28.3 C
Lagos
Tuesday, April 29, 2025
Home Blog Page 2174

Standing against GMOs

Nnimmo-Bassey-Chairman-of-ERANature has the right responses to changing climate and holds the ace to the survival of species on the planet. Humans simply have to be humble enough to accept that we do not understand everything about the intricacies of natural processes. The time has indeed come when the world has to accept that working with nature is immeasurably more beneficial than working against her. Agricultural genetic engineering (GE) over the past few decades has strived to upturn nature and box her for profit, but as it has consistently turned out, nature continues to trump the manipulators.

The power of the biotech industry has been more successful in restraining and constraining governments to do their bidding than in overcoming the power of nature. Their grip on governments has worked to the extent that when they commit crimes like genetic contamination all governments do is to legalise the misdeed so that it may become entrenched and so that the polluter profits from their crimes. And nature pays. And humans and other species pay.

Those who plead caution with regard to the planting and eating of genetically engineered (GE) crops are vilified as anti-science, whereas a close scrutiny shows that it is actually the biotech industries who are anti-science and who pretend that their approximate experimentations are precise in any serious way. Speaking from the position of power, proponents usually discount calls for reason and pleas that we have just one planet and that it is the diversity in nature that is the bedrock of resilience to variable climatic and other conditions.

The Financial Times in an editorial titled Seeds of Doubt and published on 21 July 2013 raises very deep issues. Its subtitle “Europe is right to be cautious over GM crops” captures the essence of the timely warning. The editorial informs that most GE crops are engineered to resist harmful insects or pests and to withstand glysophate, a type of herbicide. These engineering feats are expected to protect crops from target insects and to relief the farmer of the need to weed – a task that places a lot of stress on small-scale farmers. However, the application of the technology requires that farmers adopt monoculture as the norm and avoid mixed cropping and crop rotation as well.

The editorial notes the truth that critical farmers and scientists have long said, that target pests develop ways of overcoming the engineered defences while weeds have simply become super weeds, tough to hold down and tough to kill. Consequent upon these realities the biotech industry has had to continue to produce more toxic defences and chemicals in bids to overcome the resistance. Unfortunately for the industry, it has turned out that “the harder they come, the harder they fall,” as the reggae musicians sing. Those superbugs and super weeds would make even Spider Man jealous.

The FT editorial urges, “Regulators should take a broad view of the ecological change triggered when new species are released.” It adds that “Narrow fixation on the biochemical properties of a crop risks missing the wood for the trees.” The editorial concludes that if Europe has saved her environment and forgone “gains” enjoyed for some time by farmers in the USA since the 1990s “it will have been a small price to pay.”

One wonders why most African governments are not paying attention to the truth that natural resilience is the only way to secure our environment. We cannot afford to go the way of farmers who do not see their crops as food but as commodities to be processed into products for the market. This is the logic of the so-called value-added agricultural production mantra. While there is nothing wrong with value-addition, food crops need to be seen primarily as food crops to avoid needless and harmful tinkering by those who only see market shelves when they look at farms.

Coming on the same day as the FT editorial is another article, this time in the New York Times, that lays bare the tragic consequences of dependence on GE crops in a region of the USA. The article titled Our Coming Food Crisis and written by Gary Paul Nabhan, talks of the risks faced by farmers in a town in California as a metaphor for climate induced food crisis that could hit the USA and by extension impact the world through spiked food prices.

Nabhan draws attention to the higher temperatures being recorded in the area and stresses that when this persists it necessitates the use of more water for irrigation. This does not only place a demand on available surface and ground water, but also leads to higher energy need to pump the water over longer distances. Passing these costs to the consumer translates directly to increased food prices.

The writer went ahead to set out time-tested agro ecological practices that would create a climate smart situation, while at the same time helping to cool the climate, as the peasant movement La via Campesina keeps reminding us.

The steps outlined in the article include reliance on organic composting, rain water harvesting and funding to help farmers transition to perennial agriculture: “initially focussing on edible tree crops and perennial grass pastures – rather than providing more subsidies to biofuel production from annual crops. Perennial crops not only keep 7.5 to 9.4 times more carbon in the soil than annual crops, but their production also reduces the amount of fossil fuels needed to till the soil every year.”

Nabhan goes on to write on the need to secure seed diversity especially of the sort already in seed banks that are known to have drought and heat tolerance. Screening these and making sketched ones available to farmers, according to the writer, would be at a “fraction of what it costs a biotech firm to develop, patent and market a single ‘climate-friendly’ crop.”

Another critical point made in the article is that the government of the USA spends billions in crop insurance payments that could be invested in climate change adaptation. The writer notes that continued pay-outs to farmers rather than implementing a climate policy that would avoid losses means little more than subsidizing farmers for not adapting climate change.

Insurance payment for crops is not common in Africa, but it has been recently introduced in Northern Ghana where farmers risk losses due to hotter than usual seasons. It has been reported that the introduction of the payouts has given farmers more confidence in their vocation and encouraged them to increase the acreage of their farms. While this is laudable the fact still remains that creating the right policy environment for farmers to cultivate indigenous climate adapted crops is more sustainable than payouts.

The point of this article is that there is no reason to allow genetically engineered crops into farms that have not been already contaminated. This point is vital for African countries that must not allow themselves to be stampeded to toe paths that lead to questionable destinations. Genetically engineered crops are not as climate smart as native crops that have adapted to these conditions over the years.

Even the claims that Africans have nutritional deficits do not, in any way, have to translate to GE crops as solution to the problem. The enrichment of crops with higher levels of vitamins has been done through plant breeding processes of bio-fortification that is not genetic engineering. On all counts, including that of yield, the notions used to cajole political leaders to accept genetically modified crops succeed because of peculiar modification of perceptions on the basis of myths and mirages. Europe is right in rejecting GMOs. Africa cannot afford to repeat the mistakes made by those who already walked into the GMO cul-de-sac. We must not be in the business of turning our environment and peoples to laboratories and guinea pigs.

 

By Nnimmo Bassey (Director, Health of Mother Earth Foundation)

Makoko: Potable water from an unlikely source

In the course of my career as a development journalist, I have come to know some peri-urban communities in Lagos and a few other states in the country, where daunting challenges seem under-reported. Makoko, a riverside community located in the old Yaba area on the Lagos Mainland, was once again my destination in the desire to unravel how communities surrounded by water can get one fit to drink as well as for household use.

Makoko 2A community leader, Alhaji Ibrahim Aladetan, discloses: “For those living between the land and the waterfront area of Makoko, the water they get from a borehole is not clean enough for consumption.” The water, he explains, is polluted, has a taste and can only be used for washing and other domestic chores but not good for drinking.

“There is water close to Adekunle (a neighbouring community) but it is not easy channelling and laying pipes to bring it down to our community. Here, we buy drinking water from water retailers who come with water tankers, or we buy sachet water to drink,” he adds.

There are three different categories of settlers in Makoko: those on dry land, those who live between the land and the Lagoon, and settlers who live on the Lagoon.

Surprisingly, it is those living on the polluted Lagoon that get potable water. A community leader attributes this to the concerted business efforts of residents, saying that they found a way out by drilling boreholes on the Lagoon. He took me round to see this ingenious act. It was impossible for me to count the number of boreholes with clean drinking water on the Lagoon but the Baale told me that there are about 30.

“We have enough water in the waterfront area and people come from other riverside communities in Takwabay, Apapa and Amuwo-Odofin to buy water from us. The borehole that we drilled in the river is very clean and water is not a problem for us here,” he says.

Another resourceful venture by the members of the community is the networking of pipes inside the Lagoon to distribute water to numerous tankers where neighbours come to purchase the clean, drinkable water pumped from boreholes drilled in the middle of the Lagoon.

A resident on Makoko dry land, Mr. Bawo Aye, discloses that government officials once came to collected water samples but never returned with the results of the test. “Even though they didn’t return to tell us their finding, those of us living in this area know that our water is polluted and we don’t drink it. It has taste and odour; that is not good quality water. We depend on water tankers that sell to us and that is what we drink. But it is sad that we are surrounded by water and still can’t find clean water to drink,” he stresses.

 

By Tina Armstrong-Ogbonna

Lagos warns on new deadly virus, ‘Coronavirus’

0

The Lagos State Government of Nigeria has alerted resident to the existence of a new virus in the world known as Coronavirus, which has claimed many lives in areas it has so far been reported.

Babatunde Fashola, Lagos State Governor
Babatunde Fashola, Lagos State Governor

The state government thus called for the observance of a high standard of personal and environmental hygiene in order to reduce the risk of infection as there is no specific treatment for illnesses caused by Coronavirus.

State Commissioner for Health, Dr. Jide Idris, who gave the warning in Lagos, noted that the ways Coronavirus is spread have not been extensively studied but confirmed that it could be transmitted easily from one person to another through coughing and sneezing, close contact such as touching or shaking the hands of an infected person and touching one’s mouth, nose or eyes after touching contaminated objects or surfaces.

Idris explained that human Coronavirus usually causes mild to moderate upper respiratory tract illnesses and can progress to severe respiratory illness and pneumonia, particularly in the aged, young and already ill people, adding that its symptoms include running nose, sore throat, shortness of breath and fever.

He urged residents to suspect Coronavirus in people that develop acute respiratory illnesses with a history of recent travel to areas where the virus has been reported and not responding to appropriate treatment for the listed complaints or a close contact of a symptomatic traveller to areas where the virus has been reported.

He said: “There is no specific treatment for illnesses caused by Coronavirus. Most people with Coronavirus will recover on their own and they may require supportive treatment, which includes staying at home, resting and drinking a lot of fluids. However those that progressed to severe distress will need to be admitted into the hospital for specialised care.”

The commissioner noted that the risk of infection of the virus can be reduced if people observe a high standard of personal and environmental hygiene by often washing the hands with soap and water; not touching the eyes, nose or mouth frequently; avoiding close contact with people who are sick; ensuring that objects used by the sick are sterilised; and avoiding being in an overcrowded place.

Idris therefore enjoined travellers on holy pilgrimage, particularly to Makkah, to get vaccination against meningitis, yellow fever and flu, while adhering to the precautions earlier mentioned.

He said that pregnant women, the very young, the elderly and the very sick who intend to go on pilgrimage should postpone such a trip.

“You can help protect others by staying at home while you are sick, avoiding close contact with others, covering your mouth and nose when you cough or sneeze, keeping objects and surfaces clean and disinfected,” he admonished.

The commissioner advised health workers to be alert, wear personal protective equipment, observe universal basic precaution when attending to suspected or confirmed cases and report same to any local government or council development area nearest to them or the state Ministry of Health.

UN prepares Structure Plans for nine Osun cities

Diverse stakeholder groups  including community associations, trade groups and government officials last week began the validation of Urban Profiles prepared in nine cities in the State of Osun, under a N100 million Structure Plans Project funded by the state government in partnership with the United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-Habitat).

Ilesha, Osun State, Nigeria
Ilesha, Osun State, Nigeria

The Osun Structure Plans Project, which kicked off in July last year, seeks to develop and adopt Structure Plans that will guide the growth, development and management of the participating cities over the next 20 years.

The participating cities, grouped into three clusters of three cities each, are: Osogbo, Ikirun, Ila Orangun (Cluster 1), Ilesha, Ile Ife, Ede (Cluster 2) and Iwo, Ejgbo and Ikire (Cluster 3).

Structure Plans are planning instruments that will guiding the growth of these towns for the next 20 years and specifically make significant contributions towards achieving the goals of the State’s six-point Integral Action Plan, the various Local Economic Empowerment and Development Strategies (LEEDS), the HABITAT Agenda and the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

The project involves use of the Rapid Urban Sector Profiling for Sustainability (RUSPS) methodology, which establishes a sustainable, participatory, long-term framework for the orderly physical, economic and social development of the city.

The RUSPS methodology, which is based on ‘Guidelines for Sustainable Urban Development’ designed by the European Commission and UN-Habitat, seeks to reduce urban poverty through policy development and assessment of needs and responses for urban institutions.

“One of the major challenges facing urban centres is a lack of information and accurate statistics that could be used when planning development. This is one of the issues we want to address. The successful implementation of the process would help town planners prioritize their needs and put their resources into the places they ought to be,” said Dr. Alioune Badiane, Director, Projects Office, at the signing of the Memorandum of Agreement in Osogbo.

In all, 13 consultants, comprising specialists in Urban Planning and Local Economic Development; Urban Environment and Infrastructure; Governance, Gender and Anthropology, as well as Urban Services and Transportations were commissioned to work on the project under the coordination of a Chief Technical Adviser.

According to the State Commissioner for Lands, Physical Planning and Urban Development, Muyiwa Ige, the Structure Plans Project is a follow-up to an Urban Renewal Scheme involving the upgrading of a two-kilometre radius from the city centre in each of the nine cities.

“We are determined to transform our cities into functional settlements that will match our expectations as a state of excellence,” Ige said.

The City Consultations began last Tuesday, July 9 at Ilesa, followed by Ile Ife (July 10) and Ede on July 11. Others follow at Iwo (July 15), Ejigbo (July 16) and Ikire (July 17), while consultations for the final cluster will hold at hold at Ikirun (July 22), Ila (July 23) and Osogbo (July 24).

The UN-Habitat Programme Manager for Nigeria, Mallam Kabir Yari, stressing the importance of the scheme, noted: “For planning to flourish and more importantly stem the growing slum formation and poverty, there is a need for a more fundamental rethinking of city planning and development approaches and actions to make them inclusive, participatory and one to be undertaken at the local level.”

The Structure Plans project comprises three phases, namely: Phase 1 – a rapid appraisal of current issues and policies to identify strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats to policy on slums and shelter, governance, gender and HIV/AIDS and the urban environment; Phase 2 – building on priorities determined in the previous phase to develop and expand capacity for national and local institutions to improve their performance in the urban sector; and, Phase 3 – implementation of programmes and projects identified in earlier phases.

The project is scheduled for completion before the end of this year.

Secret of healthy living at Makoko

0

One thing I have noticed during my visits to Makoko in Lagos is that the people are ever smiling, lively and vibrant; and they look well fed.

MakokoMakpI also noticed that they look younger than their age. Alhaji Ibrahim Aladetan, a leader in the waterside community, is 80 years old but you would take him for someone in his 50s. A picture on the wall of his living room shocked me upon my learning that the great-grand pa celebrated his 80th birthday in April.

When I asked if indeed he was 80, he smiled and said: “Yes, my daughter. I have celebrated 80 but I still have many more years to go.”

I wanted to know the secret of his long life and healthy look. He put it back to me this way: “Don’t you know we are surrounded by sea food? There is a lot of fresh fish in the Makoko water. Our fish market draws people from as far as Ondo, Edo and even Delta State. I eat a lot of sea food and that has helped and is still helping my health. My dear, sea food is good for you.”

Another resident, Mr. Bawo Ayeoshetienikan, a town planner by training but now a private school owner is 59 years old. You would take him for someone in his early 40s. He too attests to the fact that eating fresh fish and the peaceful existence in the Makoko community is healthy.

“The lifestyle here is simple and far away from the hustle and bustle of the main Lagos city. We are surrounded by nature; and nature is taking care of us as we are also taking care of nature,” he says.

I took a canoe ride round the waterfront, and met a group of women selling sea food. My desire was to get more facts about the unique environment of the Makoko riverside which appears to a tonic for looking good and young. I engaged a woman in banter. But she was unperturbed over ordinary issues of life that would have made the average Lagos city dweller disturbed.

“We eat good food and have peace of mind here,” contributes an elderly one among them. “All these fish, crabs, crayfish and other sea food we catch from the water makeup what we feed our family with. There is always enough fish for everyone to eat in my family. Fish is good for the body.”

Majority of the people in Makoko  are into fishing. The children start fishing from an early age as they join their parents on long fishing trips in the canoe. It is common site in the waterfront to see children from age five, fishing with their nets. While one paddles the canoe, the other throws the net in anticipation of a catch.

I didn’t leave Makoko without my own share of the look-good secret. I bought a big basket full of assorted fresh fish.

To the Lagos State Government, Makoko may be a slum. But the resolve of these awesome dwellers to live a healthy, law abiding and economically-productive communal life is an example I believe other perceived slum dwellers in the Lagos metropolis should emulate.

 

By Tina Armstrong-Ogbonna

Controversy trails fortified cassava project

Vitamin A is known to be essential for good vision, proper development of embryos, healthy skin and mucous membranes. It helps cells reproduce normally, plays a role in immune system function, growth, bone formation, reproduction and wound healing. It then follows that Vitamin A Deficiency (VAD), considered a public health problem especially in Africa and South-East Asia, will lead to high risk of disease and death in children and pregnant women.

cassavaReports say that about 250,000 to 500,000 malnourished children in the developing world go blind each year from VAD, with about half of them dying within a year of becoming blind.

VAD was supposed to have been eliminated since 2010 in Nigeria, going by the 2002 UN Special Session on Children. But, with the efforts of a team of researchers led by the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) in developing vitamin A-fortified cassava, the nation is hopeful of meeting the target soon. The researchers said the cassava could help put an end to malnutrition due to vitamin A deficiency.

Mr. Adetoro Adeniyi of Cassava Breeding Unit, IITA in Ibadan, Oyo State, discloses that the team was motivated to search for ways of improving the nutritional value of cassava, believed to be the fourth largest staple after wheat, maize, and rice with an average consumption of 600 grams per capita per day in Nigeria, and having over 200 million people in sub-Saharan Africa relying on it.

“When we realised that most people around South West Nigeria in particular always complained of eye problems as a result of consuming white garri made from cassava, we decided to think of how to improve the nutritional value of cassava. In the South West, if someone has eye problem, they say maybe he is consuming too much of garri. We then thought of what we could do to solve this problem of people developing eye problems as a result of consuming white garri.”

But the Environmental Rights Action/Friends of the Earth Nigeria (ERA/FoEN) has called on the Federal Government to stop the IITA and other groups it claims is fronting for big agribusinesses and biotechnology companies from “tampering” with the nation’s cassava.

The ERA/FoEN made the call on the heels of disclosures by Harvest Plus, an organisation it alleges has strong links with the IITA, that it had started the distribution of 10 million vitamin A cassava stems imported from Brazil to 15 million farmers across Nigeria.

Country Director of the Ibadan-based Harvest Plus, Dr. Paul Ilona, while delivering lorry loads of the cassava specie to farmers in Ihiala Local Government Council Area of Anambra State, reportedly said that Anambra is one of the pilot states that would receive at least three million cassava stems, which will be distributed to farmers in all the local councils in the 2013 planting season.

Ilona had reportedly revealed that the vitamin “A” cassava species originated from Brazil with 10 million tons of the cassava stems planned for distribution in six selected states in the six geographical zones of Nigeria between now and October.

The ERA/FoEN has, however, described the development as “completely absurd”, saying the distribution of the “so-called” Vitamin A cassava imported from Brazil violated the rights of Nigerian farmers and the Nigerian citizenry to choice of what to grow or eat.

“This development is a rude shock. It is an affront that IITA and its front groups are all masquerading on behalf of big agribusinesses and the biotechnology industry to supplant local staples in favour of foreign ones in the name of enriched vitamins. Tampering with cassava which we have self-sufficiency in producing is the height of attempts by IITA and its allies to colonise what we grow and eat in the guise of enriched food vitamin that merely promotes food dependency,” the ERA/FoEN Executive Director, Godwin Ojo, was quoted as saying.

“Nigerians will want to know which government agency gave the permission for the importation and distribution of the Vitamin A cassava. This slap on the face of Nigerians is a grand illusion and a replay of the Golden Rice hoax of 1999 which was offered by the biotech industry as the remedy for Vitamin A deficiency (VAD). That product turned out to be a comic contraption as it was discovered that the average adult would need to eat up to 9 kg of the Golden Rice a day for the required intake of vitamin A which mere two carrots can provide. Sadly, here we go again,” Ojo added.

He alleged that the distribution of the Vitamin A cassava without popular consent has reinforced the ERA/FoEN demand that Nigeria’s biosafety laws are weak and must be opened up for debate with critical stakeholders such as farmers, representatives from non-governmental organisations and consumers, making an input.

“Nigeria is already the highest producer of cassava. Allowing the IITA to tamper with the crop is the surest way of ceding our food sovereignty to multinational companies whose modus operandi is to maintain a vice-like grip on our farmers strictly for profits and controlling what we eat. The government must compel Harvest Plus to recall distributed so-called vitamin A cassava stems and halt further distribution. Anything short of this is unacceptable,” Ojo stated.

Sao Paulo, Lagos host memorable Flag It! forums

The European Youth Press (EYP) in collaboration with partner organisations from Nigeria, Brazil, Romania, Latvia and The Philippines, has so far held two training sessions for young African, European, Asian and Latin American journalists under its “Flag It!” project. The programme aims at teaching the media executives how to use and apply data to report environmental issues.

Lupi
Lupi

The flagship Flag It! held in Sao Paulo, Brazil in May and the second featured in the first week of July in the Nigerian commercial capital city of Lagos. The EYP held the Nigerian Flag It! workshop in collaboration with the Nigerian Association of Science Journalists (NASJ), as well as the Development Communications Network (DevComs), which played a key role in the logistics.

Youthful journalists from Nigeria, Brazil, Germany, The Philippines, Romania, Latvia and Portugal have so far benefited from the programme, which trained them on the use of digital tools and applications like Google earth and map, every trail, and crowd sourcing.

There was a time when access to information was more for the elite. The social media has changed all that today, as news can now spread fast and to all classes of people, with follow-ups done in real time. Digital tools have also helped journalists to better play their role as watchdogs of the society.

In Brazil for instance, it is assisting NGOs to track and monitor illegal activities in the Amazon region, such as bush burning and timber logging that cause deforestation.

According to the Flag It! Project Manager, Alessio Lupi, training journalists on digital tools for environment reporting will make journalists better equipped on how to make great stories from data collected in the course of their work.

Alessio added that funding for the project came from the European Union, which is interested in empowering young journalists and also encouraging social integration among them.

Project trainer, Gustavo Faleiros, a Knight Science Journalist Fellow of the International Centre for Journalists (ICJ), said data gathering and digital tools can help a journalist’s story be more creative and easy to interpret. He added that data journalism helps to authenticate stories and is the next phase of innovative journalism.

He identified Phillip Meyer as the first to call journalists “data organisers” in 1967 and pointed out that a time would come when journalists would be data banks of information. Gustavo explained that, through digital tools like Google earth, crowd map, Google fusion and every trail, journalists can get materials that will make their stories more credible.

DevComs director, Akin Jimoh, stated: “Flag It! provides an opportunity to be more sophisticated in the ways we journalists impact on development and addressing key governance issues that are visible and helps accountability in governance.  With the tools and skills learnt, an average journalist can tell histories in a way that is more easily understandable by his/her readers or audiences.

“A story on health care on scientific development can be accompanied by visual entities that provides more perspectives to the audience or reader rather than using the pictures of ministers or commissioners. We can apply these lessons in reporting a number of other issues like the controversial issue of budgeting, constitutional review, and maternal mortality among others.  We should be able to pinpoint  legislators pattern of voting with maps of where they come from and their position on national issues.”

In Sao Paulo, Flag It! participants visited NGOs like ISA:Instituto Socioambiantal (that works with the indigenous people of Brazil to monitor deforestation and other illegal environmental activities), SOS and the Ibirapuera park.

In Lagos, participants visited the Lekki Conservation Centre (LCC), head offices of the Nigeria Conservation Foundation (NCF), and Alpha Beach community, both on the Lekki Peninsula. At the LCC, the participants went on a nature trail around the 78 hectares of pristine natural forest on a wetland that serves to preserve endangered flora and fauna. In the course of the trail, Faleiros urged them to use one of the data applications to map their activities and location.

When the participants visited the once-thriving Alpha Beach community that used to be a destination for tourists and fun seekers, the traditional leader of the community, Alhaji Atewolara Elegushi, gave them an insight into how the community has continued to face increasing levels of coastal erosion and ocean surge. According to him, in the last three years, the community has lost about 20km of land to the Atlantic Ocean as it continues to erode land and move towards the community. The only health centre in the community has since been abandoned as health workers fear for their lives, believing the ocean will one day wash away the building.

The next Flag It! training are scheduled to hold in Romania and The Philippines. According to the EYP, two the best reporting journalists using digital tools will receive an all-expenses paid trip to Warsaw, Poland to attend the United Nations Climate Change Conference in November.

 

By Tina Armstrong-Ogbonna

REDD+: Nigeria to complete Readiness Preparation Proposal (R-PP)

0

For three days beginning from Monday July 22, 2013, stakeholders involved in the Nigerian REDD+ Readiness project will gather for a crucial meeting in Abuja, the Federal Capital City, to tidy up the scheme’s Readiness Preparation Proposal (R-PP).

Josep Gari of the UNDP (left) with Salisu Dahiru during a REDD+ meeting in Calabar, Cross River State
Josep Gari of the UNDP (left) with Salisu Dahiru during a REDD+ meeting in Calabar, Cross River State

The R-PP should be ready in time for submission on or before July 31, 2013 if the country hopes to secure an engagement with the Forest Carbon Partnership Facility (FCPF) and access a grant of up to $3.6 million.

REDD+ implies Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation plus conservation, sustainable management of forests and enhancement of forest carbon stocks. Just like the UN-REDD (United Nations Collaborative Programme on Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation in Developing Countries), the FCPF is a window to finance the REDD+ programme. The UN-REDD is a collaboration involving the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations (FAO).

A couple of years ago, Nigeria accessed a $4 million grant from the UN-REDD, giving birth to the nation’s first REDD+ Readiness Programme that is being implemented within a three-year span (commencing from late 2012), allowing Nigeria to craft the REDD+ mechanism through an innovative, two-track approach consisting of actions at both federal and state levels.

At the federal level, the programme will create basic technical capacities, develop strategic and policy frameworks for REDD+, and support the alignment of the country with international climate change and environmental negotiations and agreements. At the state level, the programme will conduct strategy-development and demonstration activities on REDD+ in Cross River State, which has shown a determined political commitment for green development as well as being home to more than 50 percent of the tropical high forest remaining in the country. The best practice and lessons learned in Cross River will be used to roll out REDD+ in other states across Nigeria.

However, the immediate task now is to get the R-PP finalised to meet next week’s deadline. Coordinator of the Nigerian REDD+ Programme, Salisu Dahiru, explains why the nation is seeking the FCPF financing.

His words: “In view of the scale of Nigeria and the complexity of developing a REDD+ system for the entire country, which has a federal structure with 36 states, the UN-REDD support needs to be coupled with additional financial and technical assistance, notably to reinforce the federal-level REDD+ capacities and to expand REDD+ to new states (using the best practice, models, policies and measures that Cross River State will develop and test). Nigeria is a member of the FCPF and FCPF co-financing seems necessary for the country to further its REDD+ process.

“Nigeria is accordingly preparing a new proposal for REDD+ readiness, on the basis of the analytical and planning efforts conducted so far, in order to mobilise concrete FCPF support. The FCPF requires new proposals to be submitted by 31st July 2013 (which is the last deadline for new countries). The potential FCPF support would serve to strengthening and completing REDD+ readiness at the federal level, as well as to engage at least two additional states into the REDD+ mechanism, using best practice and lessons from Cross River State.

“The basis for this R-PP proposal already exists, notably thanks to analytical work at the ‘Preliminary Assessment of the context for REDD+ in Nigeria’ (2010) and the planning and design work done for the UN-REDD National Programme for Nigeria (2012) – the latter actually constitutes a first, ad hoc version an R-PP. Furthermore, a first R-PP draft is being developed by the country.

“Currently the draft R-PP for Nigeria is under preparation by Nigeria with the support of the UNDP/REDD+ Africa team (based in Nairobi). However, on key matters, political decision will be made at this gathering.”

The forum will also discuss a work-plan for continuing the drafting and consultation of the Nigerian R-PP in the coming months, long after the first submission on 31st July.

Pandemonium as windstorm leaves Ekuri forest in ruin

0

Residents of Ekuri Community in Akamkpa Local Government Area in Cross River State in Nigeria are grief-stricken. Reason: Penultimate Saturday, they lost about 10 square kilometers of biologically diverse forest when a windstorm hit the neighbourhood, destroying a considerable part of the famous community forest on the northerly axis contiguous with the Ukpon Forest Reserve.

Eyewitnesses say the storm left few trees standing as emergent and under-storey vines, rattans, bush mango, fruit trees and afang, among others, are left in ruins, “creating an open space of unimaginable distance except the hindrance of hills.”

The Ekuri Forest is believed to be the largest and best communally-managed forest in Nigeria.

Recounting the loss, the Village Head of New Ekuri, Chief Abel Egbe, laments: “The storm is the first of its kind in the history of Ekuri community. The destruction of this forest is unquantifiable, considering the economic, social, environmental, cultural and spiritual values of the affected area and is not a colossal loss to Ekuri people alone, but neighboring communities, Cross River State, Nigeria and the global community.”

Expressing gratitude to the Almighty the no lives were lost as no villager was in the forest when the storm struck as, according to him, gatherers of bush mango and other non-wood products had returned to the village the previous day to sell products after four nights in the forest.

Madam Margaret Ogar, one of the oldest women in Ekuri, wept inconsolably, lamenting the loss of the bush mango trees which the community members, particularly the women, are depended on for seasonal incomes that flows steadily into the pockets of individual households, contributing to improved livelihoods and poverty alleviation.

She says: “The affected area has the highest concentration of bush mango trees, achi seed trees and rattans that have sustained our livelihoods and their destruction is a calamity, an open invitation to poverty and weakening of social cohesion that knit the community together. What a devastating news I will bring to our ancestors when I pass away that their contributions in the conservation of our forest using indigenous knowledge and passed onto us  is no more!

“We are finished as our inheritance, culture, lifestyles, medicinal plants, fresh water, array of vegetables and fruits that have naturally made us healthy are destroyed.”

She adds that her children, grand and great grand children will suffer severely as it will take another 50 or more years for the affected forest to regenerate naturally before acquisition of capacity in the provision of goods and services.

Another community member, Chief Raphael Akamo, notes that the destruction of the forest habitat has apparently killed many animals including the endangered species, forcing the survivors to migrate to other forests. He said that buffalo inhabits this area and their forced migration to other forests is “a big blow to Ekuri community” as the area is already set aside for eco-tourism as in the land use plan of Ekuri community forest.

A retired headmaster, Innocent Agbor, submits: “The conservation of Ekuri forest by the Ekuri Initiative has enhanced generation of incomes from avalanche of non-timber forest products harvested by students during holidays to support their education. Now that the source of income generation is destroyed, then education will suffer, illiteracy, unemployment and poverty will increase in Ekuri community.”

A youth leader, Bernard Ogar: “Experience has shown that youth restiveness in other communities is largely attributed to unemployment and poverty. The effects of the destroyed forests will aggravate poverty for years; turn the tide against social cohesion in place of anti-social vices and the existing togetherness in Ekuri community is seriously threatened.”

One of the oldest men in the land, Pa Akwa Ambo: “We know that when you open the forest uncontrollably, you expose yourself to unnatural storm, hence one of the reasons for our community’s efforts and commitments to conserve our forest.  But for centuries, we have kept our forest relatively intact, then why the unnatural windstorm? The things we hear that happens in faraway places are here with us today and I am afraid of what the world will become tomorrow when communities that have conserved their environment suffer same like those that have destroyed theirs.”

Village Head of Old Ekuri, Chief Stephen Oji: “The expected revenues from the payment for ecosystems services from Ekuri Community forest under the Reducing Emission from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD+) is eroded as the amount of metric tons of carbon in destroyed trees and other ecosystem services – biodiversity, water, landscape – cannot be accounted for to warrant payments later when the programme kicks off fully. I praise our distinctive efforts and commitments to conserve our forest but see how the best we have done is lost in a twinkle of an eye!”

Head (Technical), Ekuri Initiative, Edwin Ogar: “The Ekuri community calls on government of Cross River State, Federal Government of Nigeria, NGOs, international development agencies, corporate bodies and individuals to come to her aid to alleviate the long sufferings and hardships the people will face for years due to loss of livelihood sources as a result of this environmental disaster. This clarion call for supports is to stabilise the hardships, take off further pressures and boost conservation of remaining forest and regeneration so that the REDD+ earmarked for the Ekuri community is realised.”

The vanishing legacies of Okoroba

One would be more saddened by the faster decline of the environment and usual attractions of the neighbourhood of Okoroba, in Nembe Local Government Area of Bayelsa State. Indeed, the reduction of the countryside would bring one to the similar mood of ‘The Sea Eats Our Land’, a timeless poem by ‘Kwesi Brew’. While the Brew’s dirge (a poem mourning the dead) laments the ‘death’ of Keita island, a village in his native Ghana, by the natural agents of a free sea-tide erosion, the unhappy situation of the Okoroba neighbourhood, is the steady destruction of its God-given environment, through unending oil pollutions, deforestation and acute poverty of its inhabitants, mainly by decades of oil exploration.

Okoroba

However, despite the reduction of its environment, the neighbourhood, particularly Okoroba town, has often been described by tourists as ‘serene destination’; ‘a tourist delight’; ‘a pearl in the creeks’; for its natural attractions. Okoroba town lies on Latitude 4.6, Longitude 6.4 and 9 metres above the sea level.

The ‘nature imbalance’ of the Okoroba habitat and the need to reverse it, has always been a nagging issue, especially in the echoing days of the early 1990s, when Ken Saro-Wiwa, the martyr environmentalist and social crusader, led few of his associates like Ledum Mittee, Oronto Douglas and Nnimmo Bassey etc., in a concerted effort to reduce the habitat destruction, and the poverty that became the unfortunate inheritance, not only of his (Saro-Wiwa) native people of Ogoni, but by the entire Niger Delta region.

Presently, the ‘Ogbia land’, as Okoroba and the adjoining communities are also called, has turned an environment and a living much more devastated than the horrible descriptions once carried by the late Saro- Wiwa, and his companions to the word view.

When undertaking the boat journeys to Ogbia land, either from the over three hours distance from Brass, in Rivers State, and the opposite two hours direction from Ogbia town, in Bayelsa the destruction of the habitation is always obvious.

Like the ornithologists (birdwatchers or bird lovers) would say, ‘Usually, Birds are the first pointer to a healthy or diminishing environment’.  And that the regular presence of Birds, in flocks and or in isolations, would portray a balanced habitat, while their shortfall or non-presence signifies the opposite.

Whatever happened to the lively flocks of the waver birds and the hornbills; the leggy storks and the migratory swallows; the kingfishers and others that used to slap the flowing rivers and search for prawns as food?

Where were the numerous troops of monkey that used to leap about its mangroves, which brought to the area; some useful studies like that of the West Africa Primate Group, guided by renowned primatologists (scientists of the study of monkeys) like Prof John Oates and Katty Gonda, with the drive to save the various species of the Okoroba Community Forest land for future generations?

Obviously in pains, George Ediegberi remarked that the usual oil spills have seriously damaged the once abundant natural fish stock and farmlands, which are the primary sources of livelihood to inhabitants of the area.  Ediegberi, a genetic expert from Nembe, also harped on his fears; ‘’If the plundering of our environment and livelihood goes unchecked, and part of the oil proceeds is not immediately invested in the very land that produces it, all the other oil producing communities in the area would have been doomed like Oloibiri.’’

On about midway distance between Ogbia and Nembe, is located Oloibiri town, bearer of the first oil well in the country. ‘’Today, Oloibiri is a disserted town, which, in spite of its huge oil wealth, has no presence of social amenities to show for it. Unfortunately, Oloibiri is now a mockery symbol of the neglect of oil-bearing communities of the Niger Delta region,” Ediegberi regretted.

Usually, in the area there is a very strong presence of oil spills, which the various respondents identified as the major cause of the losses.  All over the smell of oil infiltrates the air and could make one to suffocate out.  The top water of the main Ogbia River and its network of creeks were laced with oil paraffin, while the sideways and its plants were lined with thick layers of dark oil greases. Perhaps, it has not been cleared for a long time, and capable of causing great losses to livelihood and ‘biodiversity’ (a wide variety of plant and animal species living in their natural environment).

‘’The oil spills have not been cleaned or mopped for years, even though they occur now and then. The multinational oil companies, instead of cleaning off the spills, allowed them to gather and cause more harm. When attempts were seldom made by the oil firms to clear the mess, some unguided youths of the area would disrupt the process. In most cases it is the same oil firms that mastermind the restive youths to carry out the disorderly acts, as they hide under the guise, because they want to avoid paying the cost of cleaning up’’.  Lamented Stanley Amoda, from Nembe town.

In April, 2011 the frequent oil spills in the area, was said to again reach a highpoint, when the Environmental Rights Action (ERA) a frontline national NGO, received an SOS of a fresh oil spill and fire which ravaged the Okoroba community, with large farmlands and water-life loss along the Agip/Brass pipeline.

‘’When the spill took place in 2011 in our community, it disrupted our livelihood just as it disenfranchised us from casting our votes in the general election, which took place the same time all over the country. Since then, not much has been heard about clearing the oil toxic to bring back our farmlands and fish ponds. Either, no compensation was paid for the huge losses incurred’’; Madam Asokari, a peasant from Okoroba lamented, as she asked somewhat helplessly; ‘’Now, what legacies do we leave for our children?

The oil facilities in the community are said to be owned by two giant-oil multinationals; Shell Petroleum Development Company and the Nigerian Agip Oil Company, operating in the area.

From afar and near oil facilities in Ogbia land, like other oil bearing communities of the Niger Delta, gas flaring, the persistent menace, rule the airspaces.  It produces numerous dark burns spoiling the cloudless skyline in daylight, and the various tongues of flame that replace electricity at night. Known as a major cause of ‘global warming and climate change’, the uneasy heat from the burning furnaces, alone reduces the cooling effects which the body of water and vegetation will ordinarily give.

Unhappily, Agodi said again; ‘’In the Niger Delta region, one of the few and worst cases of gas flaring in the world, multinational oil companies and their agents still play the delay game with the deadly flare and its end date, whereas it has been banned, around the globe’’.

The fast and awkward logging taking place in the once normal Community Forests of Okoroba, in the former Edoma National Forest reserve, could be apparent from the frequent heaps of logs and sawn wood, found along the boat routes, waiting to be ferried away. The original ecosystem of the Ogbia zone, once came into limelight, as it was gazetted by Rebecca Kormos, as part of a global Conservation Action Plan, by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) and other conservation bodies. The Community Forests of Okoroba is enclosed in the vast Niger Delta mangrove, known as one of the world largest and richest in biodiversity composition.

One would have been afraid that ‘Angala’, could go out of existence like some of the key trees of the mangrove that are daily threatened.  Although she faces harmful threats by the continuous oil spills, which hangs on to its base, making her to shed the leaves, it large population, however, makes brighter her chances of surviving the menace.   The biological name of ‘Angala’ cannot be now recalled, but it is an Ijaw name for the visible mangrove tree which has many roots above the ground, like the human walking stilts. Because of its adorable and passionate name that sounds like ‘Angela’, the common name of a girl, ‘Angala’, the common mangrove tree of high medicinal and economic importance, was preferably picked as a flagship name for the now-rested environmental magazine, jointly published by Pro-Natura International and the Nigerian Conservation Foundation (NCF).

‘Angala’, a cartoon magazine, which increased conservation awareness in Nigerian schools, was anchored by Ronnie Siakor, a Liberian-American illustrator, Nick Ashton-Jones and Sir Phillip Hall (notable British conservationists), Oronto Douglas and this writer.

Commenting on the way out of the fast decline of the environment and its adverse effects on the unlucky Niger Delta people, Mr Ossain Azibalua, a national youth leader, called on the indigenes ‘’to always apply non-violence and the rule of constructive engagement, instead of the violent approach’’. This, he said, ‘’is the style of some of our leaders of note, like the late Saro-Wiwa and Oronto Douglas’’.

 

By Tony Erha 

×