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Six states urged to embrace housing fund scheme

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Lagos, Kano, Ondo, Ekiti, Edo and Oyo states have been urged to resume their participation in the National Housing Fund (NHF) scheme. They had previously discontinued their participation in the controversial exercise.

Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Lands, Housing & Urban Development, George Ossi, with the Deputy Governor of Akwa Ibom State, Valerie Ebie, at the event.
Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Lands, Housing & Urban Development, George Ossi, with the Deputy Governor of Akwa Ibom State, Valerie Ebie, at the event.

At the 4th Meeting of the National Council on Lands, Housing and Urban Development held recently in Uyo, Akwa Ibom State, participants noted that despite the significant progress made by the Federal Mortgage Bank of Nigeria (FMBN) in its operations and management of  the country’s housing finance sector, the organisation was still constrained by the of failure of some states to embrace the NHF scheme, non-passage of critical mortgage-related bills and delay in the recapitalisation of the apex mortgage house.
The two-day event had “Creating Enabling Environment for Private Sector Participation in Affordable Housing Delivery in Nigeria” as its theme.
Similarly, participants observed there were serious impediments militating against delivery of required housing stock and that Public Private Partnership (PPP) projects could be better deployed to overcome impediments to affordable housing delivery if government comes up with deliberate policies to overcome the challenges of high cost of land, transfer fees and registration processes as well as promotes training of labour, provision of ancillary infrastructure and recapitalisation of mortgage institutions.
The forum underlined the need to promote the unfolding paradigm shift in national housing delivery by further creating the enabling environment for private sector participation in affordable housing with special emphasis on the use of renewable energy sources and energy efficiency appliances as viable options for reducing the costs of buildings.
Participants likewise clamoured availability of relevant, evidence-based and up-to-date data on statistics in line with the mandate of the National Population Commission (NPC), and that ministries, departments and agencies (MDAs) should review and identify gaps in the 2006 National Population and Housing Census for inclusion in the 2016 Census, while approving the establishment of a framework to guarantee timely updating and sustainability of data input on housing and preparation of a robust plan or the establishment of a Central Housing Statistics database.
It also called for the establishment of a Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV), anchored on Home Ownership Property development cooperative societies driven by partnership with land donors, cooperative members as ‘off-takers’, contractors, investors/financiers, shareholders, Primary mortgage Institution (PMIs) and Bank of Industry (BOI) as currently practiced by Ondo state Development and Property Corporation.
A call was also made for the adoption of technological innovations in areas of walling, roofing and associated materials for housing delivery, by the Nigerian Building and Road Research Institute (NIBRRI) as, according to them, these innovations have significant
advantages over conventional materials in terms of affordability, sustainability and efficiency.
Delegates lamented the impact of the housing deficit, which they described as grievous on the low income group, resulting in more urban slums and higher crime rates. They approved the setting- up of a Joint ActionTaskTeam (JATT) of stakeholders to work out the modalities for implementing the proposed Social Housing programme.
While noting the proactive initiatives taken by the Federal Ministry of Lands, Housing and Urban Development towards the preparation of the National Physical Development Plan (NPDP) aimed at engendering sustainable and integrated development of the Nation as well as ensuring regional balance and optimisation of the use of
national resources, delegates urged the populace to desist from engaging the services of non-town planning professionals in carrying out town planning functions.
It was disclosed that the ministry was in the process of conducting impact assessment of Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) projects executed by the ministry as a prelude to the implementation of the MDGs successor programme – the Post-2015 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGS).

REDD+: Country model for forest carbon stock estimation emerges

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Nigeria may be spearheading an initiative on the African continent that would accurately measure the level of forest carbon stocks, and reap handsome financial reward.

Left to right: Agu Godson Uche, Field Officer, Federal Ministry of Environment; Salisu Dahiru, National Coordinator, Nigeria UN-REDD+ Programme; Dr John Fonweban, Forestry Officer, UN-REDD Programme, Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) office for Africa (FAORAF); Luca Birigazzi, Forestry Expert, UN-REDD Programme; and Bridget Nkor, GIS Specialist, Cross River State Forestry Commission, during the workshop in Calabar
Left to right: Agu Godson Uche, Field Officer, Federal Ministry of Environment; Salisu Dahiru, National Coordinator, Nigeria UN-REDD+ Programme; Dr John Fonweban, Forestry Officer, UN-REDD Programme, Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) office for Africa (FAORAF); Luca Birigazzi, Forestry Expert, UN-REDD Programme; and Bridget Nkor, GIS Specialist, Cross River State Forestry Commission, during the workshop in Calabar

Under the United Nations-supported Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (UN-REDD+) programme in respect of which the country is implementing a Readiness phase, communities are encouraged to leave their forests standing in the belief that trees act as carbon sink and thus mitigate the effects of climate change.

In the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), the potential benefits for non-Annex I parties are be based on results that must be measured, reported and verified (MRV). The precision of these results therefore has a major impact on potential financial compensation, and the capacity to measure forest carbon stocks is thus of increasing importance for Nigeria that is mitigating climate change through her forest activities. The measurement of these stocks currently calls on techniques that are applied at different scales such as field inventories on a local scale.

Forest carbon stock measurement at some point needs trees to be weighed in the field, constituting the keystone on which rests the entire edifice of forest carbon stock estimations. Allometric equations are used to predict the biomass (diameter or height) of a tree, and considered a key factor in estimating the contribution made by forest ecosystems to the carbon cycle.

Participants at the workshop
Participants at the workshop

Guidelines have been provided by scientists towards ensuring the construction of these equations to countries that are not yet in possession of measurements and equations that match their forests. It is believed that virtually all African countries fall in this category.

But Nigeria has begun moves to develop her equations in the bid to provide accurate and credible information on her forest stock. At a recent forum in Calabar, Cross River State, local and international experts gathered to fashion out a way to make this a reality.

“Most of the equations we are using in Africa come from models that were developed in Europe. There is virtually nowhere that you see Allometric equations with an African formula. So Nigeria is spearheading this and trying to develop its own equation that will be used to measure its own forest,” says Salisu Dahiru, National Coordinator of Nigeria’s UN-REDD+ programme.

Describing the system being utilised by the UNFCCC as “default model”, Dahiru adds: “For instance, you have Iroko tree, locust bean tree, and many indigenous trees here but we are only using models of forest that does not represent the kind of forest that we have and enable you make adjustments. But if you do your own, it gives you more accurate data and information on the forest, rather than using models developed elsewhere. The process is not novel, but the fact that we are applying it is novel, to suit Nigeria’s forest. To the best of our knowledge, there are no Allometric equations for forests in Africa.”

Dr John Fonweban, Forestry Officer, UN-REDD Programme, Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) office for Africa (FAORAF), submits: “When you are talking about carbon, you need to quantify that; you need to quantify what you have. But if you can’t do that, then there is a problem of credibility and that is the reason why Nigeria will have to go that way to be able to quantify and show scientifically and in a transparent manner that this is what we have, this is what models we’ve used to have that. That is where the credibility comes.

Luca Birigazzi, Forestry Expert, UN-REDD Programme, FAO headquaters, Italy
Luca Birigazzi, Forestry Expert, UN-REDD Programme, FAO headquaters, Italy

“That is even where most of the negotiations will be because you can’t go to the market to sell something when you don’t know how much you have. So you need to quantify the stuff and Nigeria should be able to do that. The other thing is that if Nigeria has to show performance in her REDD+ or reduction of emission process, and at one stage in time they should be able to have what is called a reference level that requires very good and accurate information. It requires this model that is very crucial for Nigeria and I think that they are ready for that.”

Luca Birigazzi, Forestry Expert, UN-REDD Programme, describes biomass assessment as a component of the MRV process.

Describing the gathering as a good representation of stakeholders, he stresses: “It’s a challenging process. There is a lot of potential in REDD+ and I hope it will bring something positive to Nigeria in particular and the world as a whole.”

According to Dahiru, if the emission reduction can measured, reported and verified, the country can benefit from the carbon credit trading process. He adds that it also helps to determine how much emission the country is reducing by implementing REDD+.

His words: “So MRV is a prerequisite for you to even trade on carbon. In terms of what you are getting, it means that you are putting yourself in a position to fast track the carbon process in Nigeria. What we are doing is putting the power to do this in our own hands and determine our own destiny. Everything we are doing is towards reducing emission of the gases that are responsible for global warming. The arrangement now is that if you can demonstrate that you have made some savings, you are now emitting less, then that difference is calculated in terms of tons of carbon dioxide and quantified in terms of dollars for each ton of carbon.

“For REDD, you have a stage called result-based payment stage where if you say you have reduced emissions then somebody will need to see how much of these emissions you have reduced. That is the measurement. The government, communities and civil society do the measurement and it is compulsory for you. If you want to be paid carbon credit, you must report that to the UNFCCC and, for it to be actualised, independent verification must be done. The UNFCCC has its own independent verifiers.

“You as government if you like you can participate in the verification, but in-country (on the ground) you have to involve the civil society and communities to help verify because they have a stake in the carbon credit that will be shared. So, the whole process is done in a transparent manner; everybody that has a stake in it is allowed to participate so that it ensures credibility and nobody will complain at the end of the day. Once you are satisfied with these three conditionality, the certificate that is going to be issued to you will now be taken to the stock market, which is the carbon market, and traded upon.”

By Michael Simire

Leave fossil fuels buried to curb climate change, study warns

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A new research identifies which reserves must not be burned to keep global temperature rise under 2C, including over 90% of US and Australian coal and almost all Canadian tar sands

Trillions of dollars of known and extractable coal, oil and gas cannot be exploited if the global temperature rise is to be kept under the 2C safety limit, says a new report. Photo credit: Les Stone/Les Stone/Corbis
Trillions of dollars of known and extractable coal, oil and gas cannot be exploited if the global temperature rise is to be kept under the 2C safety limit, says a new report. Photo credit: Les Stone/Les Stone/Corbis

Vast amounts of oil in the Middle East, coal in the US, Australia and China and many other fossil fuel reserves will have to be left in the ground to prevent dangerous climate change, according to the first analysis to identify which existing reserves cannot be burned.

The new work reveals the profound geopolitical and economic implications of tackling global warming for both countries and major companies that are reliant on fossil fuel wealth. It shows trillions of dollars of known and extractable coal, oil and gas, including most Canadian tar sands, all Arctic oil and gas and much potential shale gas, cannot be exploited if the global temperature rise is to be kept under the 2C safety limit agreed by the world’s nations.

Currently, the world is heading for a catastrophic 5C of warming and the deadline to seal a global climatic deal comes in December at a crunch UN summit in Paris.

“We’ve now got tangible figures of the quantities and locations of fossil fuels that should remain unused in trying to keep within the 2C temperature limit,” said Christophe McGlade, at University College London (UCL), and who led the new research published in the journal Nature. The work, using detailed data and well-established economic models, assumed cost effective climate policies would use the cheapest fossil fuels first, with more expensive fuels priced out of a world in which carbon emissions were strictly limited. For example, the model predicts that significant cheap-to-produce conventional oil would be burned but that the carbon limit would be reached before more expensive tar sands oil could be used.

It was already known that there is about three times more fossil fuel in reserves that could be exploited today than is compatible with 2C, and over 10 times more fossil fuel resource that could be exploited in future. But the new study is the first to reveal which fuels from which countries would have to be abandoned. It also shows that technology to capture and bury carbon emissions, touted by some as a way to continue substantial fossil fuel use in power stations, makes surprisingly little difference to the amount of coal, oil and gas deemed unburnable.

Major fossil fuel companies face the risk that significant parts of their reserves will become worthless, with Anglo American, BHP Billiton and Exxaro owning huge coal reserves and Lukoil, Exxon Mobil, BP, Gazprom and Chevron owning massive oil and gas reserves.

If the world’s nations keep their pledge to combat climate change, the analysis finds the prospects are bleakest for coal, the most polluting of all fossil fuels. Globally, 82% of today’s reserves must be left underground. In major coal producing nations like the US, Australia and Russia, more than 90% of coal reserves are unused in meeting the 2C pledge. In China and India, both heavy and growing coal users, 66% of reserves are unburnable.

While the prospects for gas are better, the study still found 50% of global reserves must remain unburned. But there are stark regional variations, with the giant gas producers in the Middle East and Russia having to leave huge quantities underground, while the US and Europe can exploit 90% or more of their reserves to replace coal and provide local power to their large cities. Some fracking for shale gas is consistent with the 2C target, according to the study, but is dominated by the existing industry in the US, with China, India, Africa and the Middle East needing to leave 80% of their potential shale gas unburned.

Oil has the lowest proportion of unburnable fuel, with a third left unused. However, the Middle East is still required to leave 260bn barrels of oil in the ground, an amount equivalent to Saudi Arabia’s entire oil reserve. The study’s conclusion on the exploitation of Canada’s oil sands is blunt, finding production must fall to “negligible” levels after 2020 if the 2C scenario is to be fulfilled. The research also finds no climate-friendly scenario in which any oil or gas is drilled in the Arctic.

The new analysis calls into question the gigantic sums of private and government investment being ploughed into exploration for new fossil fuel reserves, according to UCL’s Professor Paul Ekins, who conducted the research with McGlade. “In 2013, fossil fuel companies spent some $670bn (£443bn) on exploring for new oil and gas resources. One might ask why they are doing this when there is more in the ground than we can afford to burn,” he said.

Bill McKibben. Photo: Nancie Battaglia
Bill McKibben. Photo: Nancie Battaglia

“The investors in those companies might feel that money is better spent either developing low-carbon energy sources or being returned to investors as dividends,” said Ekins.

“One lesson of this work is unmistakably obvious: when you’re in a hole, stop digging,” said Bill McKibben, co-founder of 350.org which is campaigning to get investors to dump their fossil fuel stocks. “These numbers show that unconventional and ‘extreme’ fossil fuel – Canada’s tar sands, for instance – simply have to stay in the ground.”

“Given these numbers, it makes literally no sense for the industry to go hunting for more fossil fuel,” McKibben said. “We’ve binged to the edge of our own destruction. The last thing we need now is to find a few more liquor stores to loot.”

Financial experts, including the Bank of England and Goldman Sachs, have begun taking seriously the risk that expensive fossil fuel projects will be rendered worthless by future climate action. James Leaton, research director at the Carbon Tracker Initiative (CTI) said: “Investors are already using the detailed CTI cost curves to start identifying how low demand and price scenarios could play out.”

The research also highlights the contradiction of governments seeking to maximise their nation’s fossil fuel extraction, as in the UK, while simultaneously pledging to limit global warming to 2C. Ekins said if governments approved new fossil fuel production, they should be asked what resources elsewhere would not be exploited.

“If some UK shale gas resources turn out to be economically viable, and provided the local environmental impacts can be made acceptable, I would say we should use them,” he said. “But the caveat is what fossil fuels should we then not be using from somewhere else, if we are going to keep within the carbon budget. That is a question I have never heard asked by a policy maker in this country.”

If a global deal is signed in December to keep most fossil fuels in the ground, then compensating the losers will be key, according to Michael Jakob, a climate change economist at the Mercator Research Institute on Global Commons and Climate Change in Berlin. “If you really want to convince developing countries to leave their coal in the ground, you have to offer something else and I don’t think the Saudis will leave that oil in the ground if they get nothing for it,” he said, citing green technology including CCS, as well as financial compensation.

Jakob said the challenge was enormous, but that it provided benefits as well as costs: “There are huge sums at stake, but not just on the losers’ side but also on the winners’ side. Some assets will lose value, but others will gain value, like solar and wind power and land for biomass production.” In 2014, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change concluded that tackling global warming by diverting hundreds of billions of dollars from fossil fuels into renewable energy and cutting energy waste would shave just 0.06% off expected annual economic growth rates of 1.3%-3%.

Article courtesy The Guardian of London

Bodo spill compensation raises hope for other communities -ERA/FoEN

The agreement by Shell Petroleum Development Company of Nigeria Limited (SPDC) to pay 55 million (N15.3 billion) pound compensation to the Bodo community over two spill incidents in 2008 has continued to generate reactions. The latest comes from the Lagos-based Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FoEN), which has described the step as a welcome development that should open doors for more communities that have suffered the oil giant’s environmental degradation to seek legal redress.

Shell workers clearing earth from around broken pipeline in Bodo, 7 November, 2008. Photo credit: livewire.amnesty.org
Shell workers clearing earth from around broken pipeline in Bodo, 7 November, 2008. Photo credit: livewire.amnesty.org

Shell’s decision to pay the community was arrived at after a settlement meeting with the affected community. The firm claims it took responsibility immediately the incident happened.

But, the ERA/FoEN, in a statement, said: “The unrelenting quest for justice by the Bodo community even after six years of frustrating negotiations forced the hands of Shell. The victory goes to the people.”

ERA/FoEN Executive Director, Godwin Ojo, stated: “While we see this agreement as a victory for the Bodo community folks who have suffered ecocide and loss of livelihoods, it is also a glimmer of hope for communities that have endured massive degradation from Shell’s leaking and ill-maintained facilities in the Ogoni and elsewhere in the Niger Delta.

“The amount may seems huge but it is paltry when compared to the ecosystem disturbance and destruction of livelihoods which has denied income to the victims for 6 years in a country where welfare package is non-existent. This is victory to the Bodo people and to all those who stood by them. This is another watershed development and by this a floodgate of similar cases by victims in the Niger Delta is bound to increase against Shell.”

Ojo explained that Shell had thought the community would chicken out in the face of their corporate might. It must be compelled to go beyond piece meal in dealing with the Ogoni issue by complying with the recommendation of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) which has a cardinal call for immediate commencement of clean-up of the massively degraded environment.

He added: “In the last four years since the UNEP report was released we have witnessed an unholy alliance of the Nigerian government and Shell manifest in half-steps, deliberate attempts to muddle the issues and the setting up of a Hydrocarbon Pollution Restoration Project (HYPREP) that has been used to deceive the Ogoni people.

“We again use this medium to reiterate that the Bodo, the entire Ogoni in collaboration with other Niger Delta communities and civil society approach the United Nations to appoint a Niger Delta Reconciliation and Restoration Commission with autonomy and authority to do so. The oil companies should be required to contribute an initial amount of $100 billion to address the issues.

“Projects that do not have input from the Ogoni must be abolished and replaced with an internationally recognised clean-up body mutually agreed to by the communities.

“This victory notwithstanding, it is not time to click glasses. Now is the time to pressure Shell to clean up all the polluted environments of the Niger Delta. Tokens are not enough to cover up Shell’s ecocide.”

Bodo spill: Shell’s N16 billion compensation ‘inadequate’

Civil rights organisation, the Health of Mother Earth Foundation (HOMEF), has picked holes in the agreement by oil giant, Shell, to pay a penalty of about 55 million Pounds Sterling (about N16 billion) to 15,600 Bodo fishermen and community for the extensive crude oil spills of 2008/2009.

A fish farmer whose farm was destroyed after the 2008 oil spill. Photo credit: amnesty.org.uk
A fish farmer whose farm was destroyed after the 2008 oil spill. Photo credit: amnesty.org.uk

The group nonetheless describes the development as a welcome news “for a New Year loaded with violence and other unpalatble news.”

HOMEF spokesperson, Cadmus Atake, submitted in a statement that, when compared to what polluting oil companies pay elsewhere for their ecological crimes, “HOMEF sees the compensation which will amount to about N600,000 for each of the plaintiffs with the balance going for community projects – school blocks and health centres – as inadequate for the severity of damage done.”

Nnimmo Bassey, Director of HOMEF, adds: “The fishermen cannot hope to return to fishing in the Bodo rivers and creeks because of the depth of hydrocarbon pollution resulting from the oil spills.

“Although the amount being offered each fisherman is better than the pittance that Shell initially offered to pay, this can hardly purchase a good fishing boat and equipment necessary to return to the fishing business that the people know best – that is if they chose to move to other communities with cleaner waters in which to fish. Sadly, although the Bodo pollution also damaged the Goi community waters that community continues to languish in abject neglect without remedy.”

According to Atake, HOMEF sees the main victory in the case as its being a clear precedent, giving a case where Shell accepts liability and is not pretending to be making a payout on humanitaran basis as they have claimed in the past.

“Since the oil companies do not respect fines imposed on them by Nigerian regulatory agencies, or even the National Assembly, this decision should encourage other communities to bring up cases against Shell and other oil companies operating in the Nigeria, Ghana and other countries,” says George Awudi, a member of the international Advisory Board of HOMEF.

Atake stresses: “Payment of compensation and building of schools and clinics will not by any means reduce the demand for an urgent clean-up of the Ogoni environment. Three and a half years after the UNEP (United Nations Environment Programme) report the Ogoni people are still waiting for concrete clean up action. HOMEF regrets that in the ongoing political campaigns the political parties do not pay any attention to the severe environmental damage in the Niger Delta and the rest of the nation. A safe environment is a foundational basis for human survival.”

GEF to invest $255 million in forestry, food security, cities

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In the light of its bid to address environmental challenges facing the planet, the Global Environmental Facility (GEF) is beefing-up the impact of its investments and tackling drivers of degradation. Consequently, the organisation has refreshed its global strategy over the next four years.

Naoko Ishii, CEO of GEF
Naoko Ishii, CEO of GEF

A select number of integrated investments will seek to produce multiple environmental benefits by working with a broad range of organisations and sectors, including government agencies, businesses and NGOs. This new and more integrated approach is being added to existing GEF funding modalities to strengthen its capacity to respond to priorities identified by multiple conventions and stakeholders.

The integrated programme on “Sustainable Cities,” for example, is a $100 million programme pilot that will provide policy and governance support to facilitate integrated urban design, planning, and management; leading to sustainable, resilient development and sound ecosystem management while improving the global environment.

It aims to demonstrate innovative models of sustainable urban management and high impact investment. With this pilot, the GEF expects the participating cities to be recognised as the leading examples of sustainable urban management in five to 10 years, yielding clear and quantified global environmental benefits. Accordingly, leaders and officials of the pilot cities are expected to gain and put into practice the expertise and policy means to address global environmental concerns in an integrated manner.

The programme will establish a common platform with two key elements:

  • Sustainability plan: Clear, rolling plan that provides an assessment of challenges and opportunities in cities and metropolitan areas, consistent with those spearheaded by partner institutions and that produce global environmental benefits; and,
  • Tools: Underpinning sustainability plan development and implementation; set of tools and metrics agreed upon by participating cities and partners.

Several agencies expressed their interest in the implementing components of the Programme. The discussion on the ideal profile of the lead agency for the Programme is underway. The lead agency will develop the common platform with the set of tools and common metrics applicable to all city-related projects. The lead agency will also be in charge of supporting the exchange of knowledge, lessons learned, and capacity building activities.

One of the projects is designed to takle deforestation. Photo credit: telegraph.co.uk
One of the projects is designed to takle deforestation. Photo credit: telegraph.co.uk

Similarly, “Taking Deforestation out of Commodity Supply Chains”, the second initiative, is an integrated programme dedicating $45 million to address one of the key global drivers of deforestation by harnessing the growing public and private sector interest in expanding the supply of sustainably managed commodities; in particular palm oil, soy and beef.

It targets governments, the private sector, local communities, civil society, and consumers by providing a common platform required to tackle deforestation linked to the expansion of key commodities.

The programme will harness the momentum, and build upon the significant pledges and commitment made by companies, industry groups, and governments to develop results at scale. This was most recently evidenced through the New York Declaration on Forests, which saw world leaders and over 50 influential corporations, including some of the best known brand names in the world, endorse a global timeline to cut natural forest loss by half by 2020, and strive to end it by 2030.

The Commodities Programme will perform a catalytic role along the entire commodity value chains to engage different stakeholders at the global, national, and local levels to:

  • Enhance the understanding of decision-makers within the public and private sectors;
  • Strengthen the enabling environment for deforestation-free commodities;
  • Support the uptake of sustainable commodity production practices; and,
  • Enhance investment in deforestation-free commodities.

Stakeholder discussions are being programmed in Brazil, China, India and Indonesia within the next few weeks. These events are planned to include governmental, private sector, and civil society stakeholders as well as other active organisations and existing initiatives and donors. Additional meetings are being scheduled in 2015.

Furthermore, the “Fostering Sustainability and Resilience for Food Security in Sub-Saharan Africa” integrated programme is a $110 million initiative that aims to promote the sustainable management and resilience of ecosystems and their different services (land, water, biodiversity, forests) as a means to address food insecurity.

It specifically targets dryland regions where integration of environmental priorities into smallholder agriculture is crucial for increasing the productivity of food crops and maintenance of ecosystem services. The proposed approach will:

  • Promote multi-stakeholder platforms through which appropriate actions can be identified and pursued to ensure that food security and other livelihood needs are met while safeguarding the environment; and,
  • Apply appropriate tools for monitoring global environmental benefits.

The Food Security Programme recognises that sustainability and resilience of food production systems in Sub-Saharan Africa depends on the existence of appropriate institutional frameworks and supportive policies to promote changes in agricultural production systems that involve, inter alia, healthy soils, efficient water management, diversification of farmlands, and safeguarding of genetic resources.

The IFAD has agreed to serve as lead agency, although it is anticipated that multiple Agencies will be engaged based on the needs and priorities of the countries.

At least 12 countries are envisaged to participate in this pilot phase. A follow-up with all 22 countries in target geographies will determine the best opportunities for achieving transformational impact through this Programme. This will serve as a basis for investing the $60-million allocation reserved as a financial incentive for the Programme, which will be matched by STAR allocations from the participating countries at a 1:1 ratio.

GEF Agencies are planning to submit the Programmatic Framework Document on the three projects to the GEF Council at the 48th Meeting in June 2015.

Children living in fear in northeastern Nigeria

Hauwa, 16, is from Maiduguri, the capital of Borno State in northeastern Nigeria, a region blighted by years of Boko Haram insurgency. She says fear is with her daily, dictating how she lives.

School children in Borno State, Nigeria. Photo credit: premiumtimesng.com
School children in Borno State, Nigeria. Photo credit: premiumtimesng.com

“I’m scared of walking along roads on my own because I don’t want to be raped for the second time,” she told me on the day I met with families affected by the Boko Haram insurgency in Maiduguri. Borno State as a whole has borne the brunt of the violence that has lasted for more than five years in northeastern Nigeria.

During four days in late October, I was on a mission to encourage reluctant parents in Maiduguri to send their daughters to safe schools working through traditional leaders, youth leaders and the local media as facilitators. In those four days, I met girls who told me they were scared of returning to school because they fear they could be attacked by anyone, including their male teachers. Because of their ordeal in the hands of militants, some of whom they identified as neighbours, they are unwilling to trust anyone.

“I don’t know where my next attacker could come from,” a young girl told me. “I just don’t trust anyone, not even my teachers.”

Since the ongoing crisis, life has never been the same for kids living in the region, as every facet of their lives has been affected by the insurgency.

Children no longer feel safe even in their homes. They also fear going to public places like markets, streams, farms and social gatherings for fear of being attacked or forcibly conscripted by Boko Haram.

As many public schools in the northeastern Nigeria are now closed, many students now hawk wares on the streets, and some have turned to criminal activities. The situation in the few still-open private schools is no better, as most parents are scared of sending their children there.

The insurgency itself has set back education in an area that is grossly underdeveloped and with a high rate of illiteracy. Since 2012, Boko Haram has burned more than 300 schools in the north and deprived more than 10,000 children of an education. In a particularly gory attack in July, suspected armed Islamists killed 42 pupils and teachers and burned down a government-owned boarding school in Mamudo village, Yobe State.

Figures released by Human Rights Watch indicate that more than 5,000 people, mostly adults have been killed since the insurgency began in 2009. As parents are lost in fighting, more and more children are without families and homes.

Living with fear of being killed, and without anyone to turn to for protection and assistance, many orphans have joined the recruitment of armed conflict. The militia life has become more attractive to the children, who see a possible future of survival with their fellow soldiers. In most cases, these young soldiers from ages 12 to 16 come from communities where there are no schools to attend and no jobs to work and destitute families. Every year the number of child soldiers grows as more children are recruited into active combat.

Moreover, the continuous influx of Internally Displaced Persons into major towns in the region have increased the number of beggars on the streets, a situation that forced some of them – especially girls – into prostitution to make ends meet.

Millions of dollars, thousands of people’s efforts, and several months have all been spent trying to secure a lasting peace in northeastern Nigeria. But these efforts have not gone far enough. A lack of coordination, corruption in some quarters, and insufficient access to those most in need all make achieving well-being by children difficult, but not impossible.

For many children in these communities, education remains their surest way out of poverty and destitution. “I want to enjoy the life I had before the insurgency,” said Umar, 16. “I want to be able to go to school without the threats of insurgent attacks.”

Unfortunately, the fear of Boko Haram has forced many parents to withdraw their children from schools, and this can only add to an already explosive mix of the large pool of uneducated and unemployed youth and debilitating poverty.

Just four days spent in the heart of Boko Haram insurgency made me realize that protecting schools alone, even with the best trained military personnel, wouldn’t be enough to encourage every child to return to the classroom. They need a different form of home education that will help them cripple fear and rebuild their trust in the society.

By Philip Obaji (founder and general coordinator for the 1 GAME Campaign which promotes basic primary education for vulnerable children in Nigeria. He also started a community project, Off The Streets, for street children who are facing challenges of exclusion from school, ignorance, recruitment into insurgent groups, neglect and abuse.)

IUCN hosts second Great Green Wall e-forum

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From July 15th to August 11th, 2013, the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) organised a first E-Forum with the objective of strengthening the involvement of the civil society in the implementation of the Great Green Wall of the Sahara and the Sahel Initiative (GGWSSI). Over 130 participants took part in this E-Forum. The results of the online consultation were presented in Windhoek, Namibia in September 2013 at a “side-event” during the 11th Conference of Parties to the UN Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD). This “side-event” was organised by RESAD and IUCN.

The Great Green Wall. Photo credit: treeplantingholidays.com
The Great Green Wall. Photo credit: treeplantingholidays.com

On the basis of this forum, IUCN and UNEP have reflected on greater synergy among actors in the implementation of the GGWSSI. This discussion led to a project concept submitted to the Global Environment Facility (GEF), which has been retained. IUCN and UNEP will soon submit the complete document of projects eligible for GEF funding, according to Marcello Rocca, the IUCN communication and knowledge management specialist.

The project is entitled “Closing the gaps in Great Green Wall: Linking sectors and stakeholders for increased synergy and scaling-up.” Its objective is a greater implementation of policies for sustainable land management in the Sahel (GGW countries) through enhanced investment, inter-sectoral coordination, and engagement of marginalised groups.

To enable this project to value the best experiences and to the civil society committed to the GGWSSI to contribute to this document, considering that GGWSSI is already functional with partners involved in its implementation, IUCN is organising a second E-Forum, from Wednesday 7th to Tuesday, 20th of January 2015, that will help to deepen the issues raised by the former.,

The discussions and exchanges will take place over two weeks. The first week will allow participants to identify groups of actors and their needs to take sufficiently into account in GGWSSI. The second week will provide documentation and best practices in connection with the GGWSSI and the needs of identified groups. A final summary will be proposed at the end of the discussion forum. The results of this forum will be presented at a dissemination workshop that will integrate the proposals in the final document of the project.

Rocca adds: “Still in a participatory way, and to strengthen the synergies of actors, this forum is open to civil society organisations and key partners to identify practical actions to strengthen the participation of all stakeholders in GGWSSI and strengthen its implementation.”

The GGWSSI is a planned project to plant a wall of trees across Africa at the southern edge of the Sahara desert as a means to prevent desertification.

Rights group criticises Lagos’ World Bank water deal

The Lagos State Government has been accused by a civil society organisation of double-speaking on a transaction on water provision it reportedly got involved with.

Demand for water is steadily on the rise. Photo credit: vanguardngr.com
Demand for water is steadily on the rise. Photo credit: vanguardngr.com

According to the group, Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FoEN), the announcement by Lagos State Water Corporation (LSWC) that it is seeking partnership with private individuals on how to meet current demand for water in the state is an indication that the corporation may be pursuing a strategy of intentionally marketing forms of privatisation in the guise of Public-Private Partnership (PPPs) to avoid scrutiny and public resistance.

The LSWC had in a statement signed by its Controller, Media and Publicity, Ronke Famakinwa, disclosed that the partnership would help it meet current demand for water in the state, which is put at 540 million gallons per day.

“Intense local and international demands for disclosure had forced the World Bank to open up on the water privatisation scheme, which centres on the appointment of its private arm, the International Finance Corporation (IFC), to design a PPP water scheme for Lagos. So far, the project is shrouded in utter secrecy, with no input from critical segments of the population that it will supposedly benefit. The bank had initially said it had no deal with the Lagos government and then swiftly announced it had cancelled the IFC contract,” Phillip Jakpor, the ERA/FoEN spokesperson emphasised in a statement.

He added: “Until the recent pronouncement, the LSWC had refused to volunteer any information on the project. It also shunned demands to speak up on the issue.

“Not only has the LSWC shocked Lagosians with its confirmation of a PPP arrangement, residents are deeply concerned by the devastating track-record of water PPPs which include rate hikes, sporadic access, unsafe water, and infrastructure neglect. Clearly this is not a solution.”

ERA/FoEN Director, Corporate Accountability, Akinbode Oluwafemi, said: “The LSWC announcement has confirmed what ERA/FoEN and allies have been concerned about for months–the city intends to privatise its water system. By expressing interest in pursuing a PPP, Lagos officials are expressing interest in a form of water privatisation that has many of the same consequences as full-scale privatisation.”

Oluwafemi explained that the disorientation of Lagos residents is further heightened by the fact that the corporation has also made contradictory statements regarding the justification for its PPP plans.

“Despite admitting that it does not expect the private sector to find any capital improvements in a potential contract, it is an irony that the corporation still relies on the rationale that the private sector will help fund costly and much-needed water infrastructure improvements. This theory has been thoroughly discredited by experts as well as the World Bank and even the private water sector itself.”

Oluwafemi maintained that water PPPs are water privatisation under a different name and that while government’s primary objective should be equitable access, the private sectors’ major concern revolves only around profit.

He went on: “A true partnership as the name suggests cannot exist with such disparate goals. If the Lagos government allows its water system to be run with profit as a priority, Lagos residents will continue to suffer.

“While we laud the Lagos government interest in solutions to the water problem, we strongly advocate that it commits to real solutions that prioritise the human right to water above and over profit motives that drive the privates in a PPP. We believe the water corporation is still holding back vital details on the deal with the World Bank and we demand to know them.”

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