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How communities and innovation can save Nigeria’s last forest elephants – Forest ranger

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Emmanuel Olabode, Project Manager of the Nigerian Conservation Foundation’s Omo Forest Elephant Initiative, speaks on the growing threats to forest elephants, successful models of coexistence from across Africa, and why community-driven conservation is the key to survival

Emmanuel Olabode
Emmanuel Olabode, Project Manager of the Nigerian Conservation Foundation’s Omo Forest Elephant Initiative

Deep in the ancient canopy of the Omo Forest Reserve in Ogun State, Nigeria, lives one of West Africa’s most critically endangered species: the African forest elephant. Once roaming vast expanses, their numbers have been decimated by poaching, habitat loss, and human-elephant conflicts. Today, their survival rests precariously on the shoulders of conservationists and the very communities who share their home.

For Emmanuel Olabode, Project Manager of the Nigerian Conservation Foundation’s (NCF) Omo Forest Elephant Initiative, the story of saving these elephants is both urgent and personal. “Climate change, water scarcity, habitat shifts, poaching, and even sociopolitical instability – all these are merging threats we must urgently address,” he tells us.

Learning from Africa’s Success Stories

While Nigeria faces steep challenges, Olabode points to innovative successes across Africa that prove coexistence between humans and elephants is possible.

In Kenya, the much-celebrated Elephants and Bees Project has achieved over 80% success in reducing farm raids by using beehive fences. “Elephants fear bees, especially around sensitive areas like their trunk and eyes. The hives hung along farm perimeters both deter elephants and provide honey as a new income stream for communities. It’s a win-win,” Olabode explains.

In the Congo Basin, early-warning systems powered by radio collars and remote sensors alert villagers when elephants approach farmland. Community patrol teams then use non-lethal deterrents – such as bright lights and firecrackers – to steer the giants back into the forest. “This model combines technology with local action, and it works,” says Olabode.

Changing Hearts and Minds

But technology alone won’t solve the crisis. “The best strategy is community engagement, economic incentives, and education,” Olabode stresses. “When communities are part of the protection effort, they see elephants not as threats but as assets. If people have livelihoods, schools, clean water, and healthcare, their attitudes toward conservation shift.”

The NCF initiative is working to build such local ownership—training rangers, employing community scouts, and exploring alternative livelihoods to reduce dependence on logging and poaching.

Why Forest Elephants Matter

Beyond their iconic status, forest elephants are “ecosystem engineers,” vital to the health of tropical forests. “They disperse seeds, shape vegetation, and store carbon. If we lose them, we lose the forest’s balance,” Olabode warns. Emerging financing models, such as carbon credits tied to elephant conservation, could transform how their protection is valued.

A Vision for the Next 20 Years

For Olabode, success in the coming decades would mean stabilising and growing elephant populations, reconnecting fragmented habitats, eliminating retaliatory killings, and securing long-term funding. “We must ensure forest elephants move from being critically endangered to a species on the path of recovery,” he says.

This requires stronger anti-poaching laws, compensation schemes for farmers who lose crops, and integrated land-use planning to ensure human activities don’t choke off elephant corridors. “It’s about harmony,” he emphasises. “Communities have lived with these elephants for generations. Conservation must give them the tools, incentives, and dignity to continue doing so.”

Clifford Omonu, Research Fellow with Forest Research Institute of Nigeria (FRIN) and Manager to the UNESCO site in Omo Forest Reserve, opined that Nigeria elephants, both savannah and forest species, are critically endangered due to increasing human activities such as deforestation, farming, and settlement expansion. 

“With fewer than 300 elephants remaining in the country, their habitats are shrinking and becoming fragmented, leading to a rise in human-elephant conflict. Elephants often stray into farmlands, destroying crops and triggering retaliation from local communities. This conflict, worsened by weak environmental laws and poor enforcement, has led to killings and a general decline in elephant populations. The root causes include habitat encroachment, lack of awareness, and absence of strong government policies to protect these keystone species.

“To address these challenges, innovative conservation strategies are essential. These include restoring elephant migration corridors, using natural deterrents like chili-pepper fences, and engaging communities through adult education and farmer field schools. Community involvement has already proven effective in areas like Omo Forest Reserve, where elephant numbers are rising. Additionally, long-term strategies such as immunocontraception may help manage populations in the future. Ultimately, government intervention, through updated and enforced wildlife protection laws, is vital to ensure elephants and humans can coexist in harmony and safeguard Nigeria’s ecological future,” he suggested.

Protecting elephants in Nigeria is not just a local responsibility. It demands international cooperation – from intelligence sharing on ivory trafficking to DNA forensic tracking of seized ivory. “The threats are global, and so must be the response,” Olabode insists.

As the sun sets over the Omo Forest, the challenge is clear: without urgent action, Nigeria risks losing its last forest elephants forever. But with communities empowered, technology harnessed, and the world listening, there is hope.

“The elephants are not just wildlife,” Olabode concludes. “They are part of our heritage, our forests, our future. To save them is to save ourselves.”

By Ajibola Adedoye

This article (“How communities and innovation can save Nigeria’s last forest elephants – Forest ranger”) was funded by a grant from the United States Department of State (via Wild Africa). The opinions, findings, and conclusions stated herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect those of the United States Department of State

TAAT to highlight innovation pathways at African Food Systems Summit 2025

Technologies for African Agricultural Transformation (TAAT) will join agriculture leaders, policymakers, farmers, & innovators at the Africa Food Systems Summit (AFS), the world’s premier forum for African agriculture and food systems in Dakar, Senegal, from September 31 to 5, 2025.

The Programme, in collaboration with CGIAR, will host a session at the summit on “From Research to Impact: Aligning CGIAR and TAAT Innovation Pathways with CAADP”.

Dakar
Dakar, Senegal, is hosting the African Food Systems Summit 2005

Alongside the African Development, TAAT will equally co-host a high-level session on “From Pledges to Plates: Financing Africa’s Agriculture and Food Systems”.

TAAT experts and Country Engagement Officers will also participate in various other panel sessions and bilateral meetings at the annual summit on food systems transformation.

Established in 2018 as a central pillar of the African Development Bank’s Feed Africa strategy, TAAT represents a transformative initiative to reverse the trend of declining food productivity in Africa through the scaling of modern food production technologies to 40 million farmers across Africa, focusing on supporting young people and women in low-income regions.

TAAT has scaled up the dissemination of heat-tolerant wheat varieties, drought-tolerant maize, high-yielding rice, cassava, high-iron bean, sorghum, millet, orange-fleshed sweet potato varieties and high-quality livestock breeds and fingerlings to more than 12 million farmers, boosting crop production by an estimated 25 million tonnes. This increase in food production is a testament to the programme’s effectiveness in enhancing agricultural productivity across the continent.

TAAT acquires cutting-edge technologies from developers and agricultural research institutions led by the CGIAR for several agricultural value chains covering crops, livestock and fisheries, vets them for scaling readiness and integrates them into its electronic technology catalogue. TAAT engages governments to integrate proven technologies into their large-scale agricultural investment programmes and partner with the private sector to commercialise them.

The Africa Food Systems Summit is an annual event that brings together investors, policymakers, agriculture experts, and food systems experts to discuss and catalyse private sector investments and partnerships in the agricultural sector.

World SDGs organisation ranks Nigeria, Africa below average

The World Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) Organisation has ranked Africa and Nigeria below average in the actualisation of the 17 United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

Mr. Yahaya Muhammad, the African Continental Governor of the organisation, said this at the group’s maiden retreat on Saturday, August 30, 2025, in Abuja with the theme “Sustainable Development in Nigeria”.

World Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) Organisation
Participants at the World Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) Organisation’s maiden retreat

Muhammad called on all African leaders to accelerate the implementation of goals in their countries, especially at the grassroots levels, in line with the mandate of the UN 2030 SDGs agenda.

According to him, with 2030 in view it is pertinent for African leaders to fast-track goals development and implementation, a feat poised to launch Africa into global relevance.

The SDGs are a set of 17 global goals adopted by all United Nations member-states in 2015 as part of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.

The SDGs serve as a universal blueprint to end poverty, protect the planet and ensure peace and prosperity for all by 2030.

“On our global ratings, Nigeria is currently below 30 per cent but Africa as a whole is on an average, which is not impressive as a continent.

“There are many NGOs and CSOs that are complementing the government in every sector which should make the SDGs achieveable, but unfortunately we are yet to make significant progress as a nation and a continent.

“Mere verbal commitments are no longer enough, African leaders must demonstrate accountability through measurable actions that translate into improved livelihoods, job creation and sustainable development.

“The success of the SDGs in Africa depends on strong political will, adequate funding, and active citizen participation,” he said.

Muhammad urged Aftican governments, policymakers, civil society and the private sector to close ranks in accelerating the achievement of the 2030 Agenda.

He urged the Nigerian government to overhaul all SDGs units and create a full department, both at the municipal but state levels, to handle goals development.

He also urged the governments to tackle insecurity, attributing 70 per cent of the myriads of challenges bedevilling Nigeria and Africa to insecurity and lack of good governance.

Mr. Fubes Danor, the group’s Executive Director for Africa, said that African nations must move beyond rhetorics and champion the implementation of SDGs in the next five years.

Danor stressed that timely action would determine the continent’s chances of meeting the 2030 targets.

Mr. Aliyu Abubakar, Director of Climate Action Agency-West Africa, said that climate change remained one of the greatest threats to Africa’s development.

He warned that failure to act decisively could reverse decades of progress.

Mr. Umar Faruk, Director, Zero Hunger Agency–West Africa, described the standard of living of the average African as unacceptably low, urging governments to take bold steps toward food security and inclusive development.

He said that inspite of Africa’s vast resources and youthful population, millions still struggled with poverty, malnutrition, and unemployment.

He warned that the challemges could widen inequalities for Africans, causing them to miss out on opportunities for sustainable growth.

“Addressing hunger and improving living standards are not just moral imperatives but also critical drivers of economic development and social stability across the continent,” Faruk stated.

By Diana Omueza

Nigeria grappling to balance rapid urbanisation, infrastructure demands – Don

Senior Lecturer, Abubakar Tafawa Balewa University (ATBU), Bauchi, Dr Ibrahim Lawal, says Nigeria is still grappling with the challenge of balancing rapid urbanisation  and infrastructure demands.

Lawal stated this during the 2025 Annual General Meeting and Public Lecture of the state branch of the Nigerian Society of Engineers (NSE) on Saturday, August 30, 2025, in Bauchi.

Abubakar Tafawa Balewa University
Abubakar Tafawa Balewa University (ATBU), Bauchi

He also said that there was the need to combat the impact of climate change.

Lawal attributed the development of balancing rapid urbanisation and infrastructural demands  to the growing population.

While presenting a paper titled: “Building an Environmentally Sustainable and Resilient Future; The Nexus of Climate Change, Infrastructure and Engineering in Nigeria”, he urged governments at all levels to treat infrastructure as a priority sector for climate action.

The lecturer, who is from the department of Engineering of the institution, noted that understanding the intersection unveiled  both the hurdles faced and the innovative  solutions forged, to navigate toward a more sustainable future.

“In Nigeria, the dynamic interplay between climate change, infrastructure development and engineering practices is critical in shaping the nation’s path toward a sustainable and resilient future.

“For a sustainable and resilient future, the nexus of climate change, infrastructure and engineering practices in Nigeria presents both an opportunity and a challenge,” Lawal said.

Lawal, however, maintained that Nigeria had a better chance at an environmentally sustainable and resilient future, where communities thrived, infrastructure endured and the environment flourished, in spite challenges posed by an ever-changing climate.

Also speaking, the Emir of Bauchi, Alhaji  Rilwanu Adamu, represented by Alhaji Jibrin Jibo, Dan Saran Bauchi, said that a call for climate-resilient infrastructure was a call for survival, progress and continuity in the country.

According to him, it is a call for engineers, policymakers, traditional rulers and communities, to rethink how they plan, design and maintain the structures upon which their lives depend.

“Engineers must continue to innovate, drawing on global best practices, while adapting them to our local realities,” he said.

The emir charged engineers to lead the course of transformation, adding that, to succeed, they must collaborate with all stakeholders.

In his remarks, Mr. Abdulkarim Hassan, the Chairman, NSE, Bauchi branch, said the chapter had made significant strides in advancing the mission and vision of the society.

He explained that as part of the mandate to promote technical development and professional competence among its members, the branch conducted several technical visits during the year, which broadened their technical exposure.

This visits, Hassan said, also created opportunities for collaboration, mentorship and knowledge exchange between its members and industry personnel.

Mrs. Margaret Oguntala, the President of the NSE, who was represented by Mr. Ibrahim Usman, NSE National Executive, North-East, called on members of the society in the state to encourage visitation to project and construction sites to foster relationships.

By Olaide Ayinde

Nigeria’s gas: Flaring drops, production hits daily average of 7.59bscf – NUPRC

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The Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) says Nigeria’s gas flaring has fallen to 7.16 per cent in July 2025, while daily gas production rose to 7.59 billion standard cubic feet per day (BSCFD).

The NUPRC, in its Gas Production Status Report for July 2025, released on Saturday, August 30, said this marked an 8.58 per cent increase compared to the 6.99 BSCFD recorded in the full year of 2024.

Gas flaring Ecuador
Gas flaring. Photo credit: Neil Ever Osbourne

According to the report, the simultaneous growth in output and decline in flaring underscores the Commission’s drive to boost production while advancing its 2030 zero-flare commitment.

The report stated that Nigeria’s gas industry had sustained steady growth over the past three years, with daily average production hitting 7.59 BSCFD in July 2025.

“The 7.59 BSCFD daily average also represents a 9.84 per cent increase from the 6.91 BSCFD posted in the full year of 2023, which shows a sustained rise in gas production,” it said.

It said in spite of an increase in production, there was a continued reduction in gas flaring.

This, it said fell to 7.16 per cent in July 2025, down from 7.55 per cent in 2024 and 7.38 per cent in the corresponding period of 2023.

It sated that the reduction in gas flare was recorded in spite of the steady increase in gas production which reflected the Commission’s commitment to end routine gas flaring by 2030.

“The Commission has embarked on gas reduction programmes like the Nigerian Gas Flare Commercialisation Programme (NGFCP).

“Other initiatives include developing a Decarbonisation and Sustainability Blueprint, promoting Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS), and integrating sustainability into project planning through the Upstream Petroleum Decarbonisation Template (UPDT).

“In terms of Domestic Gas Delivery Obligation (DGDO) performance, the sector delivered 72.5 per cent in July 2025, up from 71.8 per cent in June,” the report said.

Data from the Commission further showed that DGDO performance stood at 72.2 per cent in January.

It revealed that it rose to 73.5 per cent in February, dipped slightly to 70.8 per cent in March, before climbing again to 73.7 per cent and 73.0 per cent in April and May, respectively.

On gas production by contract type, it said 63 per cent of output during the review period came from Marginal Sole Risk (formerly Marginal Fields), while Production Sharing Contracts (PSCs) accounted for 24 per cent.

“Joint Venture (JV) contracts contributed 10 per cent, and Sole Risk (SR) operators delivered the remaining three per cent.

“Gas utilisation data shows that, year-to-date as of July 2025, 35.88 per cent of production was channelled to export sales, 27.82 per cent was supplied to the domestic market, while 29.13 per cent was utilised for field and plant operations (own use).

“Companies deployed gas mainly for in-house purposes such as fuel, gas lifting, and reinjection for pressure maintenance,” it stated.

It further stated that Gas-to-Power supply hit its strongest level in three months, with average daily deliveries rising by 3.48 per cent month-on-month, from 833.86mmscf/d in June to 862.86mmscf/d in July 2025, the highest in three months.

“Over the first seven months of the year, Gas-to-Power supply stood at 780.23mmscf/d in January, increased to 849.37mmscf/d in February, and rose further to 886.83mmscf/d and 886.7 in March and April, respectively.

“The daily averages for May, June, and July were 837.64 MMSCF/D, 833.86 MMSCF/D, and 862.86 MMSCF/D, respectively,” it said.

By Emmanuella Anokam

Empower youth to drive sustainable development – Don urges stakeholders

A university lecturer, Dr Kabir Alhaji-Jabo of the Usmanu Danfodio University, Sokoto (UDUS), has called on stakeholders to empower young people and nurture their potential.

He emphasised the importance of equipping the youth with the necessary tools and opportunities to grow and contribute meaningfully to society.

Youth
Dr Kabir Alhaji-Jabo of the Usmanu Danfodio University, Sokoto (UDUS) emphasised the importance of equipping the youth with the necessary tools and opportunities to grow

According to Alhaji-Jabo, such empowerment is crucial in enabling young people to take the lead in driving sustainable development initiatives across the country.

He believed that when the potential of the youth was harnessed, it could significantly impact national growth and long-term progress.

He believed that when the potential of the youth was harnessed, it could significantly impact national growth and long-term progress.

He said by investing in education, mentorship, and leadership opportunities, young people could become key drivers of innovation, social change, and sustainable development across various sectors of the economy.

Alhaji-Jabo made the appeal during a lecture organised by the National Youth Council of Nigeria (NYCN) to commemorate the 2025 International Youth Day celebration, on Saturday in Sokoto.

The event was organised by the Sokoto State Ministry of Budget and Economic Planning with support from the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA).

According to the lecturer, society’s development depends significantly on youth participation and active involvement in developmental activities.

“They are not just the leaders of tomorrow; they are the change-makers, driving progress and inspiring us to build a brighter future together,” Alhaji-Jabo said.

He highlighted the critical role young people play in economic activities, social causes, environmental sustainability, and the promotion of equality and justice.

Alhaji-Jabo also stressed the importance of government, individuals, and groups aligning their efforts with the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to ensure meaningful outcomes.

Also speaking at the event, the District Head of Gagi, Alhaji Sani Umar-Jabbi, emphasised the importance of population control and proper demographic planning.

He noted that proper planning enhanced access to healthcare, education, and other services, and advocated for wider access to family planning services.

Umar-Jabbi cautioned young people against concealing their health status, particularly regarding HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted infections.

“Many people have unknowingly infected their loved ones while pretending to be morally upright. If abstinence is not possible, couples and individuals should protect themselves by using condoms,” he advised.

He also urged that youth empowerment initiatives be extended to grassroots communities, ensuring inclusiveness and widespread developmental impact.

UNFPA State Programme Officer, Ms. Gloria Enuaze, commended the active participation of young people in development-oriented engagements.

“Proactive steps toward achieving the vision are more impactful than just making noise. UNFPA will continue to support young people to realise their potential,” Enuaze said.

She reaffirmed the agency’s commitment to amplify youth voices through innovation and empowerment programmes.

On his part, the Sokoto State Chairman of the NYCN, Mr. Isa Abdullahi-Yabo, expressed appreciation for the stakeholders’ support and reiterated that Nigerian youths were ready to contribute meaningfully to national development.

He described the 2025 theme, “Local Youth Actions for Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and Beyond”, as timely and relevant to the challenges and opportunities facing the country.

By Habibu Harisu

GMOs controversies, NAFDAC’s conflicting narrative

For Nigeria’s two 250 million people and multitudes across the “honey” world, the “Africa’s giant” had gained another feat. An infamy of scoring cheap-own-goals. As if we aren’t tired of a run with the unusual! One of our own, the Director General (DG) of the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration (NAFDAC), Mojisola Adeyeye, a learned professor of this and that, particularly of Emeritus in Pharmaceutics and Drug Product Evaluation, from the highbrow College of Pharmacy, Roosevelt University, USA, was caught in a windstorm of a key official pronouncement. “DG-NAFDAC”, as her uppermost position is widely called in the country, had made two conflicting statements on the ranging global scourge, the Genetically Modified foods.

Wielding her exalted office as the number one official hunter of fake food and drug and their diehard dealers, Adeyeye had blown hot and then cold, leaving all in palpable confusion about which to believe of the two conflicting statements she had made, debunking public safety concerns. There are over 50 genetically modified (GM) foods, whose spread, consumption and deadliness to humans, continually generates reactions in the country.

Mojisola Adeyeye
Prof. Mojisola Adeyeye, Director-General, National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC)

Speaking to journalists in August 2025 in Abuja, Prof Adeyeye said vividly: “GMOs are genetically modified foods when it comes to food, and they are not bad for us…, depending on what type of foods they are and whether the safety conditions have been taken”. The same pundits who hailed her earlier comments soon came upon her. “It’s outright praises for the Agama lizard, but not when it adds black feces to the whitish part.

A double-speak, so to say, when in June 2024 Adeyeye uttered that: “We have not registered a single GMO product, because we are sensitive about it. In terms of GMOs, we do not think it is safe…for our own consumption. That is the position of NAFDAC”. Prof Adeyeye, who spoke verbatim in English, had turned around to say she was misquoted. How possible?

But for a spontaneous hue and cry by a coalition of over 80 NGOs, NAFDAC would have eloped with the skewed news headlines and the matter swept under the carpet, like several others. The coalition, led by the Health of Mother Earth Foundation (HOMEF), included Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FoEN), the GMO-Free Nigeria Alliance and others.

The coalition, in a press conference, accused the NAFDAC’s boss and the National Biosafety Management Agency (NBMA), of failure to produce credible, independent, and long-term studies to justify their position that GM foods are safe for consumption. More tangible issues were raised by subsequent speakers, featuring Dr. Nnimmo Bassey, HOMEF’s Executive Director. He warned of the deadly imports of the GMO foods on quasi agriculture and ecology realms.

“GMOs go beyond health risks, where reports of Nigerian cotton farmers say their soils no longer support conventional crops after three years of planting genetically modified Bt cotton. Herbicide-tolerant GMOs have led to biodiversity loss and the emergence of super weeds, forcing farmers to use more toxic chemicals.”

Prof. Johnson Ekpere, convener of the GMO-Free Nigeria Alliance, queried NAFDAC and NBMA on credible feeding studies to back their claims, citing an Iranian study, where rats that were fed GM soybean oil, suffered significant organ damage. Dr. Ifeanyi Casmir, a medical microbiologist, also raised further alarm over Bt crops such as beans, which release toxins that destroy beneficial soil microorganisms, that have been detected in the blood of pregnant women and fetuses.

The body also emphasised that GMOs threaten Nigeria’s food sufficiency and sovereignty, where durable indigenous seeds give way to GM seeds, which are short-lived and local farmers were discouraged from farming.

There was another conspiracy theory that the current armed insurgencies raging Nigeria were designed to chase farmers away from their farmlands, so that the alternative is for the country to depend on GM foods and technology shipped in from overseas.

Apparently, the more Adeyeye justified her gaffe the more she validated it as a misspeak. Interestingly, Dr. Agnes Yemisi Asagbra, Director General of NBMA, spilled the beans by her insistence “that no GM food permits are issued without NAFDAC’s involvement, and faulting the inadequacy of synergy between her agency, NAFDAC and the supervising Federal Ministry of Health, in corroboration of government’s failure to concretise actions on the GMOs blight”.

Prof Adeyeye’s assertion that NAFDAC hasn’t signed any GMO permit sounded too good to be true. Otherwise, how come that the country witnessed a controversial approval of GM maize imports by WACOT Limited, which obviously had eroded the public trust in the country’s shoddy GMOs pursuit? Will such huge GM products sneak into the country without NAFDAC and NBMA? How does numerous other GM foods find their way into the Nigerian markets? What proactive measures have NAFDAC and NBMA taken to arrest the offenders and serve deterrence?

Dr. Tunji Alausa, the Minister of State for Health, was harassed, lately, into a tripartite fence-mending meeting with NAFDAC and NBMA, by the coalition’s intensity. But a fly in the ointment is Prof Adeyeye insistence, after the meeting, that the choice is left for Nigerian consumers to ascertain whichever GM products they could buy, among countless other foods that are roughly labeled by NAFDAC, where numerous Nigerians are not lettered. Pertinently, how many NAFDAC’s labeled products do Nigerians read before buying, including the numerous that have fake NAFDAC’s labels?

Yet, one could find it unbelievable that Prof Adeyeye, who professed to being a “food freak”, could recommend or label the GM toxic for Nigerians. Did inventors of the COVID 19 vaccine fraud not refuse to administer it on themselves and their dependents, whilst it was meant for others? GM foods are rejected across the globe. Why should Nigeria’s case be different?

There was Prof Dora Akunyili as NAFDAC boss and now a counterpart Adeyeye. When a person who isn’t around is eulogised, as all are still disposed to the late Prof Akunyili, long after her demise, for having given NAFDAC a meaningful direction, it is, therefore, a wake-up call to the incumbent.

Pointedly, the Nnimmo Bassey’s coalition has indicated the way to go. One devoid of landmines. Taking the matter to the Senate, where all GM foods and techniques must be given outright ban, in the country. For Nigerians cannot perpetually under the yoke of overbearing neocolonialist interests, multinational aristocrats and the Bretton Woods’ bitter pills.

By Tony Erha

NCDMB outlines achievements, charges media, youth groups on social responsibility

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The Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB) on Thursday, August 28, 2025, in Port Harcourt organised a workshop for media stakeholders and youth groups, providing profound insights into the structural organisation, internal workings, accomplishments and operational targets of the agency after 15 epochal years as an effective driver of local content and regulator in the oil and gas industry.

Billed as a signature event of the NCDMB, having been held regularly since the beginning of the Board in 2010, the workshop also acquainted participants with procedures for registration for employment or training programmes in industry-related skill sets, engagement as industry contractors or vendors, and also the Board’s ‘Community Content Guidelines,’ designed to ensure integration of host communities into the oil and gas industry value chain.

NCDMB
Dignitaries at the NCDMB workshop for media stakeholders and youth groups

In a presentation entitled “NCDMB Mandate and Achievements,” the Executive Secretary, Felix Omatsola Ogbe, represented by Dr. Abdulmalik Halilu, Director of Corporate Services in the Board, said the workshop was of crucial importance, as the mass media, youth groups and civil society organisations (CSOs) have dutifully striven to put leaders of government agencies on their toes, demanding public service value as public institutions.

He explained that the Nigeria Oil and Gas Industry Content Development (NOGICD) Act, 2010, which established the Board, vested it with two mandates: to develop local capacities and capabilities without compromising standards and to monitor and enforce compliance with the provisions of the aforesaid Act.

“Everything we do revolves around our mandate. From our mandate comes guidelines which help us to measure success; and consequences for non-compliance.”

He said that, under such arrangements, there is predictability, and that once anyone seeking to do anything with the Board looks at the guidelines and follows them, he does not need to lobby anybody. There are also regulations which are meticulously followed.

According to Dr. Halilu, the regulations cover training, indigenous capacity, registration of oil and gas professionals, industry technology transfer, research and development, and enforcement and compliance. Every businessman in the industry, he revealed, operates within ISO (International Organisation for Standardisation) standards.

On milestones attained in the past 15 years, he said the Board decided to challenge itself by creating very ambitious targets in terms of visioning to be a catalyst for the industrialisation of the oil and gas industry and its linkage sectors based on its awareness of the huge yearly industry spend and the need to harness inputs from other sectors.

In line with its development targets, the Board made it a cardinal policy to invest substantially in research and development (R&D) and the establishment of world-class Centres of Excellence in six universities in the six geopolitical zones.

He pointed out that “there is a nexus between the money you spend on research and development (R&D) and your GDP (gross domestic product),” and that “any country that wants to produce locally must have R&D) presence.”

The Corporate Services Director highlighted that the Board’s Strategic Partnerships have yielded industry success stories as Waltersmith Refinery, NEDO Gas Gathering Plant, and Better Gas Energy Services Limited LPG Terminal and Gas Distribution Infrastructure, among others, have all been commissioned, while construction work is ongoing on others such as Azikel Refinery, Transiel Limited LPG Terminal, Eraskon Lubricating Oil Blending Plant, and Ladol Power Plant.

On key achievements of the Board, he noted that pressure vessels, galvanised steel structures, and platforms are now increasingly fabricated in Nigeria. “TotalEnergies’ US$3.3 billion Egina FPSO (floating production storage offloading) vessel, whose topsides were manufactured in Nigeria, remains a loud testament to the sophistication of Nigeria’s fabrication capabilities.”

Halilu further stressed that from some 50 world-class fabrication yards in the country, Nigeria currently has excess capacity in fabrication, which is now exported to the Middle East and some African countries. He pointed that service sector growth has as highpoints over 100 indigenous companies most of which have already expanded their operations to other oil-producing African countries.

Dr. Halilu explained that ownership and control of marine vessels and rigs has placed many Nigerians in good stead with remarkable successes recorded. According to him, “where you demonstrate ownership and control, you are given first consideration.”

He expressed hope that Nigeria’s success would spur continent-wide collaborations, with total crude oil reserves estimated at 125 billion barrels and gas reserves of 800 trillion standard cubic feet in Africa, and rapid economic development.

In another presentation entitled “Impact of the Monitoring and Evaluation Directorate,” the General Manager, Midstream, in the Directorate of the Monitoring and Evaluation, Mr. Silas Ajimijaye, said the operations of the unit are geared towards enhancement of the contribution of the oil and gas industry to the country’s gross domestic product (GDP). He said the contribution of the oil sector has remained relatively low over the years.

On Capacity Building Achievements, the Deputy Manager, Capacity Building Directorate, Mr. Tareowei Bufazi, stated that the directorate’s mandate is “to promote human capital development (HCD) and to enhance skills in various areas of the oil and gas industry.” He pointed out that the mandate is “to drive competency that is globally competitive; also, to establish ownership of facilities, asset ownership.”

Earlier in his opening remarks at the event, the General Manager, Corporate Communications Division (CCD), Dr. Obinna Ezeobi, commended media practitioners, civil society and youth groups for the invaluable support the Board has enjoyed from them, particularly in having its activities properly covered and propagated. He assured them that the Board’s capacity-building programmes for them as well as stakeholder engagements would be sustained.

He urged the mass media to act effectively as gatekeepers, filtering out inaccurate and misleading stories about the Board and promoting stories that would help the national economy. According to him, “Set the right agenda, focus on how do we grow local content, how do we grow the energy industry?” He called on participants to ask questions on the Board’s activities to get the true picture of developments.

New report exposes Europe’s offshore wind infrastructure gaps

Europe’s offshore wind pipeline totals 411 GW across 386 projects, yet infrastructure gaps threaten delivery timelines. The bulk of projects, 84%, are still in planning or feasibility stages, according to a report by the Energy Industries Council (EIC), the world-leading association for the energy supply chain.

The EIC UK & Europe Offshore Wind report, released on Thursday, August 28, 2025, flags severe infrastructure and supply chain constraints. Out of about 80 specialist installation vessels operational in Europe, only five can handle 14–15 MW turbines. Port expansions require six to 10 years from permit to operation, clashing directly with project timelines. FIDs and port capacity must align with auctions to land 2030 numbers, as projects now hinge on commitments with ports, grid and the supply chain.

Sharanya Kumaramurthy
Sharanya Kumaramurthy, EIC Market Intelligence Manager

According to the report, which draws on data from EIC’s proprietary energy project and supply chain databases, the UK leads Europe’s operational offshore wind capacity with 15.6 GW, followed by Germany at 9 GW and the Netherlands at 5.5 GW. Europe holds 43% of global capacity and commissioned 2.7 GW of the 4.2 GW added over the past year (excluding China).

By basin, the technology split is clear: fixed-bottom still dominates the North Sea and Baltic, whereas floating – now 37% of the pipeline – is essential for the Mediterranean and Southern Europe. Europe has 37.8 GW already operating across 150 wind farms (7,178 turbines).

Against this backdrop, a close look at continental Europe’s key players shows that Germany faces headwinds despite 31.1 GW in development. “Negative bidding” in auctions is expected to raise costs for consumers/supply chains. In Germany, prices fell sharply (€1.8m/MW in 2023 to €0.18m/MW in 2025), a trend that can strain margins and slow delivery as seen with the latest auction receiving no bids. However, infrastructure limits are also a major brake on reaching the 30-GW target, with only 21.6 GW expected by 2030.

Meanwhile, France advanced floating wind via its 2024 auctions, awarding the world’s first subsidy to a commercial floating development, and Norway awarded a fixed-bottom CfD (€99.4/MWh) in 2024 to the Sørlige Nordsjø II project. The CfD is a national government mechanism that supports low-carbon electricity projects by guaranteeing a fixed “strike price” for the power they generate.

These national snapshots sit within an EU push to unblock bottlenecks and speed build-out. The drive is based on three levers, including the Wind Power Package, the Net-Zero Industry Act (NZIA), and the Clean Industrial Deal. The focus is on faster permits, auction reform, and access to finance. Under the NZIA, at least 30% of annual auctioned capacity must be awarded on non-price criteria, meaning projects are judged not only on cost but also on factors such as supply chain resilience, sustainability, innovation, and job creation.

The European Investment Bank (EIB) is providing €6.5 billion in counter-guarantees for wind manufacturers and €250 million for mid-sized green manufacturing, with port upgrades at Esbjerg, Cuxhaven, Cork, and Bilbao in scope. A second pressure track is decommissioning in the 2030s, with about 366 turbines in 2035 and 540 in 2038 due to come offline. That load draws on the same vessels, ports, and finance.

“The numbers tell a simple story, which that is Europe has scale in the pipeline, but delivery hinges on ports, vessels, auctions and faster investment decisions. Where those align, capacity arrives. Where they don’t, targets slip,” said report co-author, Sharanya Kumaramurthy, EIC Market Intelligence Manager (CAPEX).

The report was also written by Christopher Shirley, EIC Market Intelligence Manager (Supply Chain) and Thomas Bacon, Market Intelligence Manager (OPEX & Decommissioning).

According to the report, Chinese Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs) outpace Europeans on annual installations, with manufacturing capacity roughly four times Europe’s (82 GW vs. 20 GW). They supply turbines to Germany and Italy, with Mingyang planning to manufacture its 18.8-MW turbine model in Italy (under an MoU with Renexia) to supply projects like Med Wind. The report warns against repeating Europe’s solar experience (95% Chinese module market share) without robust auction design and industry support.

Rebecca Groundwater, EIC’s Global Head of External Affairs, said: “Policy must lock in a predictable run of work and enable supply-chain finance. Use non-price criteria well, accelerate port upgrades, and keep capital flowing through EIB and national tools. That’s how Europe converts a 411-GW pipeline into steel in the water.”

Green investment key to unlocking Africa’s potential amid climate challenges – Ethiopia’s Planning, Dev’t Minister

Unlocking green investment is vital for Africa, which has been emerging as a land of opportunity and hope for investors amid climate challenges, Planning and Development Minister of Ethiopia, Fitsum Assefa, said.

“Africa is not a place for charity, but a destination for smart, high-return investments,” the minister noted.

Fitsum Assefa
Ethiopia’s Planning and Development Minister, Fitsum Assefa

In an article published on Project Syndicate on August 28, 2025, under the title “Africa’s Green Economy Is a Good Investment,” Assefa said the Addis Ababa Climate Summit that takes place next month would be a decisive moment to declare Africa’s green economy as “a wave of smart investment just waiting to be unleashed.”

The summit will bring together heads of state and government, scientists, private-sector leaders, civil society and youth representatives as well as global development partners to chart a new course for climate action and green investment on the continent.

The minister cited the African Development Bank, which noted that Africa faces severe climate threats with droughts, floods, and extreme weather cutting GDP by 5–15 percent annually.

She also stated that the continent holds 60 percent of the world’s best solar resources but accounts for only 1 percent of global solar capacity, receiving just 3 percent of global energy investment.

Furthermore, Assefa cited Ethiopia as an example where the national grid runs almost entirely on renewable energy, led by hydropower.

The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) is already generating 2,350 megawatts and will reach 5,150 MW at full capacity, while also supplying power to neighboring countries, including Djibouti, Kenya, Sudan, and Tanzania.

In the article, she also highlighted renewable projects such as Gambia’s 23 MW Jambur Solar Power Station, South Africa’s 330 MW Impofu Wind Complex, and Kenya’s solar-powered green ammonia production initiative on the continent.

According to Assefa, the forthcoming Africa Green Industrialization Initiative and ACS2 Flagship Report will provide frameworks for scaling up such projects with the support of governments, the private sector, and development finance institutions.

Challenging perceptions of Africa as dependent on aid, Fitsum said: “Africans are not asking to be rescued. Our continent’s young demographics, abundant resources, and innovation make green investments among the most promising worldwide.”

Assefa further underlined Africa’s critical role in global climate solutions, noting that “the road to a stable climate and fair economy runs through Africa.”

As world leaders and investors prepare to gather in Addis Ababa in September, she said they face a choice between investing in Africa’s green economy for sustainable growth or allowing climate change to worsen instability and missed opportunities.