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12 new health care facilities earmarked for FCT

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Acting Executive Secretary, Federal Capital Territory (FCT) Primary Health Care Development Board, Dr Mathew Ashikeni, says that 12 additional health care facilities had been approved to be constructed in the six area councils.

Mohammed Bello
FCT Minister, Mohammed Bello

Ashikeni told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in an interview in Abuja on Sunday, December 31, 2017.

He said that the FCT Minister, Malam Mohammed Bello, gave the approval recently to expand the health care service delivery for the growing population in the territory.

He explained that two Primary Health Care (PHC) facilities would be constructed in each of the six area councils to ensure that FCT residents have access to quality health care.

He said that, in 2017, 18 new PHC facilities were added to the existing ones to boost health care delivery.

According to him, nine were constructed under the SureP programme and another nine were provided by Satellite Town Department.

“The recent mapping we carried out in the PHC facilities confirmed to us that many of them need to be attended to, looking at the infrastructure or the service delivery in terms of the human resource component.

“There are gaps we need to address urgently, that is why the minister has graciously approved 12 PHC facilities to be constructed in the six area councils to fill in some gaps,

“The FCT population is estimated to be five million, there is need to have health facilities that will meet up the health needs of the growing population” he said.

Ashikeni said that human resources was key to functional primary health care service hence the FCT administration has engaged the services of 50 Volunteer midwives under Save One Million Lives programme.

He said also that the midwives have been posted to various health centres across the territory.

The acting executive secretary disclosed that the minister has also given directive to commence the process to adopt 203 additional midwives trained by the Federal Government’s Midwives Service Scheme (MSS).

He said that the essential drugs received under Save One Million Lives programme, have been made available to health facilities in FCT to ensure they were functional.

By Mustapha Sumaila

Waste recycling described as an efficient source of revenue generation

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An environmental analyst, Mr Odumeru Musuilideen, on Saturday, December 30, 2017 dscribed waste recycling as an efficient source of revenue generation and a way to make the society green.

Waste recycling
Industrial waste recycling process

Musuilideen, a former Chairman of the Nigerian Society of Engineers (NSE), Environment Division, Lagos Chapter, made the remark in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Lagos.

He said that most of the materials and waste products that cause flooding in the country could be recycled.

According to him, some the waste materials that cannot be recycled and constitute hazards to the environment can be prohibited from being used in the country.

“Waste materials like nylons are unrecyclable and can be banned from usage because nylons constitute about 70 per cent of residues that block the water canals, thereby causing flood,’’ he said.

However, Musuilideen urged the Federal Government to encourage recycling of all kinds of waste products, saying that it was a major way to check the causative factors of flooding in the country.

He noted that recycling reduces energy consumption and ensures sustainable use of limited resources.

“Large amounts of energy are required to mine raw materials, process them and transport them around the world.

“But much of this energy can be saved if manufactured products like plastics, metals, or paper are properly segregated and recycled.

“People can generate revenue if they can start sorting their wastes, especially the pet bottles, papers, cans, among others, as there are resource merchants that buy them,” he said.

Musuilideen said that most of the recycled items were exported by the resource merchants because many industries had not learnt to benefit from the use of recycled items.

“There are many ways recycled items can be used; they can be reused in the same industry that produced them and also be used in the construction of buildings.

“For instance, somebody constructed three bedrooms using ‘PET bottles’ in Kaduna State, while another used the same ‘PET bottles’ for the construction of a school library,” he added.

By Lilian Chukwu

Unilag now compliant with WHO malaria diagnostic test standard

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The University of Lagos, Akoka (Unilag) says the World Health Organisation (WHO) has recognised its institution as being compliant with its malaria Rapid Diagnostic Test (RDT) batch testing standard operating procedures.

University of Lagos Unilag
University of Lagos, Akoka

The Director, Research and Innovation of the university, Prof. Wellington Oyibo, disclosed this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Saturday, December 30, 2017 in Lagos.

According to him, the WHO had in a cicular made available to the institution, recognised the university’s “African Network for Drug and Diagnostic Initiative” Centre of Excellence for Malaria Diagnosis, alongside that of the National Institute of Malaria Research (NIMR), New Delhi, India.

He said that the laboratories of these two institutions had been adjudged compliant with the WHO malaria Rapid Diagnostic Tests (RDTs) lot (batch) testing standard operating procedures.

“The circular mentioned that these laboratories will be conducting lot (batch) verification for RDT batches imported into their respective countries, which are  Nigeria and India.

“I just want to say we are happy with this development because it goes to show that we can make it happen, given the much needed support, in the area of research.

“We must all begin to see our universities as centres for solutions, as we are all aware that it is beyond just teaching and learning for the acquisition of certificates or degrees.

“With this recognition of the Unilag platform also, malaria Rapid Diagnostic Tests (RDT), that are used for the diagnosis of malaria can now be easily tracked.

“It can also be monitored for quality, till the expiration date of the kits,’’ Oyibo said.

The professor of Medical Parasitology explained that monitoring can now be done on such kits quickly, upon their arrival in the country.

According to him, those with defects would be not be deployed to the country’s facilities.

“In fact, they will be stopped from entering the country thus, ensuring that high quality malaria rapid tests are available for effective malaria case management,’’ he said.

Oyibo noted that for over nine years, the WHO had coordinated an independent global quality assessment programme for malaria rapid diagnostic test batches.

According to him, a circular made available to the institution has noted that from 2007 through 2016, the WHO global batch testing programme had tested more than 5000 RDT batches.

He added that the circular also stated that since 2011, batch or lot testing had been mandatory for all global fund grant recipients and had been adopted by all other major RDT procurers.

By Chinyere Nwachukwu

Cocoa farmers decry low productivity, urges government commitment in 2018

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Chairman, Osun State Chapter of Cocoa Farmers Association of Nigeria (CFAN), Mr Moses Oladipupo, has decried the poor production of cocoa in the state, attributing it to bad weather.

Cocoa
Harvesting cocoa

Oladipupo, during an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Osogbo on Saturday, December 30, 2017 said only 30 per cent of expected cocoa production was achieved by farmers in the state in 2017.

He attributed the major factor responsible for the low production to inadequate support from government in 2017, adding that farmers had to struggle on their own.

“We faced the challenges of unfavourable weather, fake chemicals sold in the market, and lack of fund and financial support from the government.

“Majority of our farmers lack funds and as such could not pay labourers employed to work on their farms, and this often resulted to police cases.

“In fact, we had a lot of our members arrested because they were reported to the police for not paying the labourers they employed.

“It is not entirely the fault of farmers not being able to pay their employed labour, but what they get from their harvest is not up to what they have invested on production.” he said

He said though the Federal Government through the Federal Ministry of Agriculture, had been providing chemicals to cocoa farmers at 50 per cent subsidised rate, the farmers still need more support and assistance from them.

He said farmers in the state were not really feeling the Federal Government’s impact on agricultural programmes and policies because the states governments that were supposed to be implementing them were not doing so.

He said the target of government in terms of cocoa production was 300,000 metric tons, but said they would get less than 200,000 metric tons this year due to the challenges farmers faced this year.

He, however, called for more commitment from the government toward cocoa production and to equip farmers through training, funding as well as provide extension workers to assist and monitor farmers operations.

According to him, if government can provide the needed tools and materials cocoa farmers need to operate, it will encourage farmers’ production and cultivation of cocoa on a large scale.

By Olajide Idowu

Nigeria can achieve self-sufficiency in rice production, says expert

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The Chief Executive Officer, Raymos Guanah Farms, Mr Raymos Guanah says that Nigeria can achieve self-sufficiency in rice production if the present trend is sustained.

rice-farming
Rice farming

Guanah said this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Saturday, December 30, 2017 in Asaba, the capital of Delta State.

While commending the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN)’s Anchor Borrowers Programme, he advised government at all levels to create the enabling environment for sustained rice production in the country.

Guanah also called for the introduction of modern milling machines which should be accessible to mechanised rice farmers in the country.

“Creating the needed environment as well as introduction of modern milling machines will help to boost and sustain production of rice in the country,’’ he said.

Guanah, a former commissioner in Delta, also called for the training of rice farmers in the country in order to boost their entrepreneurial skills.

On the quality of locally produced rice, he noted that it was good, but there was still room for improvement with the provision of modern milling machines.

According to him, local rice is richer and better, compared to imported rice because of the freshness and high nutritional value.

Guanah identified flooding as one of the challenges of the agriculture sector and expressed the hope that it could achieve more in 2018

On the involvement of more youths in agriculture, Guanah noted that if agriculture was mechanised, more youths would embrace it.

By Mercy Obojeghren

Dust haze, cloudy weather to prevail on Saturday – NiMet

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The Nigerian Meteorological Agency (NiMet) has predicted dust haze weather conditions with horizontal visibility range of about three to five kilometres over the central states of the county on Saturday, December 30, 2017.

Dust haze weather
Dust haze weather

NiMet’s Weather Outlook by its Central Forecast Office in Abuja on Friday also predicted day and night temperatures in the range of 26 to 36 and 11 to 20 degrees celsius.

The agency predicted that the Southern States would experience hazy conditions over the inland cities with day and night temperatures in the range of 33 to 37 and 18 to 26 degrees celsius.

It also predicted partly cloudy skies over the coastal cities throughout the forecast period.

According to NiMet, Northern States will experience slight dust haze throughout the forecast period with day and night temperatures in the range of 28 to 34 and 12 to 19 degrees celsius.

“Slight dust is expected to be raised which should leave the northern part of the country in slight dust haze.

“The central states are expected to be in dust haze condition with horizontal visibility range of about three to five kilometres.

“Conversely, partly cloudy conditions are expected over the southern cities in the next 24 hours,” NiMet predicted.

By Sumaila Ogbaje

Ivory sales ban commences as China aims to curb elephant poaching

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Ban on ivory sales in China, the world’s largest importer and end user of elephant tusks, takes effect on Sunday, December 31, 2017 with wildlife activists calling it a vital step to reducing the slaughter of the endangered animals.

Ivory trafficking
Ivory trafficking. Photo credit: girlegirlarmy.com

China has made a big push to eradicate ivory sales and demand has fallen since early 2014 because of a crackdown on corruption and slower economic growth.

Public awareness campaigns featuring celebrities have helped boost awareness of the bloody cost of ivory. Wildlife groups estimate 30,000 elephants are killed by poachers in Africa every year.

“It is the greatest single step toward reducing elephant poaching,” said Peter Knights, chief executive of the group WildAid.

China has allowed the sale of pre-convention ivory, which refers to products such as carvings and crafts acquired before the 1975 Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), as long as it is accompanied by certificates.

The trade in pre-convention ivory has been legally thriving in China and Hong Kong since 1975, and environmental activists have long asserted that it has spurred demand for all ivory.

The ban on all ivory sales has already led to an 80 percent decline in seizures of illegal ivory entering China as well as a 65 percent decline in raw ivory prices, said conservation group WildAid.

Under the ban, China’s 172 ivory-carving factories and retail outlets will also close. Some factories and shops started closing in March.

Illegal ivory supplies have also been rife in unlicensed shops and online across China.

This year, ivory prices in China were about 65 percent lower than 2014 levels, said WildAid, with retailers in some places trying to sell off stocks and offering heavy discounts before the ban.

The Chinese ban has been hailed by activists but they warn that Hong Kong, a special administrative region of China, remains a big obstacle to the eradication of elephant poaching.

China’s ban on sales do not apply in the former British colony, which has the largest retail market for ivory and has traded it for more than 150 years.

Hong Kong is a prime transit and consumption hub for ivory with more than 90 percent of consumers from mainland China.

Since 2003, Hong Kong has intercepted about 40 tonnes of illegal ivory, only about 10 percent of what is believed to have been smuggled in, WildAid said in a paper to the city’s legislature in May.

Hong Kong set a timetable for a ban on ivory trading last year, with a phase-out time of five years. A final vote on the ban is expected in the city’s legislature in early 2018.

Conservationist Zhou Fei said the Chinese ban could be a catalyst for the closure of ivory markets across Asia.

However, Kenya-based conservation group Save the Elephants said this year that neighbouring Laos had expanded its retail market more rapidly than any other country.

Beijing phases out 4,450 coal-fired stoves

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Beijing phased out more than 4,450 coal-fired stoves in 2017, reducing its coal consumption by almost three million tonnes, local authorities said on Friday, December 29, 2017.

coal-fired stove
Chinese coal-fired stove

“The move also reduced emission of 5,500 tonnes of smoke and 6,600 tonnes of sulphur dioxide,’’ the Beijing Municipal Environmental Protection Bureau said.

As part of a campaign launched in 2013, Beijing has phased out about 99.8 per cent of coal-fired stoves.

Natural gas and other forms of clean energy are used to replace coal.

An investigation shows that Beijing’s average sulphur dioxide density, a major air pollutant, was eight microgrammes per cubic metre toward the end of October 2017, compared with the annual average density of 28 microgrammes in 2013.

Small stoves in Beijing’s suburban and rural areas, not covered by the central heating system, had been blamed for worsening the city’s smog during the winter.

Beijing completed 338 projects to switch coal-fired heating to heating fuelled by natural gas in rural areas this year, involving ¥8.5 billion ($1.3 billion) of investment.

UNEP report: Government targets 5,000 for medical outreach in Ogoniland

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The Federal Government is targeting about 5,000 men, women and children in its free medical outreach aimed at preventing, detecting and treating victims of hydrocarbon pollution in Ogoniland, Rivers State.

Medical outreach
Medical outreach

Dr Marvin Dekil, the Project Coordinator, Hydrocarbon Pollution Remediation Project (HYPREP), flagged-off the second phase of the exercise on Friday, December 29, 2017 in Kpite-Tai community, Tai Local Government Area of the state.

He said that HYPREP has concluded the exercise in Khana and would soon begin same exercise in Gokana and Eleme Local Government Areas in compliance to recommendations of UNEP Report on Ogoniland.

“The health outreach is the first step towards the implementation of the initial stage of the Health Impact Study as recommended in the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) Report on Ogoniland.

“Health impact study is one of the emergency measures taken by HYPREP to ensure that we are clear about the link between disease pathogens and oil contamination in the area.

“We are mandated to perform three tasks which are to remediate impacted sites; restore livelihood in the communities, and emergency measures – which includes health impact study and water.

“HYPREP would administer screening for various ailments – while at the end of the exercise; the report would be used to do a health record for Ogoni people,” he said.

Dekil said the screening would cover malaria, HIV, dental, eye, arm circumference; Random Blood Sugar; Fasting Blood Sugar, weight and height.

He said that pulse and vital signs of residents would also be checked with focus to early detection of diseases.
Besides, the project coordinator said the exercise would offer free surgeries and treatment to residents found with dental and eye impairment.

“Also, free correctional eye glasses would be given to those diagnosed with impairment,” he said.
Dekil said that Ministry of Environment recently signed Memorandum of Understanding with the United Nations Institute and Research (UNITAR) to train Ogoni youths and women on skills acquisition.

He noted that President Muhammadu Buhari was fully committed to successful implementation of the UNEP Report on Ogoniland.

The founder of Medical Women Association of Rivers State, Dr Bernadette Korubo, expressed optimism that the outreach would improve health of residents.

She said that most residents of the area suffered severe forms of arthritis, high blood pressure, stroke, eye impairment, waist pain and upper respiratory tract infection.

Korubo said: “These diseases are common here because at this age and time people are still drinking from streams and hand-dug wells especially in an area that is highly polluted.

“This is a public health emergency, and as such government at all levels should as a matter of urgency interface with the community gatekeepers to provide them with pipe borne water.

“We will continue to create awareness to enable them maintain healthy living in the midst of the health challenges caused by decades of oil pollution in Ogoni communities,” she said.

The medical practitioner urged the participants to boil their water before drinking while awaiting government intervention in their communities.

One of the beneficiaries, Mr Rapheal Obari, who was diagnosed with low blood sugar, commended HYPREP and called for a quarterly conduct of the exercise.

By Desmond Ejibas

Government’s renewable energy projects: An overview

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On Nov. 7, 2017, President Muhammadu Buhari told the National Assembly that the Federal Government would launch the first African Sovereign Green Bond in December 2017 to finance renewable energy projects.

Clean Cookstoves
Minister of State for Environment, Alhaji Ibrahim Jibril

Buhari, while presenting the 2018 Budget Proposal, said: “I am pleased to inform this distinguished assembly that the Federal Government will be launching the first African Sovereign Green Bond in December 2017.

“The bond will be used to finance renewable energy projects. We are very excited about this development, as it will go a long way in solving many of our energy challenges, especially in the hinterland.’’

As a follow-up, the Debt Management Office (DMO) and the Federal Ministry of Environment, in collaboration with Green Bond Advisory Group, on Dec. 14 organised Nigeria Green Bond Investors Forum in Abuja and Lagos.

Stakeholders that participated in the forum include Pension Funds Administrators (PFAs), the Federal Ministry of Finance, the Inter-ministerial Committee on Climate Change and the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE).

Others are DMO, Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the World Bank and Chapel Hill Denham Group as well as representatives of private sector organisations.

The Director-General of DMO, Ms. Patience Oniha, said that the forum was organised to educate prospective investors in the Green Bond programme to know the benefits of investing in green bond projects.

Oniha said that the Federal Government would soon issue N10.6 billion green bonds to finance renewable energy projects in efforts to protect the environment.

The director-general said the Federal Government acted to borrow the N10.6 billion, in line with its borrowing agenda contained in the 2017 budget.

According to her, more funds would be allocated to finance green bond projects in the subsequent budgets.

Oniha said that the bonds would be used to finance three renewable energy projects, which were Renewable Energy Micro-Utilities Programme, Re-energising Education Programme and Afforestation Programme.

Also speaking, Alhaja Halimat Bwari, the Deputy Director, Department of Climate Change, Federal Ministry of Environment, said that N142 billion was required to finance renewable energy projects in the country.

She said that the ministry decided to issue the green bonds as an alternative source of funding because of the huge capital outlay which was required to finance the nation’s renewable energy projects.

She noted that the Green Bond programme would boost the nation’s economy and protect the environment.

Besides, Bwari said that the ministry had inaugurated five low-carbon growth projects.

She listed the projects as the Rural Energy Access, the Great Green Wall Programme, the National Clean Stoves Scheme, the Clean Energy Transportation Scheme and the Nigerian Erosion and Watershed Management Project.

She said that the projects would go a long way to reduce carbon emissions in Nigeria, while facilitating the country’s efforts to meet its commitments in the Paris Agreement on Climate Change.

As part of efforts to promote renewable projects in the country, the Federal Government has called for public-private sector collaboration in efforts to promote the use of clean cook stoves.

The Minister of State for Environment, Alhaji Ibrahim Jibril, while speaking at the 2017 Nigeria Clean Cooking Forum in Abuja, solicited the partnership to develop domestic market for made-in-Nigeria clean cook stoves.

The minister, who underscored the need to develop and expand the market, emphasised that the government and the private sector ought to work together in growing the market for made-in-Nigeria clean cook stoves.

According to him, clean cooking techniques constitute a priority area in efforts to achieve the goals of Nigeria’s Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs), which aims at reducing carbon emissions in the country.

“It also aims to reduce the emission of greenhouse gases; clean cooking energy for all is not only possible but a right for our citizens,’’ he said.

The President of the Senate, Dr Bukola Saraki, stressed the need to step up activities and actions that were fundamentally aimed at ensuring increased use of clean energy by households across the country.

He said that the citizens’ consumption of over 500 million kilogrammes of firewood every day was an enormous strain on the nation’s forest resources.

Besides, Saraki said that nearly 65,000 people died every year in Nigeria due to household air pollution, while more than four million people died because of household air pollution globally annually.

According to him, more than 50 per cent of these fatalities are children and women.

The Senate president, who underscored the need to increase the usage of clean cooking stoves by households, said that the stoves would save lives and help to create additional jobs for people in the country.

A stove manufacturer, Mr Biodun Olaore, who is the Country Director, Envirofit Nigeria, urged the government to create public awareness on the menace of indoor air pollution and deforestation to enable Nigerians to embrace the clean cooking technology.

Envirofit Nigeria, a subsidiary of U.S.-based Envirofit International, owns a clean cooking stove factory in Lagos.

Olaore said: “Governments should play a vital role in creating the required awareness about the hazards of indoor air pollution and deforestation.

“This will help people to actually embrace this cooking technology and they can actually see the benefit, which ultimately translates to a better environment for all.’’

He said that his company embarked on the manufacture of efficient, clean cooking stoves so as to encourage the people to engage in air pollution-free activities, adding that the stoves, which produced less smoke and cooked faster, were cost-effective.

“We manufacture the stoves to support government’s policies and efforts to reduce carbon emissions and effects of greenhouse gases.

“This technology is actually out there to reduce the consumption of fuel wood and carbon emissions, while preventing the hazards associated with cooking with biomass fuel,’’ he said.

Olaore, who said that the government had yet to subsidise the stove production, said that the stove was affordable and cost-effective, taking into cognisance the high cost of cooking fuel nowadays.

The country director said that the price of one unit of the stoves ranged between N5,500 and N15,000, depending on the fuel that was suitable for that particular stove.

“We produce these stoves to help people to live better lives; this technology is actually out there to improve the life of the common man in Nigeria,’’ he said.

However, Mr Richard Inyamkume, the Senior Programme Officer, Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation Initiative (CCMAI), urged the government to support low carbon growth initiatives that were executed by relevant stakeholders in the country.

He said it was imperative for government at all levels to support the low carbon growth initiatives because of their attendant benefits to the people and the environment.

“Presently, a huge number of Nigeria’s population is dependent on dirty cooking modes such as firewood and charcoal.

“While this contributes to global warming through carbon emissions, it also poses health risks to the users.

“Governments need to focus on investing in the area of clean cooking options for Nigerians, especially the citizens in the rural communities,’’ he said.

As parts of efforts to lay solid foundation for the evolution of a low carbon society, Inyamkume urged the government to mainstream climate change issues into federal, state and local government budgetary proposals.

He said that the government at all levels needed to give priority to investments in low carbon projects, particularly in the areas of cooking modes, transportation modes and clean energy options.

“To this end, private sector investments should be encouraged for the production and distribution of clean cooking technologies, low carbon travel options, such as bicycles, hybrid cars, tricycles, and other low- or zero-carbon emitting energy options.

“Nigeria has a huge economic potential as well as brilliant climatic and environmental future which cannot be left to be ravaged by the adverse impacts of climate change,’’ he said.

Inyamkume also urged the government and other relevant stakeholders to implement existing policies and strategies to achieve low carbon growth in the country.

He said that the federal, state and local governments as well as the citizens should make concerted efforts to achieve green, healthy and sustainable environment that supports food and livestock production, as well as clean energy production.

By Deji Abdulwahab, News Agency of Nigeria (NAN)

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