 2015 Paris accord. Macron even adopted Trump’s slogan, urging people to join his environmentally friendly cause and “Make Our Planet Great Again.”

But Hulot suggested that Macron’s government has paid little more than lip service to environmental issues. He highlighted, for example, the government’s pledges to cut back reliance on nuclear energy to 50 percent by 2025 and to curb the use of pesticides and said there had been little progress on several other initiatives.

 

Elysee defends progress

Government spokesman Benjamin Griveaux told BFM news channel that Hulot should have warned Macron and Prime Minister Edouard Philippe before announcing his resignation.

“Do you do an environmental revolution in one year? The response is no,” said Griveaux. “I prefer little steps to not moving.”

Observers have suggested that Hulot’s departure could cause further shakeup within the government and prompt Macron to reshuffle his cabinet.

AU wants member states to acquire skills for accessing Green Climate Fund

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The African Union (AU) Commission has urged stakeholders to train officials of member states, agencies and academic institutions on the skills of developing, implementing and monitoring of Green Climate Fund (GCF) Proposals.

AU Commission
Participants and facilitators at the Capacity Building Workshop for AU member states on Accessing Green Climate Fund (GCF) organised by the African Union Scientific, Technical and Research Commission in Abuja on Aug. 28, 2018

Prof. Sarah Agbor, the Commissioner, Department of Human Resources, Science and Technology, African Human Commission, made the call in Abuja on Tuesday, August 28, 2018 while declaring open a three-day capacity building workshop for representatives of AU member states.

The workshop, organised by the African Union Scientific, Technical and Research Commission (AU-STRC) Abuja, was aimed towards training the participants on the process involved in accessing the fund.

She said: “The Green Climate Fund aims to promote a paradigm shift towards low emission and climate resilient pathways in developing countries to limit or reduce their greenhouse gas emissions and to adapt to the impact of climate change.

“However, many AU member states have been able to access the GCF, and that is why this particular conference is very essential.

“Where do we go, how do we go, how do we implement and get member States access to the GCF?

“The key development mechanism has registered a minimal success of less than 2% in Africa in terms of Projects as compared to China alone that has over 80%.

“Some studies attest that this is due to the lack of institutional and technical Capabilities which attract funds in accordance with best practices.

‘’I started the paradigm in design execution and monitoring of projects, learning lessons from the challenges of CDM, particularly where all member States have little knowledge, skills and nuances of design, implementation, monitoring and evaluation of fundable projects

“In response to the above mentioned, the African Union Scientific, Technical and Research Commission, with the technical support of the African Centre for Technology Studies, the African Sustainable Health and the Institute of Climate Change and Adaptation, Nairobi, Kenya.

“May I underscore the need to prepare officials of member states’ industries, agencies, parastatals and academic institutions for training on the skills of developing, implementing, and monitoring of GCF projects.

“We hope and believe that you will take advantage of this unique opportunity to learn, improve and strengthen your capacity with the requisite knowledge and competencies on the operation of the GCF and hoe to develop competitive affordable GCF project proposals.

“And that on returning to your institutions, organisations and parastatals, you will in turn champion this cause and train others to create the chain.

“And this will help establish GCF project development and management development skills within states.’’

The AU commissioner further urged the stakeholders at the workshop to realise that they had a responsibility to the continent.

“The dream of achieving what Africa should be lies in all of you. We say health is wealth, but when there is pollution everywhere how can there be health?

“In whatever capacity you are attending this meeting, you have already been taken as an ambassador to promote the GCF and for it to be implemented so that at the end of the day, we will benefit from the positives that will come out of it,’’ she added.

The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that participants from 17 African countries are attending the three-day conference.

The countries are Ethiopia, Botswana, Kenya, Tanzania, Gambia, Ghana, Egypt, and South Africa.

The others include Cameroon, Zambia, Mauritius, Malawi, Zimbabwe, Liberia, Swaziland, Uganda, and Nigeria.

By Patricia Amogu

Marshall Islands emerges new Climate Vulnerable Forum chair

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The Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia concluded its chairmanship of the Climate Vulnerable Forum (CVF) and the Vulnerable Twenty (V20) Group of the member states of the CVF with a handover ceremony held at Addis Ababa on Tuesday, August 28, 2018 transferring presidency responsibilities to the Republic of the Marshall Islands.

Hilda-Heine
Hilda Heine, President of Marshall Islands

Speaking at the event, Dr. Gemedo Dalle, Minister of Environment, Forest and Climate Change, said: “The Marshall Islands gives us hope. They are very vocal and committed to fighting climate change. The CVF is in safe hands. We strive for 1.5°C to thrive and we can do this together. The dream of a safer world needs the cooperation of all countries, and of every man, woman, and child.”

Accepting the responsibilities of the Forum chairmanship, Mr. Carlsan Heine of the Office of the President of the Marshall Islands said: “We have come together on climate change and we will continue to fight together on climate change. The Marshall Islands stands on the shoulders of the giants of this Forum who came before us as we seek to implement the CVF Vision and the core priorities of the V20 Finance Ministers. We are proud that a Pacific island nation of less than 100,000 inhabitants under female leadership will take forward this global Forum at this critical moment.”

The Marshall Islands is convening an entirely online Virtual Summit of the Climate Vulnerable Forum on 22 November 2018 and it was indicated that the Summit would be front and center of the Forum’s work for the remainder of 2018.

The handover ceremony took place in conjunction with meetings of the V20 Focus Groups and a CVF-V20 Troika Meeting held at Addis Ababa from August 27 to 28, 2018, gathering senior CVF and V20 officials from different world regions.

Groups slam inclusion of new coal in S’Africa’s electricity plan

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The inclusion of new coal in the updated draft Integrated Resource Plan for Electricity (IRP) will cost South Africa close to R20 billion more than is needed to spend and will make electricity more expensive for all South Africans. If the Department of Energy were to publish the least-cost plan that civil society organisations have been demanding, it would not include any new coal.

Melita Steele
Greenpeace Africa’s Senior Climate and Energy Campaign Manager, Melita Steele

Allowing the two new coal plants contemplated by the draft IRP to go ahead would be disastrous for water resources, air quality, health, land, and the climate, environmentalists believe.

The Life After Coal Campaign (consisting of Earthlife Africa, the Centre for Environmental Rights, and groundWork) and Greenpeace Africa argue that the inclusion of an additional 1000 MW of new coal-fired power – on top of existing and under-construction coal – puts the Department of Energy in conflict with the rights enshrined in the Constitution, given that there are safer, cleaner, and less-expensive energy options available.

“While we recognise the increased emphasis on renewable energy in the draft IRP, unless the Minister of Energy substantially revises and amends the draft IRP to ensure that the Constitutional right to a healthy environment is preserved and protected – and specifically excludes any new coal – the Department runs the risk of the IRP being challenged in court,” warns Melita Steele, senior climate and energy campaign manager at Greenpeace Africa.

Robyn Hugo, head of the Pollution & Climate Change Programme at the Centre for Environmental Rights, says that the updated IRP fails to take sufficient account of the external costs of the various available technologies. “Coal is an outdated and dirty technology – the environmental and health costs of which have not been factored into electricity planning.”

At present, almost 90% of South Africa’s energy mix is already comprised of coal, despite many of these plants failing to meet the required emission standards and causing devastating health impacts.

A 2016 report by UK-based air quality and health expert Dr Mike Holland found that air pollution from Eskom coal-fired power stations kills more than 2,200 South Africans every year and causes thousands of cases of bronchitis and asthma in adults and children annually.

“This costs the country more than R33 billion annually, through hospital admissions and lost working days,” says Bobby Peek, Director of groundWork.

“In addition to these severe health impacts, coal-fired electricity is also enormously water-intensive and the estimated costs of rehabilitating old mines and mining areas runs into the billions”, says Steele.

“Even discounting the health and environmental dangers of coal, it simply makes no economic sense to include coal in the IRP, as it is more expensive than other technologies such as wind and solar power,” says Makoma Lekalakala, director of Earthlife Africa.

The Campaign and Greenpeace Africa will reiterate all of these – and other concerns – in comments on the draft IRP. It is crucial that South Africa’s future electricity plan is least-cost and in the public interest. All South Africans – including coal workers and the unemployed – must be part of the process to ensure a just energy transition.

Flood: Kebbi spends N33m on clearing of drains, waterways

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The General Manager, Kebbi Urban Development Authority (KUDA), Malami Muhammad Shekare, on Tuesday, August 28, 2018 said it had expended N33 million on evacuation of drains and clearing of waterways in the state.

Alhaji Atiku Bagudu
Alhaji Atiku Bagudu, Governor of Kebbi State

Shekare told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Birnin Kebbi that the exercise was part of efforts to prevent flooding in the state.

He said the authority had engaged over 200 unemployed youths to assist in the evacuation and desilting of drains in major towns in the state.

“The State Governor, Alhaji Atiku Bagudu, approved N33 million for the exercise, and we engaged the services of unemployed youths in Zuru, Argungu, Birnin Kebbi and Yauri areas to assist in the evacuation and clearing.

“The exercise has so far yielded positive results as we have not witnessed flood in those areas apart from Argungu Local Government Area,’’ the general manager said.

He warned residents against erecting structures on the various drainage systems in the state and waterways, saying it was illegal.

“We will not hesitate to deal decisively with defaulters as we have been sensitising them on the dangers of building structures on the drains,” he said.

Shekare urged residents in the 21 local government areas to evacuate their drains to avoid flooding during the rainy season.

“As part of the measures to avert the flooding, we usually experience in the 11 local government areas, we urge residents to complement the state government’s efforts by evacuating the drains around their premises,’’ he said.

By Ibrahim Bello

UNICEF prepares DRC school children for Ebola response

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The UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) said more than 82,500 children are being prepared for the new school year in Ebola-affected areas of the Eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).

Anthony Lake
Anthony Kirsopp Lake, Executive Director of the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF)

UNICEF said it was scaling up education, health and water, sanitation and hygiene programmes to assist the schools to provide a protective learning environment for children and their teachers.

The Government of the DRC recently made the decision to proceed as planned with the start of the school year in the affected provinces of North-Kivu and Ituri, where some 250 schools are listed as being in Ebola-affected health zones.

“Education is a right for every child and essential for children to develop to their full potential.

“Especially in times of crisis such as an Ebola outbreak, schools are vital for children to find stability, learn prevention measures and receive psychosocial support.

“Every effort must go into ensuring a smooth and safe start to the new school year,” said Dr Gianfranco Rotigliano, UNICEF Representative in the DRC following his visit to Mangina, the epicentre of the Ebola-epidemic.

School principals and teachers would receive training on Ebola prevention and protection, and how to educate children on good hygiene practices to avoid the spread of the virus.

To ensure schools in the affected health zones are well prepared for early detection and response, UNICEF is distributing health and WASH supplies including laser thermometers, hand washing units and megaphones and prevention posters to each of the 250 schools.

UNICEF and partners are working to train school principals and more than 1,750 teachers in the affected health zones about Ebola and protection measures against the virus.

They are also organising prevention communication activities for parents’ committees and local authorities on prevention measures in every concerned school.

They prepare teachers to sensitise all children at the beginning of the school year on good hygiene practices to contain the spread of the virus and distribute 500 laser thermometers – two in each school – to monitor the health situation of children.

UNICEF and partners are also installing 1,500 hand washing units – six in each school – to promote hand washing and hygiene, as well as distribute megaphones and prevention posters in every school.

By Prudence Arobani

NISER wants more rural electrification projects to boost power supply

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Nigerian Social and Economic Research Institute (NISER) in Ibadan on Tuesday, August 28, 2018 called for more rural electrification projects to boost power supply across the country.

Ijan-Ilupeju Rural Electrification project
Commissioning of a rural electrification project

Dr Femi Ogundele of the Agriculture and Food Policy Department in NISER made the call while delivering a lecture at the NISER Research Seminar Series (NRSS).

Ogundele spoke on the topic “Electricity Consumption and Households’ Welfare Effects in Nigeria.”

He said rural electrification projects would promote rural industrialisation and curb rural-urban drift among the populace.

Ogundele said that massive procurement and deployment of prepaid meters would ensure justice in electricity charges.

He said that there was the need for a national policy and framework for enforcement of rules and standards guiding the use of generating sets due to their environmental effects.

“There is need to exercise caution on the extent to which tariff on electricity can be increased as households don’t adjust electricity expenditure upward proportionately to increased tariff.

“Efforts to make the cost of the environmentally friendly alternatives such as solar affordable is necessary to solve the problem of reliability and environmental pollution,” he said.

Ogundele said that electricity supply should reach the minimum daily average of 10 hours considered as satisfactory by households before any tariff adjustment.

Earlier, NISER Director-General, Dr Folarin Gbadebo-Smith, had said availability of electricity was key to healthy living, stressing that almost nothing would function without it.

Gbadebo-Smith, represented by Prof. John Adeoti, Head of Science and Technology Innovation in NISER, said that the NRSS was a platform where the institute interacted with stakeholders on NISER researches with the aim of improving the economy.

He commended the stakeholders for their support and for finding time to attend the seminars.

The Chairman of the occasion, Prof. Andrew Ayodele, said that rural areas should be developed through adequate supply of electricity to stop rural-urban migration.

Ayodele also said there was the need to support massive provision of electricity to discourage the use of generating sets with its concomitant effects on the environment.

By Chidinma Ewunonu-Aluko

Bauchi urged to settle N250m counterpart fund for water, sanitation project

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The United Nations Children Fund (UNICEF) has urged the Bauchi State Government to settle its counterpart fund of N250 million to enable it benefit from intervention fund under the Sanitation, Hygiene and Water in Nigeria (SHAWN) project.

Mohammed Abdullahi Abubakar
Mohammed Abdullahi Abubakar, Governor of Bauchi State

UNICEF officer in charge of Water Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) in Nigeria, Mr Zard Jurji, made the call on Monday, August 27, 2018 when he led a team of UNICEF staff on a visit to the deputy governor of the state, Alhaji Audu Katagum in Bauchi, the state capital.

According to him, money has been set aside by the government of United Kingdom for the implementation of SHAWN projects in 12 Local Government Areas of the state.

He therefore warned that the state government might lose the fund if payment of the counterpart money is not completed in earnest.

Jurji also called on the state government to upgrade the WASH units of local government areas to the status of department for proper supervision and sustainability of SHAWN projects in the state.

In his response, the deputy governor, Katagum, said the State government would pay it counterpart fund within two weeks.

He commended UNICEF and the United Kingdom for its commitment towards improving the lots of the people, especially in the area of water, sanitation and hygiene

By Mohammed Ahmed Kaigama

World Water Week opens with call for more nature-based solutions

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Poor water management and stressed ecosystems cause poverty and violent conflicts. To avoid a global water crisis, more nature-based solutions are urgently needed. These were key themes during the inauguration of World Water Week 2018 on Monday, August 27, which has brought world leaders, water experts, development professionals and business representatives from all over the world together in Stockholm, Sweden.

World Water Week 2018
L-R: Torgny Holmgren, Executive Director of SIWI; Amina J. Mohammed, Deputy Secretary-General of the United Nations; and Carin Jämtin, Director-General of the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency, all spoke at the opening of the World Water Week 2018

There is a growing realisation that humans are increasingly vulnerable to water shortages, extreme weather and social unrest. Decades of unprecedented economic and population growth, rapid urbanisation and climate change have led to stressed ecosystems and high pressure on limited water resources. In response to this, societies must find and implement solutions that work with, rather than against, nature.

World Water Week, the leading meeting-place for the global water community, is this year focused on the link between water, ecosystems and human development. Some 3,700 participants meet in Stockholm from August 26 to 27 to discuss concrete solutions to the escalating water challenges.

“With the rapidly growing demand for water, it is becoming increasingly clear that water is everybody’s issue. Scarcity of water has become the new normal in so many parts of the world,” said Torgny Holmgren, Executive Director of SIWI, which organises World Water Week.

In his welcome address on Monday, Mr. Holmgren called for a shift towards more green infrastructure solutions, noting that they are inherently multi-functional: “City parks retain rain, improve the microclimate, contribute to biodiversity – and look good doing so. Green solutions are, in addition, also often much more resilient than grey. They tend to bend rather than break under pressure. They can repair themselves and restore their functionality also after significant damage.

Amina J. Mohammed, Deputy Secretary-General of the United Nations, talked about the strong link between environmental degradation, poverty and violent conflicts. This is not least visible in her home country Nigeria, which in recent years has suffered from terrorism: “I believe that the tragedy of Boko Haram is inextricably linked to poor water management and the solution to the conflict in the region must include equitable ways of using water resources,” she said.

As an example of the dramatic consequences of a collapsing ecosystem, Amina J Mohammed referred to Lake Chad, which has shrunk by 90 per cent, saying that “it has impacted food insecurity and is increasing the risk of water-borne diseases, but it is also causing poverty by taking away farmers’ livelihoods, especially for women. And it has a gender dimension, contributing among others to low levels of school-enrolment among our girls. Taken together, all these factors have contributed increasingly to insecurity in our region, already affected by religious extremism.”

Similar views were expressed by Åsa Regnér, Assistant Secretary-General and Deputy Executive Director, Director for the Intergovernmental Support and Strategic Partnerships Bureau, at UN Women. She described lack of water as a root cause of poverty and inequality since “only in Sub-Saharan Africa, women and girls spend 40 billion hours a year collecting water, equivalent to a year’s worth of labour by the entire workforce in France”.

Carin Jämtin, Director-General of the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency, also talked about the relationship between poverty, conflicts and lack of clean water. “In countries affected by conflict and fragility, tensions over water increase. There is evidence that water and sanitation infrastructure have been attacked, or that the access to clean water is denied as tactic or weapon of war. Without access to clean water, children fall ill, hospitals do not function, and disease and malnutrition spread quickly. Among the threats against children in conflict, the lack of safe drinking water is one of the deadliest,” Jämtin said.

Karin Wanngård, Mayor of Stockholm, pointed to the risk from populism and short-sightedness but also felt that cities were increasingly coming together to find new solutions, adding: “I hope that this week will help the global community to get closer to the goal of a sustainable world.”

Many of the speakers also expressed optimism about the increase in new solutions borrowed from nature. An inspiring example is the work of Stockholm Water Prize winners Professors Bruce Rittmann and Mark van Loosdrecht. Interviewed by SIWI’s Senior Manager International Policies, Maggie White, on how their research on environmental biotechnology has revolutionized water treatment Bruce Rittman said:

“Microorganisms live in water and when we use microorganisms we are making water a key part of the solution to many of our environmental challenges.” He added: “We want to have a merging of environmental and economic interests. We don’t want to make pollution control and environmental protection just a cost to society, we want to turn that also into a generator of resources and economic value.”

SIWI is an international water institute working to solve global water challenges by improving how water is used and managed.

Erosion: Engineers advocate better environment management to check man-made causes

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The Nigerian Society of Engineers (NSE) has blamed manmade factors for the devastating effects of erosion menace in Anambra State and the entire southeast.

Erosion Anambra State
A erosion site in Idemili, Anambra State

Mr Edmund Nkalu, Chairman of NSE, Awka Branch, made the call in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Awka on Monday, August 27, 2018.

NAN reports that the branch will hold a lecture with the theme “A case for Good Governance; Role of the Procurement Process” on Aug. 30 as part of its 60th anniversary.

Nkalu said erosion menace in Anambra was caused primarily by the soil type which was prone to erosion and the topography also increased the speed of runoff water which had helped the activities of storm water.

He, however, said that manmade factors including indiscriminate construction of buildings, covering of soil surfaces with concrete slabs, no or out dated urban designs and poor project supervision were exacerbating the menace.

Nkalu said people should imbibe the habit of keeping green surroundings as well as make adequate arrangements to ensure that rain water from their premises was properly collected and channeled.

“It is clear that storm water has been causing enormous damage in this part of the country, especially in Anambra, but it is not a new event as it has been with us for a while.

“There are manmade and natural factors that cause erosion but the man-made factor is an area that interest us.

“What can we do to reduce and control erosion which occurs as a result of human activities?

“At the individual level, people should design their buildings in such a way that flood water from rain can be absorbed in the soil, instead of these concrete floors which prevent water from percolating into the soil and increase the speed of runoff.

“It is ignorance that makes people to seal off the floor unlike in other climes where people only cover the portion for walkway to the house and leave the other areas green and to absolve the water.

“Let people begin to plant grass, there is nothing bad in having farm or garden in compounds,” he said.

Nkalu said the society decided to focus on effective procurement process in its forthcoming lecture because of its role in ensuring sustainable and resilient infrastructure projects.

He condemned the collapse of  roads and structures due to erosion, blaming it on poor adherence to standards and supervision.

He urged government agencies, developers, community leaders to attend the lecture which was designed for the purpose of enhancing service delivery in both the public and private sectors.

“The Society of Engineers is not comfortable with roads collapsing within two years; we are calling on the supervisory agencies to step up their functions and help check the loss of scarce funds that goes into poor quality jobs.

“We need a concerted effort of the approval agencies, the physical planning board, the city development agencies, the Ministry of Environment to come up with a master plan designs.

“Specifications for road designs should be strictly adhered to, there are challenges of paucity of which make the contractors to cut corners.

“The procurement system must be thorough, the material quality must meet standards, the contractor must be competent and the cost of contract must be realistic to be able to build a quality road,” he said.

The chairman said the society was interested in good governance which according to him was all about service delivery in every sector of the economy.