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World Safety Day: SEEPCO reinforces firm’s commitment to safety, wellbeing

Sterling Oil Exploration and Energy Production Company Limited (SEEPCO) has reaffirmed its unwavering commitment to workplace safety, employee wellbeing, and innovation, as it marked the 22nd observance of the World Day for Safety and Health at Work, established by the International Labour Organisation (ILO).

SEEPCO
SEEPCO workers observing the World Safety Day

SEEPCO, one of Africa’s fastest-growing oil exploration and production companies, commemorated the occasion with a week-long series of activities under the theme “Revolutionising Health and Safety: The Role of AI and Digitalisation at Work.”

The celebrations, which concluded on April 26, 2025, ahead of the global observance on April 28, emphasised the evolving role of technology and digital solutions in enhancing workplace safety.

Throughout the week, employees across SEEPCO’s operational locations actively participated in various activities, including a health walk, a themed lecture on AI in workplace safety, leadership demonstrations, safety engagement sessions, and health talks promoting physical wellbeing and raising awareness about site-specific health challenges.

Aligned with its Health, Safety, Environment, and Fire (HSEF) objectives, SEEPCO’s safety teams had previously through the year 2024 conducted impactful campaigns, covering construction work safety, working at heights, fire drills, confined space entry protocols, alcohol testing for accident prevention, and seasonal campaigns such as protection against lightning strikes.

On the concluding day of this year’s World Day for Safety and Health at Work, SEEPCO also emphasised on its way forward with a comprehensive digital transformation of its health and safety systems to drive operational excellence and proactive risk management.

In the coming weeks, the company will roll out additional technology-driven platforms, including a real-time digital incident reporting system, a digital Unsafe Act and Unsafe Condition (UAUC) reporting tool, and a streamlined e-Permit to Work (PTW) system, all designed to enhance transparency, compliance, and responsiveness.

This transformation will be achieved through advanced HSEF (Health, Safety, Environment, and Fire) data analytics, artificial intelligence, and predictive monitoring, strengthening SEEPCO’s ability to anticipate and prevent incidents while empowering employees to play an active role in building a safer, smarter workplace.

These initiatives are not just about automation; they are about empowerment, giving every employee the tools to make better decisions, prevent harm, and continuously improve.

Reinforcing its focus on professional development, SEEPCO provided specialised safety training through internationally accredited agencies.

Notably, a National Training Course on Nucleonic Gauging Equipment, Well Logging, Waste Management, and Naturally Occurring Radioactive Materials (NORMs) was conducted at the National Institute of Radiation Protection and Research (NIRPR), University of Ibadan, certifying employees as Radiation Safety Officers (RSOs).

Further advancing its environmental sustainability agenda, SEEPCO organised Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Management Awareness Training for around 50 employees, building internal capacity for effective GHG management and compliance with emerging environmental regulations.

As part of its commitment to emergency preparedness, SEEPCO collaborated with the Lagos State Fire Service for a joint emergency drill, strengthening inter-agency coordination and ensuring robust readiness for critical situations.

Speaking at the closing ceremony, SEEPCO’s spokesperson emphasised: “At SEEPCO, safety is not just a priority; it is our value. We are embracing innovation and digitalisation to revolutionise our approach to health and safety. Our commitment is unwavering – to protect lives, enhance wellbeing, and build a resilient workforce for the future.”

Since its establishment in 2003, Sterling Oil Exploration and Energy Production Company Limited (SEEPCO) has embedded safety into the core of its operations across Nigeria. The company continues to drive operational excellence while contributing to Nigeria’s economic growth and championing a future where safety, technology, and sustainability are deeply intertwined.

“Remarkably, SEEPCO is among the few producing companies out of more than 70 successful bidders that signed PSCs’ during Nigeria’s 2005 licensing round to achieve first oil within a record time of just two years. SEEPCO’s journey has been marked by numerous challenges, operating in the tough terrains of its allotted Oil Mining Licenses and blocks.

“However, through perseverance and consistent commitment, the company has stood resilient against all odds. SEEPCO today stands proudly as one of the fastest-growing oil exploration and production companies in Africa,” the company remarked.

Earth Day, Water Day, Wetlands Day share ecosystem restoration messages

As the month of April 2025 comes to an end, there is need to recall and reflect on messages from three of some of the world’s most significant annual global environmentally related observances namely: World Wetlands Day (February 2), World Water Day (March 22), and Earth Day (April 22).

Ghana
A scene within Ghana’s Densu Ramsar Site, where community members are engaged in a thriving artisanal fisheries industry. This demonstrates that a healthy and vibrant wetland is a source of livelihood for local community members

They unfolded with a unifying message: the urgent need to restore natural ecosystems, combat climate change, and protect the life-supporting systems of the earth.

From wetlands conservation and water management to renewable energy advocacy, their 2025 themes reflect a growing global consensus that environmentally related actions are not just about saving nature, but about promoting human wellbeing and resilience for all.

Earth Day: Accelerating the Renewable Revolution

Earth Day 2025, the most recently observed of the Days, boldly called for a worldwide transition to clean, renewable energy by tripling global renewable electricity generation by 2030. With fossil fuel emissions driving the climate crisis, Earth Day activists urged leaders to prioritise solar, wind, hydroelectric, tidal and other sustainable energy sources.

The campaign also spotlighted environmental justice, demanding that no community be left behind in the global shift to a green economy.

Executive Secretary of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), Astrid Schomaker, used the occasion to remind the international community of how Indigenous peoples and local communities (IPLCs), including youth, women and children, have lived in harmony with Mother Earth for millennia.

She was concerned that “today they are among those most affected by the environmental crises afflicting the planet”.

Ms. Schomaker noted that the practices and innovations of IPLCs constitute a wealth of traditional knowledge that is crucial for global efforts to halt and reverse biodiversity loss and to address climate change. She continued that such role of IPLCs is recognized in the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (the KMGBF), adopted at COP 15 in Montreal in December 2022.

The framework acknowledges “indigenous peoples and local communities as custodians of biodiversity and as partners in its conservation, restoration and sustainable use”.

Water Day: Preserve glaciers to secure global fresh water sources

World Water Day 2025 highlighted the critical role glaciers play in sustaining freshwater supplies for drinking, agriculture, industry, ecosystems and the global water system.

Glaciers are accumulated ice and snow that slowly flows from high elevated areas down mountainsides into valleys and across lands. Glaciers store almost 70% of Earth’s freshwater, acting as natural reservoirs that release meltwater essential for various human and ecological needs.

However, global warming has led to accelerated glacier melting with 2023 witnessing over 600 gigatons of water loss – the highest in the past 50 years, according to the Global Water Partnership. This rapid unprecedented melting is disrupting the water cycle, leading to more unpredictable and extreme weather patterns including increased incidences of floods, droughts, landslides and sea-level rise.

This, says UN-Water, “is endangering billions of people and countless ecosystems as well as threatening water security”. In Ghana and for the rest of the West African sub-region, the 2025 World Water Day served as reminder that although glaciers may be remote, they are an essential component of the water cycle, nourishing our rivers and lakes.

Therefore, their disappearance, also means less water for consumption by the population, less water for industrial development, a lower hydroelectric energy generation capacity, and less water for agriculture.

So, the national durbar to celebrate the Day in Accra, was an occasion to resound the call for all hands-on deck, to conserve Ghana’s water resources and ensure that every Ghanaian has access to this life-giving resource.

Reflecting over the Day’s national theme: “Water Conservation: Let’s Make It Our Way of Life”, Deputy Minister of Works, Housing, and Water Resources, Gizella Tetteh-Agbotui, said “it is a wakeup call for all Ghanaians to intensify their commitment to reversing the deterioration of the country’s water bodies”.

The Managing Director of the Ghana Water Company Limited (GWCL), Adam Mutawakilu, urged Ghanaians to renew their commitment to protect and conserve the nation’s fresh water resources.

“This is because of the reality that our water resources are not infinite, therefore, urgent action is required to ensure sustainability,” he stated.

Re-echoing similar sentiments, Acting Executive Director of the Water Resources Commission (WRC), Dr. Bob Alfa, was concerned that water availability for Ghanaians was way below the minimum annual requirement.

“Currently, the water resources per capita is about 1700 m3/cap/yr. This is well below the minimum threshold per capita of 1900 m3/cap/yr,” Dr. Alfa stated, adding that, “this is largely due to the combine effects of climate change and pollution resulting largely from illegal mining”.

Wetlands Day: Protecting wetlands for man’s sustainable welfare

The Day’s celebration underscored the importance of wetlands in maintaining ecological balance by supporting biodiversity, regulating water cycles, and mitigating climate change. Globally, wetlands are among the world’s most productive ecosystems, yet they are also among the most threatened.

So, for this year, the main campaign call is for bold action to safeguard these vital habitats for current and future generations.

In Ghana, the Wildlife Division (WD) of the Forestry Commission (FC) in collaboration with the Obane Community within the Songor Lagoon Ramsar Site in Ada, commemorated World Wetlands Day 2025 with a symbolic Mangrove planting and a durbar at the Dove Park, in Ada Foah.

An address read on behalf of the Acting Chief Executive of the FC, Dr Hugh Brown, said the Day’s celebration is a call for collective responsibility to conserve and restore wetlands to ensure a sustainable ecosystem for present and future generations.

On the state of Ghana’s wetlands, he said, “They are disappearing three times faster than forests. Hence, the need for all to actively participate in the conservation and restoration of Ghana’s wetlands ecosystems.”

What the trio celebrations means for Ghana and Sub-Saharan Africa

The trio celebrations clearly depict the global community rallying around the themes of ecosystem restoration, water cooperation, and a shift to renewable energy in 2025, with sub-Saharan Africa and countries like Ghana in particular, standing at a critical crossroads.

The relevance of these themes goes beyond mere symbolism. They speak directly to the most pressing development and environmental challenges of countries like Ghana calling for urgent collective actions in ecosystem restoration in the face significant pressure from widespread degradation due to deforestation, agriculture, mining, infrastructural expansion and climate change.

This would involve an examination of provisions including those made for ecosystem restoration in the various urban planning and national development policies, and legal frameworks.

Where need be, the existing polices and framework, may have to be revised, amended or revoked. Also, with increasing pressure from climate change impacts, population growth, and urbanisation on freshwater supplies, the trio celebrations proposed proactive water management as imperative and critical measure.

This is not to safeguard public health, ensure food and energy security, protect the environment only, but also to prevent potential social conflicts. Also, it would strengthen their resilience, drive economic development, and honor the commitment to leaving no one behind in the pursuit of sustainable development.

On the subject of clean energy and in Ghana’s case, while, she has made strides with hydropower and solar initiatives, yet still, energy access remains unequal, particularly in rural areas. Hence, a significant part of the population remaining unreached.

But, under Ghana’s Renewable Energy Master Plan, huge potential exists for scaling up solar and mini-grid projects. Along with these opportunities, comes the urgent need to create green jobs in energy, conservation and climate adaptation, which is vital for the nation’s growing youth population.

Another crucial message can be seen in the push for Ghana and other sub-Saharan nations toward a model of development that is green, just, and inclusive. And to get there, countries need to strengthen the performance of systems and institutions put in place to administer the various sectors.

This should be supported by reinforced environmental governance and enforced regulations that protect biodiversity.Local communities should be appropriately empowered with tools and knowledge to adapt to climate change.

Regional and national structures should be revitalised to champion climate finance access that would enable Africa to lead in solutions and not keep suffering consequences.

By Ama Kudom-Agyemang

World Seed Day: HOMEF calls on govt to withdraw from UPOV

As the World Seed Day was observed on Saturday, April 26, 2025, the Ecological Think Tank, Health of Mother Earth Foundation (HOMEF) says it isn’t just celebrating seed as food but as part of our cultural heritage and  life. Along with the Environmental Rights Action, the group adds that it honours the resilience, knowledge  and ingenuity of small holders farmers all over the world who have for generation preserved the biodiversity of our seeds and our food sovereignty.

Nnimmo Bassey
Nnimmo Bassey

The group called on the Nigeria Government to withdraw from the International Union for the Protection of New Plant varieties (UPOV 1991), which it said is a threat to our food system. It urged the authorities to develop a “Sui generis” seed protection system in line with the African Model Law. 

 “HOMEF in partnership with other national and international organisations  has since 2021 campaigned  against the set up of the Nigeria’s Plant Variety Protection (PVP) Law  which was developed as a requirement for membership in UPOV. The PVP Law threatens farmers right, biodiversity and our food sovereignty.

“Despite our collective voice and a lawsuit against some key components of the law, The Nigerian government on 27th February 2025, deposited the instrument of accession and Nigeria was approved as the eightieth member of UPOV on 27th March 2025,” the group submitted in a statement.

HOMEF’s Executive Director, Nnimmo Bassey, stated that “The Nigerian Plant Variety Protection (PVP) Law fails to recognise the country’s unique agricultural landscape, where over 80% of farmers are smallholder farmers who play a vital role in conserving and enhancing plant genetic resources. These farmers depend largely on traditional practices including saving, reusing  and exchanging farm saved seeds.

“Furthermore, the law creates an imbalanced environment where Intellectual Property Rights override farmers’ rights. It promotes the dominance of commercial seed systems over farmers’ and indigenous seed systems, thereby marginalising the very people who have sustained our food systems for generations.”

The Project Lead on Hunger Politics, Joyce Brown, noted that careful analysis of the PVP Law has shown that it places severe restrictions not only on the use of farm-saved seed (propagating material) but extends to harvested material (e.g., grain) and even further to products made directly from harvested material (e.g., milled maize).

Brown added that the PVP law encourages the genetic modification of crops which have direct implications on human (use of herbicides and pesticidal crops) and environmental health (monocultures) as well as on biosafety (destruction of non-target organisms)

Food Sovereignty Activist and Deputy Director of Environmental Rights Action, Mariann Bassey-Orovwuje, highlighted that “the process of development of the PVP law was less than transparent, with no public hearings and lack of consultations and participation of smallholder farmers. This is in contrast to the Nigerian Constitution of 1999 which provides for democracy and social justice as per Article 14 (1) and 14(2) (c ).”

In addition, she pointed out that “the law grants final decision-making power to the Minister of Agriculture, particularly in cases of appeal regarding breeder’s rights. This provision violates Section 36 of the Nigerian Constitution, which guarantees every citizen the right to a fair hearing and access to justice through the courts. Concentrating such powers in the hands of a single authority undermines democratic principles and judicial independence.”

The groups call on the Nigerian government to withdraw from the UPOV 1991 framework and halt the implementation of the PVP Law in its current form, adding that the Law which is line with the UPOV’s provisions undermines traditional agricultural practices and threatens farmers rights and freedom by opening the door for corporate control. 

Furthermore, the groups advised that “Nigeria should develop a ‘sui generis’ plant variety protection system tailored to Nigeria’s unique agricultural context, drawing from the African Model Law. Such a system should  ensure that protection mechanisms do not privilege commercial interests at the expense of communal, farmer-driven seed systems. It is essential that this law be developed through inclusive, bottom-up consultations with farmers, indigenous communities, civil society, and public research institutions.

“This seed law must guarantee farmers’ rights, including the right to save, use and  exchange farm-saved seeds without criminalisation; ensure full transparency and public access to breeder applications to protect against exploitation and safeguard indigenous knowledge; support smallholder farmers through credible credit facilities, infrastructure, and support for public research institutions that serve farmers’ needs.

“Also, Nigeria should prioritise the set up of seed banks at community, local government and state levels to ensure the  preservation of indigenous varieties.

“In line with the theme for the 2025 World Seed Day: Empowering Farmers-Protecting Biodiversity, Nigeria should promote farmer-managed seed systems and invest in local, resilient seed networks that secure food and ecological justice. Our government should prioritise people over and above corporate interests.”

COP30: Africa champions new approach to measuring green wealth, incentivising climate action

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African leaders are advocating for a new approach to measuring the continent’s green wealth, emphasising that current gross domestic product measures in most African countries are outdated and underestimate their true wealth.

UN Headquarters
UN Headquarters, New York

They spoke on Thursday, April 24, 2025, at an event hosted by the African Union Commission and the African Development Bank Group at the African Union Mission to the United States on the sidelines of the 2025 Spring Meetings of the World Bank Group and the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

“We need to talk the talk and walk the talk. It is time to turn our commitments and pledges into concrete actions,” said Ambassador Hilda Suda-Mafudze, Permanent Representative of the African Union Mission to the U.S.

“We need to invest in our systems of national accounts. If we want to have accurate measures of our wealth and create a store of assets, we can leverage them to drive our ambitions of shared prosperity and sustainable development.”

The event featured discussion of a 2024 African Development Bank Group report that found that including the value of carbon sequestered in African forests only would have resulted in an additional $66.1 billion of GDP for the continent in 2022, an expansion of about 2.2 percent.

Professor Kevin Urama, African Development Bank Chief Economist and Vice President presented key findings from the report, Measuring the Green Wealth of Nations: Natural Capital and Economic Productivity in Africa.

Leaders emphasised that a proper valuation of Africa’s natural resources would transform the continent’s financial landscape by unlocking access to global financial flows, improving national risk profiles, and creating new capacity for investments in green economies and climate-resilient infrastructure.

This call to action comes ahead of the November UN Climate Change Conference in Belém, Brazil, where African leaders are expected to press for reforms to the global economic and financial infrastructure, so these better reflect Africa’s green wealth and sustainability contributions.

“It is time for us to redefine our identity as Africa,” said Nigerien Prime Minister Ali Lamine Zeine in a panel discussion on practical steps towards implementing the 2025 System of National Accounts (SNAs) in Africa. “Africa is underestimated. We must work strategically to change this.”

Panelists noted that several African countries still use SNAs dating back to 1968. SNAs are an international standard system of concepts and methods for national accounts that have been adopted by most countries worldwide.

Madagascar’s Minister of Economy and Finance Rindra Rabarinirinarison called for more robust technology transfer and technical capacity building to enable African countries to build proper statistical systems for natural capital. She outlined that Madagascar has launched pilot projects to leverage and measure the value of its natural resources.

“Madagascar is a rich country but not rich,” she lamented, pointing to the country’s abundant natural resources.

Erich Strassner from IMF’s Statistics Department described the report as transformational and assured that the Fund was ready to work with the African Development Bank, the World Bank, and governments to implement its recommendations.

He emphasised the need to focus on priorities in each country, “so that together we can put together a plan to bring each country up to speed on the new system of national capital evaluation.”

Quoting African Development Bank figures, Ambassador Suda-Mafudze observed that if countries rebased their GDP based on carbon sequestration by forests alone, the impact would be substantial, with estimated GDP increases of 38.2% in Côte d’Ivoire, 36.7% in Benin, and 33.5% in Niger.

“We need to ensure a proper valuation of Africa’s green wealth. When we know the value of this significant asset base and incorporate its true value into our national accounts, we improve our economies’ risk profiles and enhance access to financial flows for financing our development,” the Ambassador said.

In his presentation, Vice President Urama pointed to the massive economic value of Africa’s natural resources – estimated at $6.2 trillion in 2018 – and the fact that the continent accounts for 26% of global forest-based carbon capture despite contributing only 4% of global carbon emissions.

“Africa’s green wealth and the important global public goods and ecosystem services it provides to the world are often overlooked in economic valuations,” Urama said. “This significantly underestimates African countries’ gross domestic product, despite abundant green wealth.”

He said that in addition to natural capital, ecosystem services and informal economic activities were also not factored into GDP.

Revaluing these assets through Natural Capital Accounting (NCA) and the updated System of National Accounts, which includes the informal sector, could significantly increase Africa’s GDP and improve access to sustainable finance, Urama noted.

“This is not just about correcting statistics. It’s about ensuring comparability of the measures of countries’ GDP in Africa and globally. By updating the System of National Accounts in countries, we can ensure that the basket of goods and services included in the measure of GDP of countries is the same, and avoid comparing oranges and apples,” Urama said.

He called on African countries to allocate appropriate budgets to upgrade their National Accounting Systems and rebase their GDPs, noting that “this is a smart investment that can deliver low-hanging fruit.”

The Executive Secretary of the African Economic Research Consortium, Prof. Victor Murinde, described the new model developed by the African Development Bank as transformative.

“It is a bold step to address a methodological gap in how the GDP of countries is measured to consider the true wealth of nations. Its recommendations provide rich materials for economists to work on in the coming years to improve the methodology for assessing the wealth of nations,” he remarked.

The African Development Bank expressed a commitment to work with the World Bank, the IMF, and other partners to implement the recommendations of the report. It is also advancing practical steps that include creating standard methods to value natural resources, connecting environmental goals with other policies, training local experts across Africa, and helping African countries sell their environmental benefits in worldwide carbon markets.

The Bank Group will also host the African Natural Capital Accounting Community of Practice.

ECN, UNIDO introduce IEE to ARMECO to reduce energy consumption

The Energy Commission of Nigeria (ECN) in partnership with the United Nations Industrial Development Organisation (UNIDO) is implementing a Global Environment Facility (GEF) project titled: Improving Nigeria’s Industrial Energy Performance & Resource Efficient Cleaner Production through Programmatic Approaches & the Promotion of Innovation in Clean Technology Solutions’ though the introduction of industry energy efficiency (IEE), to Arewa Metal Containers Limited (ARMECO) to help reduce energy consumption in the country.

ECN
A cross section of the Energy Commission of Nigeria (ECN) technical working group members and industry players during the kick off review meeting in Kaduna State

Engr. Okon Ekpenyong, Industrial Energy Efficiency (IEE) Consultant, ECN/UNIDO, made this known at the KICK OFF Review Meeting with industries in Kaduna on the implementation of Industrial Energy Efficeincy/Energy Management Systems (EnMS).

The project is aimed at accelerating the adoption of industrial energy efficiency (IEE) and improving enterprise environmental performance under the wider umbrella of Resource Efficiency and Cleaner Production (RECP) best practices and innovative approaches within selected small, medium and large-scale industrial enterprises in Nigeria.

He explained that the project aims to promote the adoption of industrial energy efficiency best practices and improve environmental performance, as well as reduce energy consumption which helps to lower bills and improved environmental performance.

According to him, industrial energy efficiency, focus on energy management systems and reducing energy waste.

Ekpenyong revealed that UNIDO is partnering with the Bank of Industry to provide financial support for industries adopting energy management systems.

He added that the project is being monitored by multiple agencies, including the Ministry of Environment, Energy Commission, and Standard Organisation of Nigeria.

Speaking further, Ekpenyong called for data base collection which is a baseline to conduct and collect data on energy consumption and costs. The data will help industries measure and manage their energy consumption, leading to potential cost savings, enabling comparative analysis and informed decision-making.

The Managing Director, Arewa Metal Containers Limited, (ARMECO), Engineer Joachim Daudu, assured partnership with UNIDO to implement energy efficiency measures in their company also expresses commitment to implementing energy efficiency measures.

To save energy, he noted the importance for solar power to reduce energy costs.

Daudu echoed that through solar, the company expects to save around 144 million naira in the next six years.

He revealed that the company plans to implement energy efficiency measures in phases, starting with the admin block and factory equipment.

Lagos signs MoU to rehabilitate water project

The Lagos State Government (LASG) has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with an international consortium company, Belstar and ENKA, for the rehabilitation and expansion of water supply works in the state.

Tokunbo Wahab
Lagos State Commissioner for the Environment and Water Resources, Mr Tokunbo Wahab

The Commissioner for Environment and Water Resources, Mr Tokunbo Wahab, said this in a statement on Monday, April 28, 2025, in Lagos.

Wahab said it was aimed at addressing critical water infrastructure challenges in the state.He said the project entails construction, rehabilitation, installation of water treatment facilities and distribution networks to provide reliable and sustainable water supply to the underserved communities.

Wahab added that the project would see to the establishment of new water works to ease distribution network issues.

He said the state would ensure compliance with relevant regulations, including social and safety standards.

Wahab said the project was divided into two parts: the Brown Field which consist rehabilitation of existing water works and the Green Field, the construction of entirely new water works in various locations across the state.

The Managing Director, Lagos Water Corporation(LWC), Engr Mukhtaar Tijani, said that the LWC would collaborate with the International Consortium, provide support development, technical inputs as well as stakeholder’s coordination to achieve success.

He said the projects would not only provide portable water to communities without water, but would ensure the eradication of water related diseases in the state.

The Group Managing Director, Belstar Capital, Mr Tewodros Polk, said the consortium would remain committed to the project.

Polk said the consortium would leverage strength and technical expertise to ensure long-term productivity and service delivery.

He promised that the consortium would utilise local subcontractors in order to promote capacity building and sustainable development throughout the different phases of the project.

He said the project would be executed using the Engineering, Procurement, Construction and Finance model insured by the U.S.International Development Finance Corporation.

Polk said the project would be completed in 36 months.

Nigeria’s energy transition should lead Africa’s climate future – APRI boss

Founder, Africa Policy Research Institute (APRI), Dr Olumide Abimbola, on Monday, April 28, 2025, said Nigeria should lead the charge for Africa’s climate future through an equitable, homegrown and economically sound energy transition.

Dr Olumide Abimbola
Dr Olumide Abimbola

Abimbola stated this ahead of a workshop organised by APR in partnership with the Federal Ministry of Budget and Economic Planning, the National Council on Climate Change Secretariat scheduled for Tuesday in Abuja.

The event, which is co-hosted by the Nigerian Economic Summit Group, will draw stakeholders from across the Global South for peer learning.

“This convening is not just about knowledge-sharing, it is about defining Nigeria’s leadership role in Africa’s climate future and ensuring that our energy transition is equitable, homegrown, and economically sound.

“At the heart of the event is a shared goal to explore how Nigeria can design its own Country Platform for Climate Action (CPCA).

“The CPCA is a coordinated national framework to drive low-emission growth, mobilise climate finance, and ensure a just, inclusive energy transition,” he said.

Abimbola said the insights from the two-day workshop would contribute directly to Nigeria’s forthcoming National Development Plan 2026-2030 and help to mainstream climate priorities across key sectors, including power, transportation, agriculture, industry, and finance.

He said that in the lead-up to the event, APRI had already released a background paper offering practical pathways for Nigeria’s transition.

According to Abimbola, the document presents lessons from global case studies, outlining bold, locally relevant strategies for implementing a coordinated, fundable, and inclusive climate framework across policy, infrastructure, and industry.

“The workshop will draw lessons from countries like South Africa, Indonesia, Vietnam, and Senegal, which are already implementing Just Energy Transition Partnerships (JETPs),” Abimbola added

By Angela Atabo

Only political will can develop eco-friendly technology – UNDP Official

National Coordinator of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) Global Environment Facility Small Grants Programme (GEF SGP) Nigeria, Mrs. Ibironke Olubamise, says only genuine political will can develop environmentally friendly technology.

Ibironke Olubamise
Mrs Ibironke Olubamise, Nigeria National Coordinator, UNDP GEF-SGP

Olubamise said this during an interview on Monday, April 28, 2025, in Abuja.

She noted that environmentally friendly technology would have significant impacts, add value, and sustainably enhance livelihoods.

“Any technology that is not environmentally friendly will eventually fizzle out,” she said.

The coordinator stressed the importance of developing inclusive strategies, policies, and plans that supported data collection and management, awareness creation, and advocacy.

“Policies must be designed to promote learning that reduces environmental impacts, especially among youth and women,” she said.

Olubamise also emphasised the need to enhance national and local digital education platforms and to invest in energy-efficient infrastructure.

According to her, energy-efficient infrastructure will empower communities to engage in sustainable practices and improve the management of solid, plastic, and electronic waste.

“UNDP GEF SGP strongly encourages technological ideas and solutions that address environmental challenges,” she said.

According to her, the programme discourages unsustainable traditional practices that no longer serve environmental goals.

“For instance, traditional tree planting ceremonies have often proven unsustainable, as there is usually no follow-up to ensure the survival of the trees,” Olubamise explained.

She advised the adoption of sustainable, technology-driven tree-planting initiatives aimed at conserving and restoring natural ecosystems.

Olubamise noted that the UNDP GEF SGP was supporting the use of technology and applications to monitor and manage plastic waste, flood, and erosion, as well as to report pollution, especially in remote areas.

By Abigael Joshua

Guinea, TAAT, partners convene stakeholders for seed roadmap

Stakeholders from Guinea and across Africa are organising a summit to draw a seed roadmap for the West African country. 

Hybrid seeds
Hybrid seeds

The consortium includes the Government of the Republic of Guinea, Technologies for African Agricultural Transformation (TAAT) of the African Development Bank, the Building an Economically Sustainable Integrated Cassava Seed System, Phase 2 (BASICS-II) project of the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA), and Sahel Consulting.

The three-day Seed Business Summit, with the theme “Building a Harmonised Roadmap for Seed Sector Transformation,” is being organised in collaboration with the Guinean Ministry of Agriculture and Livestock, the country’s National Institute for Agricultural Research (IRAG) and other stakeholders. 

The summit will be held from April 28 to 30, 2025, in Conakry, the Guinean capital. The summit aims to catalyse an agricultural revolution in the Republic of Guinea by establishing an economically sustainable seed system for priority crops like Rice, Cassava, Maize, Groundnut, and Soybean.

The Guinean Minister for Agriculture and Livestock, Felix Lamah, notes that “this summit represents a direct response to the need to hold a more comprehensive audience consultation to identify major challenges, develop solutions, and advocate for more investments in Guinea’s agriculture.” 

“This seed summit will bring together policymakers, international financial institutions, scientists, the private sector and farmer organisations to a roundtable discussion to broker investments for Guinean agricultural transformation with quality inputs, particularly seed as a primary entry point,” Lamah added.

“The summit will address factors limiting growth in Guinea’s agricultural sector, including the underdeveloped seed sector characterised by poor quality seeds, a weak seed regulatory framework, a struggling research system for variety maintenance, and a feeble private sector participation in the seed system,” says Dr Solomon Gizaw, the Head of TAAT Clearinghouse. 

“A solid seed system will surely change the country’s agricultural landscape. In this summit, TAAT and partners will share the models currently strengthening the seed system in Nigeria, Tanzania, D.R Congo, Benin, Sierra Leone, Liberia, Côte d’Ivoire and Kenya,” Dr Gizaw added.

The BASICS-II Project Manager, Prof Lateef Sanni, explained that “the seed summit aspires to produce outcomes that will form the basis of future investment in the Guinean seed system. It will produce recommendations to help forge a roadmap to feed into the country’s agricultural policies and plans.”

The Guinean Minister of Agriculture and Livestock, Felix Lamah, will chair the summit’s opening ceremony, supported by other dignitaries and development partners.

In addition to the conveners, several national stakeholders, including farmers, seed producers, and International Development partners, will participate in the summit. 

They include the African Development Bank (AfDB), the Islamic Development Bank, the Gates Foundation, the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), the World Bank, and the European Union.

Others include the African Agricultural Technology Foundation (AATF), the AfricaRice Centre, and the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT).

Journalists in DRC trained on tobacco control, accessing data dashboard

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Nigeria-based non-governmental organisation, The Renevlyn Development Initiative (RDI), has trained journalists in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) on how to access credible data in upscaling their tobacco control reports with specific attention on how they can explore the rich information in the Tobacco Control Data Initiative (TCDI) developed by the Development Gateway.

Tobacco smoking
Tobacco smoking

The training had prominent tobacco control experts including Professor Patrick Shamba – Technical Advisor, TCDI Programme, DRC; Caleb Ayong, founder, Vital Voices for Africa (VVA); Achieng Otieno, founder, Being Africa; Oluchi Joy Robert, a UK-based tobacco control expert; and Philip Jakpor, executive director of RDI, the convening organisation.

In his welcome words, Executive Director of RDI, Philip Jakpor, explained that the training is the first that the organisation is organising with support from Development Gateway, and that in conceiving it, RDI realises that the media is key not only in keeping the public informed as part of its watchdog role, but also in eliciting robust discourse that ultimately translate into policy responses and actions.

Jakpor said that the indispensability of the media to tobacco control is exemplified in the amount of money that the tobacco industry expends annually to market its products using media channels.

He revealed that the Centre for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in the U.S. recently revealed that in that country alone the amount that the tobacco industry spent on visibility activities including cigarette advertising and promotion increased from $7.84 billion in 2020 to $8.06 billion in 2021. In 2022, it was $8.3 billion.  

He revealed that tobacco companies have also been linked to social media influencers who covertly promote tobacco products, using subtle company campaigns.

He went on to say that, in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) just like other countries on the continent, smoking is a major public health problem with significant impact on morbidity and mortality from non-communicable diseases (NCDs).

He lamented that tobacco control in DRC hardly makes the news, even as he added that the training is premised on the need for more robust and educative reports on tobacco control coming from journalists in the DRC.

He reminded the participants that policy makers rely on what they read or hear or watch to be able to make laws that are rooted in facts and that the task of ensuring the right information gets to them is shouldered by the media.

Professor Patrick Shamba, Technical Advisor, TCDI Programme in DRC, while speaking on the current state of tobacco control in the Democratic Republic of Congo, explained that smoking is a major public health problem in the DRC with significant impact on morbidity and mortality from non-communicable diseases (NCDs).

Shamba revealed that tobacco control in the DRC is hampered by lack of specific regulatory measures, lack of detailed provisions for the effective implementation of the 2018 framework law, tobacco industry interference, illicit trade in tobacco products, and difficulties in controlling and regulating the parallel market.

To address these issues he said that the media has the task of raising public awareness,
Informing the public about the dangers of tobacco and promote preventive measures, Monitoring industry actions and the expose of tobacco industry’s attempts to interfere in public policy. The media must also support legislative initiatives, and report on progress and challenges in implementing smoke-free legislation, among others.

He called for collective engagement, especially greater collaboration between government, civil society and the media to achieve effective tobacco control measures. He also wants the development of detailed regulatory measures; and setting up monitoring and evaluation mechanisms.

The don also took the participants on a tour of the TC Dashboard of the Development Gateway explaining that the platform wharehouses data and information cutting across six themes – Prevalence of Tobacco Use, Tobacco Control Legislation, Tobacco Industry Interference, Tobacco Taxation, Morbidity, and Illicit Trade. The dashboard is regularly updated with new information as it becomes available.

In his intervention on Using Data to Make Tobacco Control Stories Relevant, Caleb Ayong, founder of Vital Voices for Africa (VVA), said that data is information collected, stored, and processed for analysis or decision-making. They can be numbers, text, images, or any other form of recorded details.

On their relevance, he stressed the quality of being closely connected or appropriate to a given topic or situation and he added that data determines how useful or meaningful something is in a specific context.

He told the journalists that in presenting their facts it must be relatable and speak to emotions.
For example, when it is said that approximately 25,000 die every year from tobacco-related deaths in DRC, it is relatable to the number that fills a stadium.

On the kinds of stories that expose the industry he said that poverty caused by tobacco, corruption, health emergency, environment and human rights violations top. He also cited various case studies to drive home his point.

Picking up from there in a presentation on How Tobacco Industry Targets Young People in Africa, Achieng Otieno, founder, Being Africa, said that rising tobacco use especially among African youth is influenced by urbanisation and western cultural imports.

Otieno also said that tobacco and nicotine use have devastating conasequences especially on the health of the smoker and represents a growing burden on healthcare systems across the continent.

He revealed that the youth demographics show that Africa has the world’s largest youth population, making it a prime target for tobacco marketing. There is also a market shift from the west to Africa as a result of declining sales there. The industry is also adopting aggressive marketing tactics, often targeting vulnerable populations.

Weak enforcement of tobacco control laws also allow for continued exploitation of loopholes.
He revealed some of the strategies of the industry. They include introduction of flavoured products, social media and street advertising as well as product visibility.

In her presentation on Tobacco and Conflict, Oluchi Joy Robert, a UK-based tobacco control expert, said that the tobacco industry’s history of profiteering from war and crisis spans centuries. Citing an opinion piece published in the British Medical Journal blog in October 2024, she said that the report noted that there are no winners in war, just terrible pain, destruction, and fatalities.

Nevertheless, the tobacco industry continues to make money by taking advantage of humanitarian crises and human suffering, making money in war-torn places while leaving consumers hungry, homeless, and displaced.

Oluchi explained that since World War I (1914-18), tobacco companies have targeted troops with free cigarettes, direct mail, branded merchandise, and “welcome home” events, thereby creating a new market and normalising smoking.

In World War II (1939-1945) cigarettes were included in soldiers’ rations, further solidifying smoking’s popularity.

With the onset of the Cold War (1947-1948) tobacco companies started targeting developing countries, expanding their markets.

She explained that with more recent conflicts in regions like the Middle East and Africa, tobacco companies have been exploiting weak regulations and targeting vulnerable populations. Their approach has only been modified with the distribution of tobacco products and nicotine to soldiers, promotion of tobacco products in countries weakened by conflict, involvement in illicit trade, etc.

She revealed that after Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, many large transnational corporations, including tobacco companies, said they would pull out of Russia but Philip Morris International (PMI), British American Tobacco (BAT), and Japan Tobacco International (JTI) did not, prioritising profits over human rights and health.

In May 2024, JTI announced that it would continue its operations in Russia to satisfy investors, despite previously announcing that they were leaving. In 2022, the two companies JTI and PMI earned a whopping $7.9 billion and $7.4 billion in profits, respectively, and paid hundreds of millions of dollars in corporate taxes to Russia – Philip Morris $206 million and Japan Tobacco $193 million respectively.

She also pointed out that, in Ukraine, PMI controls 24 % of the cigarette market.

After temporarily suspending production in 2022, it continued to supply its cigarettes to Ukraine from eight factories located outside the country and by partnering with Imperial Brands which still operates in Ukraine.

In 2024 the UK and Ukraine government agreed to  provide cigarettes, nicotine sachets and electronic cigarettes to Ukrainian soldiers who came to train across the Channel. The products were donated by an anonymous international tobacco company, and distributed to the soldiers as part of their rations.

An unnamed source claimed that smoking “poses a smaller threat to these brave soldiers than fighting Putin’s illegal invasion of their country.”

Going further, she said that, in Syria, the civil war since 2011 has led to forced displacement of more than 12 million people disrupting agriculture, yet the country remains a tobacco exporter. In 2023, the World Bank database recorded Syrian exports of cigars or cigarettes to importers Lebanon, Jordan and Qatar.

Also, Yemen, which has been in conflict for nine years, and facing one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises, imported 3,361,440Kg worth of cigarettes in 2019, mostly from the UAE.

Then British ambassador to Yemen attended the opening of a tobacco manufacturing plant jointly owned by the Yemeni government, cigarette manufacturer Kamaran and BAT in late 2019, as revealed by the University of Bath Tobacco Control Research Group.

For journalists in the DRC she said that their area of interest should be that two major tobacco corporations – BAT Congo and Pan African Tobacco Group (PTG) with subsidiary Congo Tobacco Company – operate in the country and across six other countries in sub-Saharan Africa.

The corporations have significant presence and influence in the DRC tobacco market. Additionally, the DRC government faces challenges in regulating the tobacco industry, with issues such as illicit trade and the need for stronger tobacco control policies.

She urged the journalists to take up the following issues:

The tobacco industry exploits vulnerable situations, including conflicts, to market and promote their products, Targeting of vulnerable populations especially youth, women, and low-income communities with aggressive marketing tactics, Illicit trade, weak regulations, and tobacco in humanitarian settings, among others.

The training was supported by the Development Gateway, an IREX Venture.

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