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Pollution kills 1.7m children yearly, says WHO

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More than one in four deaths of children under five years of age are attributable to unhealthy environments. Every year, environmental risks – such as indoor and outdoor air pollution, second-hand smoke, unsafe water, lack of sanitation, and inadequate hygiene – take the lives of 1.7 million children under-five years, say two new World Health Organisation (WHO) reports.

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Children exposed to air pollution. The WHO says that more than one in four deaths of children under five years of age are attributable to unhealthy environments

The first report, “Inheriting a Sustainable World: Atlas on Children’s Health and the Environment”, reveals that a large portion of the most common causes of death among children aged one month to five years – diarrhoea, malaria and pneumonia – are preventable by interventions known to reduce environmental risks, such as access to safe water and clean cooking fuels.

“A polluted environment is a deadly one – particularly for young children,” says Dr Margaret Chan, WHO Director-General. “Their developing organs and immune systems, and smaller bodies and airways, make them especially vulnerable to dirty air and water.”

Harmful exposures can start in the mother’s womb and increase the risk of premature birth. Additionally, when infants and pre-schoolers are exposed to indoor and outdoor air pollution and second-hand smoke they have an increased risk of pneumonia in childhood, and a lifelong increased risk of chronic respiratory diseases, such as asthma. Exposure to air pollution may also increase their lifelong risk of heart disease, stroke and cancer.

 

Top 5 causes of death in children under-five years linked to the environment

A companion report, “Don’t pollute my future! The impact of the environment on children’s health”, provides a comprehensive overview of the environment’s impact on children’s health, illustrating the scale of the challenge. Every year:

  • 570,000 children under-five years die from respiratory infections, such as pneumonia, attributable to indoor and outdoor air pollution, and second-hand smoke.
  • 361,000 children under-five years die due to diarrhoea, as a result of poor access to clean water, sanitation, and hygiene.
  • 270,000 children die during their first month of life from conditions, including prematurity, which could be prevented through access to clean water, sanitation, and hygiene in health facilities as well as reducing air pollution.
  • 200,000 deaths of children under-five years from malaria could be prevented through environmental actions, such as reducing breeding sites of mosquitoes or covering drinking-water storage.
  • 200,000 children under 5 years die from unintentional injuries attributable to the environment, such as poisoning, falls, and drowning.

 

Ongoing and emerging environmental threats to children’s health

“A polluted environment results in a heavy toll on the health of our children,” says Dr Maria Neira, WHO Director, Department of Public Health, Environmental and Social Determinants of Health. She adds: “Investing in the removal of environmental risks to health, such as improving water quality or using cleaner fuels, will result in massive health benefits.”

For example, emerging environmental hazards, such as electronic and electrical waste (such as old mobile phones) that is improperly recycled, expose children to toxins which can lead to reduced intelligence, attention deficits, lung damage, and cancer. The generation of electronic and electrical waste is forecasted to increase by 19% between 2014 and 2018, to 50 million metric tonnes by 2018.

With climate change, temperatures and levels of carbon dioxide are rising, favouring pollen growth which is associated with increased rates of asthma in children. Worldwide, 11–14% of children aged five years and older currently report asthma symptoms and an estimated 44% of these are related to environmental exposures. Air pollution, second-hand tobacco smoke, and indoor mould and dampness make asthma more severe in children.

In households without access to basic services, such as safe water and sanitation, or that are smoky due to the use of unclean fuels, such as coal or dung for cooking and heating, children are at an increased risk of diarrhoea and pneumonia.

Children are also exposed to harmful chemicals through food, water, air and products around them. Chemicals, such as fluoride, lead and mercury pesticides, persistent organic pollutants, and others in manufactured goods, eventually find their way into the food chain. And, while leaded petrol has been phased out almost entirely in all countries, lead is still widespread in paints, affecting brain development.

 

Making all places safe for children

Reducing air pollution inside and outside households, improving safe water and sanitation and improving hygiene (including in health facilities where women give birth), protecting pregnant women from second-hand tobacco smoke, and building safer environments, can prevent children’s deaths and diseases.

For example, multiple government sectors can work together to improve the following:

  • Housing: Ensure clean fuel for heating and cooking, no mould or pests, and remove unsafe building materials and lead paint.
  • Schools: Provide safe sanitation and hygiene, free of noise, pollution, and promote good nutrition.
  • Health facilities: Ensure safe water, sanitation and hygiene, and reliable electricity.
  • Urban planning: Create more green spaces, safe walking and cycling paths.
  • Transport: Reduce emissions and increase public transport.
  • Agriculture: Reduce the use of hazardous pesticides and no child labour.
  • Industry: Manage hazardous waste and reduce the use of harmful chemicals.
  • Health sector: Monitor health outcomes and educate about environmental health effects and prevention.

Under the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) countries are working on a set of targets to guide interventions for children’s environmental health, as well as to end preventable deaths of newborns and children under five by 2030. In addition to SDG 3, which aims to ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all, other SDGs work to improve water, sanitation and hygiene, transition to clean energy to reduce air pollution, and reverse climate change – all of which will have an impact on children’s health.

Shell undertakes turnaround maintenance at Bonga

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Shell Nigeria Exploration and Production Company Limited (SNEPCo) has commenced turnaround maintenance at Bonga, executing statutory activities that will ensure continuous optimum operations at the deep-water field which began producing in November 2005.

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SNEPCo Managing Director, Bayo Ojulari. He says this is the fourth turnaround maintenance since Bonga began production

Production from the field was shut down on Saturday, March 4 2017, and is expected to resume at the conclusion of the exercise next month.

“This is the fourth turnaround maintenance since Bonga began production,” said Bayo Ojulari, Managing Director SNEPCo. “The exercise will help ensure sustained production and reduced unscheduled production deferments. For the Bonga team, this is another opportunity to excel, having won the ‘Asset of the Year’ Award 2016 in the Shell Group, followed by runners-up in Norway and Malaysia. We are pleased that the award recognised the continuing collaboration towards optimum production with a focus on safety, cost and Nigerian content development which will be invaluable in the maintenance work.”

The turnaround maintenance involves inspections, recertification, testing and repair of equipment as well as engineering upgrades with Nigerian companies and subsea professional playing key roles. A major focus is the Bonga floating, production, storage and offloading (FPSO) vessel, which is at the heart of Bonga operations. The Bonga FPSO has the capacity to produce 225,000 barrels of oil and 150 million standard cubic feet of gas per day.

Bonga is Nigeria’s first deep-water development in depths of more than 1,000 metres, and is located 120km offshore Nigeria. SNEPCo expanded the project with further drilling of wells in Bonga Phases 2 and 3 and through a subsea tie-back that unlocked the nearby Bonga North West field in August 2014. Bonga Phase 3 achieved first oil in October 2015.

SNEPCo operates Bonga in partnership with Esso Exploration and Production Nigeria (Deep Water) Limited; Total E&P Nigeria Limited; and Nigerian Agip Exploration Limited under a Production Sharing Contract with the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).

Ekiti, Nasarawa to introduce sex education in curriculum

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In collaboration with the Nigerian Academy of Science (NAS) and Ford Foundation, the governments of Ekiti and Nasarawa states recently in Lagos publicly presented the Family Life Health Education (FLHE) Curriculum that will be used in secondary schools to teach students.

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Mrs. S. Mnena Lan, Programme Manager, Nigerian Academy of Science (NAS) (left), with Mrs. Adenike Esiet, Executive Director, Action Health Incorporated, speaking at a roundtable held to engage media and other stakeholders to disseminate the published Family Life Health Education (FLHE) curriculum of Ekiti and Nasarawa states.. in Lagos on Friday, 24th of February, 2017

The development, which is in apparent response to the rampant cases of sexual abuse among youths, now sees three states adopting the FLHE Curriculum, with Lagos being the first.

President of NAS, Professor Motso Onuoha, said the Academy facilitated the curriculum because of its desire to ensure that the benefits of Science and Technology are translated into the benefit of the people.

He added that the documents would ensure that government officials develop strategies to improve social development and reproductive health of youths in their respective states.

“Our aim at the NAS is to ensure that the gains of science and technology are made available to everyone. There are existing curricula addressing the issues of family life and health education, but some of the concepts and areas of emphasis are not keeping with contemporary trends. There is a misconception among the teachers about how to transmit the concept of family life and health education to the youth,” he stated, adding that the engagement with the state governments revealed that teachers who would implement the plan were eager to learn new materials and incorporate them into the existing curriculum.

Professor Akinyinka Omigbogun, who is also from NAS, noted that if the youths are not well educated on reproductive health, the future of the country is at risk.

Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Youth and Sports Development, Nasarawa State, Abari Aboki, said that the introduction of the curriculum in the existing curriculum for secondary schools in the state would ensure that pupils make the right choices to prevent sexually transmitted diseases.

Executive Director, Action Health Incorporated, Adenike Esiet, said the curriculum would equip pupils with information about human sexuality and interpersonal skills, as well as assertiveness and refusal skills that would allow them to learn about resisting pressures to become prematurely involved in sexual activity. She said that studies had shown that by the end of their teenage years, eight out of 10 young people had initiated sexual intercourse.

“These sexual encounters are generally sporadic and without protection. More than half of all the new HIV infections are in people under the age of 25 with girls being disproportionately affected. Young girls aged 15-19 are three to four times more likely to be HIV positive compared to boys of the same age,” added Mrs Esiet.

SAWAP promotes collaboration with social media, web tools

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A forum held recently in Accra, Ghana has attempted to promote collaboration and build a community of practice through the use of social media and collaborative web 2.0 tools among a group of media practitioners.

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Participants at the Regional Workshop on SAWAP teams’ and media men and women’s capacity building for the use of social media and collaborative web 2.0 tools for development held in Accra, Ghana

Held February 13-16 2017, the regional capacity building workshop likewise involved the project teams and the main stakeholders of the SAWAP (Sahel and West Africa Programme in support of the Great Green Wall Initiative) portfolio as well as the BRICKS (Building Resilience through Innovation Communication and Knowledge Services) project executing institutions.

Besides sharing knowledge and networking, the workshop allowed participants to collect, process and disseminate the lessons learned, success stories and knowledge acquired in each SAWAP project, using social media platforms.

The opening ceremony workshop was chaired by Kwabena Frimpong-Boateng, Ghana’s Minister of Environment, Science, Technology and Innovation, along with Saadia Owusu-Amofah of the IUCN (International Union for the Conservation of Nature) Office in Ghana, who underlined the importance of the BRICKS and SAWAP projects, as well as the need for the protection and management of land and water resources.

Various presentations were made during the weeklong programme. They include:

  • Presentation of the BRICKS and SAWAP projects by Dankoulou Abdoulkarim, CILSS communications manager and member of the BRICKS communication working group
  • Success stories as a tool for communication and dissemination of best practices by Lilia Benzid, communication and gender specialist at OSS and member of the BRICKS communication working group
  • Safe navigation on the Internet by Robert Sanhama, IT manager at CILSS and IT support  for the BRICKS
  • Social media aspects and collaborative tools by the trainer and moderator Christophe Hien
  • Draft of Social Media Policy by Sandrine Ouattara, Editorial Content officer and member of the BRICKS communication working group
  • The BRICKS communication strategy and 2017 communication plan by Félicité Mangang, communication and relationship with IUCN members officer and member of the BRICKS communication working group

One of the highlights of the workshop was the development of a web 2.0 communication strategy by all participants, who were also introduced to the performing tools of the new SAWAP portal, as well as “Climate”, the online SAWAP community radio.

Radio Report: Chief of Air Staff advises new officers to love their country

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Chief of Air Staff, Air Marshall Sadique Abubakar, has advised newly commissioned officers of the State Security Service to always love their country and bring new ideas in intelligence gathering, required to overcome contemporary security  challenges in the country.
He spoke recently during the passing out parade of Cadet Officers  at the State Security Services Academy in Ojo, Lagos.
Correspondent Innocent Onoh witnessed the event and now reports.

YVE Nigeria lauds Amina Mohammed

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The Young Volunteers for Environment (YVE) Nigeria has described the appointment of Amina J. Mohammed as the Deputy Secretary-General of the United Nations as a round peg in a round hole.

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Amina J. Mohammed, Deputy Secretary-General of the United Nations. The YVE has hailed her new appointment. Photo credit: i.vimeocdn.com

The organisation, in a statement made available to EnviroNews on Sunday, March 5 2017, described her as a leading light on sustainable development issues.

The statement, endorsed by Executive Director of YVE Nigeria, Prince Olawuyi Seyi, reads in part: “We want to use this medium to congratulate Ms Amina Mohammed on her resumption as the United Nations Deputy Secretary-General.

“Indeed, we have absolute confidence on your works and we hope you continue to be ‘A mother to all African youths’, a promoter of sustainable environment and a voice for the voiceless.”

YVE Nigeria is a member of YVE International, a non-governmental organisation working on sustainable environment issues like climate change, clean energy, conservation of biodiversity, as well as water and sanitation.

The organisation has 25 chapters across Africa and is headquartered in Lome, Togo.

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