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Kunle Odusola-Stevenson: Middle East turmoil brings Nigeria an oil windfall – and a choice

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In global energy markets, geopolitics has a habit of repeating old lessons.

The latest crisis in the Middle East – triggered by U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran in late February, has again exposed the fragility of the world’s oil supply chain. Iranian retaliation has effectively choked traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow maritime corridor through which roughly a fifth of global oil and liquefied natural gas passes.

Within days, tanker movements slowed sharply and markets responded with predictable speed. Brent crude climbed above $84 per barrel, its sharpest weekly gain in decades, while analysts began openly discussing the possibility of triple-digit oil prices if disruptions persist.

Kunle Odusola-Stevenson
Kunle Odusola-Stevenson

For most oil-importing economies, such volatility is unwelcome news. For Nigeria, Africa’s largest crude producer, it represents something more complicated: the prospect of another sudden windfall.

Nigeria has been here before. The last time global conflict triggered such a surge in oil revenues, the outcome was not encouraging.

In 1990, Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait removed roughly 4.5 million barrels per day from world supply. Prices surged from about $17 to nearly $46 per barrel. Nigeria, producing close to 1.8 million barrels per day at the time, benefited from what economists later estimated as more than $12bn in unexpected revenue.

What became of that windfall has since entered the country’s political folklore.

An inquiry led by economist Pius Okigbo later reported that $12.4bn had flowed into opaque “dedicated accounts” outside normal budgetary oversight during the military government of General Ibrahim Babangida. By the time the panel concluded its investigation in the mid-1990s, most of the funds had disappeared.

The episode was more than a financial scandal. It symbolised a missed opportunity at a moment when Nigeria could have strengthened its economic foundations. The funds were meant to support strategic projects, including defence spending and the long-delayed Ajaokuta steel complex. Instead, the country emerged from the oil boom with little to show for it.

Three decades later, Nigeria finds itself confronting a similar moment, though under different economic circumstances.

The federal budget for 2026 assumes an oil price of roughly $65 per barrel and production of 1.84 million barrels per day. In practice, output has struggled to reach those levels. Production currently fluctuates between 1.46 and 1.58 million barrels daily, constrained by pipeline vandalism, operational disruptions and persistent oil theft in the Niger Delta.

Industry estimates suggest that as much as 400,000 barrels per day are lost to theft and sabotage, the revenue that would otherwise flow into government coffers.

Even so, the current price surge offers a potential fiscal reprieve.

If Brent prices remain near $80–$90 per barrel over the coming months and Nigeria manages to lift output modestly, and supported by deepwater developments such as the Egina field, the country could realise an additional $10–15bn in revenue over the next year.

For an economy navigating currency volatility, high debt service and stubborn inflation, such an inflow would be significant. It could strengthen foreign reserves, ease pressure on the naira and create room for targeted investment.

Yet windfalls rarely arrive without complications.

Higher oil prices also feed into domestic inflation through transport costs and imported fuel. Petrol prices, already elevated after the removal of subsidies, could rise further, placing additional strain on households.

The broader question therefore is not whether Nigeria will benefit from higher oil prices, but whether it will manage the proceeds differently this time.

Other resource dependent economies offer useful lessons.

Norway remains the benchmark. Since the 1990s it has channelled most petroleum revenues into the Government Pension Fund Global, now valued at more than $2tn. The fund invests internationally, shielding the domestic economy from commodity volatility while preserving wealth for future generations.

Chile provides another example. Through its Economic and Social Stabilisation Fund, built largely from copper revenues, the country has established clear fiscal rules that save excess earnings during boom periods and deploy them during downturns.

These models are not easily replicated, but their underlying principle is simple: commodity windfalls require institutional discipline.

Nigeria already possesses some of the necessary structures. The Nigeria Sovereign Investment Authority and the Excess Crude Account were both designed to manage surplus oil revenues. In practice, however, political pressures have often undermined their effectiveness.

A credible approach to the current windfall could follow several straightforward priorities.

First, a significant share of excess revenue should be channelled automatically into long-term savings through the sovereign wealth framework. This would help stabilise government finances and reassure investors concerned about fiscal volatility.

Second, part of the proceeds should address Nigeria’s rising debt burden. Public debt now exceeds $100bn, while debt servicing absorbs a large portion of federal revenues. Reducing foreign currency liabilities would lower financing costs and improve fiscal sustainability.

Third, the government could use the opportunity to accelerate investments that reduce structural dependence on imported fuel. Despite its status as a major crude producer, Nigeria has historically relied heavily on imported refined products. Strengthening domestic refining capacity and gas infrastructure would ease pressure on foreign exchange reserves and improve energy security.

Finally, transparency will be critical. Clear reporting on how windfall revenues are allocated and credible oversight of the process, would strengthen public trust and enhance Nigeria’s reputation among international investors increasingly attentive to governance standards.

None of these steps require radical policy innovation. What they demand is consistency.

The global context makes the stakes higher than they were in the early 1990s. Energy markets are evolving rapidly as the transition to cleaner fuels gathers pace, while geopolitical tensions continue to reshape trade flows and supply chains.

For Nigeria, the present moment may therefore represent not only a temporary fiscal boost but also one of the last major windfalls of the traditional oil era.

Thirty-five years ago, a similar opportunity slipped away.

Today, with oil prices rising again and global attention focused on energy security, Nigeria has a chance to demonstrate that it has learned from the past.

Whether it does so will matter not only to Nigerians, but also to the investors and policymakers around the world watching how Africa’s largest economy manages its most valuable resource.

Kunle Odusola-Stevenson is a Lagos-based public relations professional and communication strategist specialising in energy policy and reputation management in the oil and gas sector

How Middle East tensions should force a rethink of Nigeria, Africa’s oil dependency

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The continued bombardment of Iran by the United States of America to Israel’s advantage may have again uncovered the dominance of the world’s energy system and the fragility of the least developed and oil-dependent economies. The war in the Middle East is already forcing an increase of about 10 percent on oil prices.

Also of concern is the shutdown of the Strait of Hormuz, a 38 km corridor through which about one-fifth of the world’s oil transits, and if the shutdown continues, global prices could remain above $100 per barrel. This shows that the world’s glue to fossil fuels comes with grave consequences.

Oil
Oil

The toll on Africa is immense. The continent can expect a staggering increase in fuel prices and a rise in food inflation. Nations such as Kenya, Ghana, and Uganda, which are oil-importing, will experience strain in their transportation and production sectors, while states that are oil-exporting might have temporary price spikes but that won’t help their vulnerability to the shocks of the global markets.

The reliance on fossil fuels for Africa as the main source of energy and revenue leaves the continent at the mercy of geopolitical crises beyond its borders. This undue strain and avoidable exposure are affecting fiscal decisions, social interventions, and delaying developments across the region.

This damning reality reveals a broader story: Africa’s energy independence is not impossible. The continent must know that fossil fuels and their so-called associated benefits are tools in the hands of forces beyond the continent’s control. Tension, as seen currently between the US and Iran, and supply disruptions recently observed in Venezuela, can adversely impact Africa and unsettle it. Every increase in fuel price balloons household costs and limits governments’ ability to invest in critical social services and public infrastructures.

Meanwhile, in the middle of this challenge lies a profound window. Africa has enormous renewable energy potential from the striking sun deserts of the Sahel to the vast wind waves along the coasts, and massive hydroelectric prowess in the Congo Basin and beyond. Projects like the Africa Renewable Energy Initiative (AREI) must now receive special attention from the African Union and all member states due to their potential to ensure clean energy across the region. If maximised, it can reduce Africa’s reliance on foreign fuels, facilitate energy access, and reduce the cost of power.

Beyond energy alone, investing in renewable facilities will no doubt support economic diversification as green hydrogen and other clean-tech industries have proven to provide employment, fortify domestic industries, and improve continental trade.  Drifting away from a fossil-dependent economy, the continent will immune their economies from external volatility while laying the foundation for lasting growth.

Internally, Nigeria must take a pause and reflect on its growth priorities. These emerging realities and the lessons of the COVID-19 era, when oil exports were stranded in global markets should force a rethink on the government and henceforth inform policy priorities. The country must establish long-term financing instruments outside the global oil price swings that fast-track development. Depending on fossil revenues to finance public expenditures and investing percentages of fossil derivatives in speculative (frontier exploration) are no longer viable strategies, they will only expose the country to unnecessary and avoidable risk.

Ultimately, the ongoing US, Israel – Iran war should rouse Africa, as fragility to global oil shocks is not inevitable; it is a choice accepted by African leaders. Investment in sustainable industrialisation and clean energy remains the only way Africa and Nigeria can turn this period of uncertainties into an era of resilience and self-determination.

By Olamide Martins, Associate Director, Corporate Accountability and Public Participation Africa (CAPPA), Lagos, Nigeria

International Women’s Day: CAPPA urges stronger protections, inclusive policies for women

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The Corporate Accountability and Public Participation Africa (CAPPA) has called on the Federal Government and state authorities to adopt stronger protections and more inclusive policies for Nigerian women as the world marks the 2026 edition of International Women’s Day (IWD).

In a statement issued on Sunday, March 8, 2026, the organisation said this year’s theme, “Give to Gain,” reflects the reality that women in Nigeria continue to shoulder a significant share of the labour that sustains families, communities, and the wider economy.

Indigenous women
Indigenous women

CAPPA noted that across the country, women manage household resources, provide care for children and relatives, and often carry the responsibility of keeping families afloat in difficult economic conditions. Despite this central role, the organisation said many women and girls still lack access to the basic services and protections necessary for a dignified life. The group pointed out that millions of Nigerian women struggle to access safe water, sanitation, healthcare, education, and other essential services.

CAPPA also raised concern about the persistence of gender-based violence. Citing the Nigeria Demographic and Health Survey, the organisation said about 31 percent of Nigerian women aged 15 to 49 have experienced physical violence, while about 9 percent have faced sexual violence at some point in their lives. It added that more than 10,326 cases of gender-based violence were reported between January and September 2025.

At the same time, the organisation noted the growing concern around femicide in Nigeria, which has prompted advocates and civil society groups to repeatedly call on authorities to treat the killing of women as a national emergency and to strengthen both prevention and accountability measures.

Economic inequality further compounds the challenges faced by women, according to the group. CAPPA stated that data from the National Bureau of Statistics indicate that women are more likely to work in low-income or informal sectors, where job security and social protection are limited. It added that women farmers, traders, and small business owners in various communities struggle to access credit, land, and other resources needed to grow their livelihoods, while rising living costs place additional pressure on women responsible for managing household welfare.

The organisation also highlighted the low level of women’s representation in political decision-making. It stated that women currently occupy about 3.9 percent of legislative seats in Nigeria, one of the lowest rates globally. Out of 469 members of the National Assembly, only 19 are women, including 15 in the House of Representatives and four in the Senate.

According to CAPPA, Nigeria ranks 180 out of 185 countries in the Inter-Parliamentary Union global ranking for women’s parliamentary representation and remains the lowest-ranked country in Sub-Saharan Africa. The organisation added that even the few women who have broken through into political leadership still face sexism, exclusion, and the undermining of their contributions or positions as equals in male-dominated political environments.

“These realities expose a clear contradiction,” the statement said. “Nigerian women give so much to sustain society, yet many continue to live within systems that fail to guarantee their safety, health, political participation, and economic security.”

CAPPA said this year’s IWD theme, Give to Gain, should be understood as a demand for accountability, arguing that governments at all levels must recognise the contributions of women by creating conditions that allow them to live and lead with dignity.

The organisation called for stronger investment in public services such as water, healthcare, sanitation, and education, as well as stronger laws and enforcement mechanisms to prevent and respond to gender-based violence. It also stressed the need to protect civic space so that women leaders, organisers, and advocates can carry out their work without fear of intimidation or repression.

CAPPA further urged policymakers to address the unequal burden of unpaid care work through measures such as affordable childcare, paid family leave, and infrastructure improvements that reduce time poverty for women. It also called for gender responsive budgeting, improved access to credit for women entrepreneurs, and policies aimed at closing the gender pay gap.

On political participation, the organisation said legislative reforms such as the proposed Special Seats for Women Bill could help increase women’s representation and ensure that women’s voices play a stronger role in shaping national policies. It therefore called for the swift passage of the bill.

CAPPA reaffirmed its commitment to working with women across Nigeria who are organising around critical issues. According to the organisation, women’s leadership across communities continues to demonstrate that when women organise, societies move closer to justice.

“As we reflect on the theme “Give to Gain”, true progress for Nigeria lies in recognising and reciprocating the contributions of its women,” the organisation said. “Investing in women’s rights remains fundamental to building a just and sustainable future for all Nigerians.”

Examining eateries and waste management in Ibadan

Introduction

Waste management can be defined as the systematic collection, transportation, processing, recycling, and disposal of waste materials with the objective of minimising adverse impacts on human health and the natural environment.

Within the food service industry which encompasses restaurants, canteens, fast food outlets, roadside eateries, and institutional cafeterias, effective waste management assumes particular urgency because of the high volumes, heterogeneous composition, and rapid decomposition rate of generated wastes.

Globally, the food service sector alone contributed an estimated 290 million tonnes of food waste in 2022, representing approximately 28% of total consumer-level food waste.

Ibadan
Ibadan, Oyo State, Nigeria

In Nigeria, food waste management presents a particularly complex governance challenge. The annual volume of solid waste generated nationally exceeds 25 million tonnes, with urban per capita generation averaging 0.66 kg per person per day. In restaurants, markets, and retail outlets, unsold and leftover commodities are directly converted into municipal solid waste (MSW), compounding the already strained collection and disposal systems of Nigerian cities.

Ibadan, the capital of Oyo State and the largest city in sub-Saharan Africa by geographic area, is home to a rapidly expanding food service sector. The South-West region of Nigeria, of which Ibadan is a central node, commands over 50% of the national food service market share, driven by high population density and a concentration of commercial food establishments.

Within this ecosystem, eateries of varying scales, from informal street vendors to sit-in restaurants such as Aroma Place, Eleyele, generate daily volumes of solid organic waste, recyclable packaging, non-biodegradable plastics, and liquid effluents that require systematic management. This article provides an observation of the waste management challenges and opportunities specific to this sector in Ibadan.

Types and Composition of Waste

The waste stream generated by food service establishments is heterogeneous in physical form, chemical composition, and environmental fate. The principal categories applicable to Ibadan’s eateries are Organic / Biodegradable, Recyclable Plastics & Packaging, Glass, Metal and Wastewater / Liquid Effluent.

Organic or biodegradable waste constitutes the dominant fraction of total volume of eatery waste in Nigerian urban contexts. Typical examples include vegetable and fruit peels (tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers, cabbage), food preparation scraps, cooked leftovers, bones, and rice or bean residues.

This fraction is characterised by high moisture content, low pH, and high solubility; properties that give it elevated energy content per dry mass unit but also make it a rapid vector for microbial proliferation and leachate generation. In market and restaurant settings across Africa, the unsold commodities and organic leftovers from food service operations are directly turned into MSW, bypassing any recovery or valorisation pathway.

Recyclable materials constitute the second major waste category, encompassing glass bottles and jars, metallic cans and trays, polyethylene terephthalate (PET) bottles, and diverse flexible plastic packaging including nylons and water sachets. These materials are inherently non-biodegradable and persist in the environment for decades to centuries. Despite their recyclability, recovery rates in Nigerian food service settings are negligible, primarily due to the absence of formal source-separation systems, inadequate municipal collection infrastructure, and a lack of operational incentives for material recovery.

Liquid waste, including cooking oil effluents, wash water, and food-rinse water constitutes a third, often overlooked waste stream, with the potential for significant biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) loading, aquifer contamination, and surface water eutrophication if discharged without treatment.

The quantity of waste generated by a given eatery is a function of patron volume, menu composition, portion sizing, purchasing efficiency, and waste management culture. Research on food waste in hospitality establishments across sub-Saharan Africa identifies three primary waste generation stages: pre-consumer waste (arising from ingredient preparation, trimming, and cooking), plate waste (leftover food returned from the dining area), and post-service waste (unsold prepared food at close of business).

Research demonstrates that the most common waste material at restaurants comes from three sources: ordering and inventory management errors, food preparation processes, and customer consumption behaviour.

At Aroma Place, Eleyele, a mid-scale eatery serving traditional Nigerian cuisine, observations reveal a daily waste stream dominated by organic perishables: tomato and pepper residues from soup preparation, cabbage and cucumber trimmings from salad preparation, rice and stew leftovers, and substantial volumes of cooking oil effluent. This composition is consistent with the documented dominance of biodegradable organics in the MSW fraction of south-western Nigerian urban eateries.

The high ambient temperatures characteristic of Ibadan’s tropical climate (mean annual temperature≈ 26.8°C) accelerate the aerobic and anaerobic decomposition of organic food waste, shortening the window for safe storage and intensifying the generation of malodorous volatile organic compounds and pathogen-supportive microenvironments if uncollected.

Environmental and Public Health Implications

The improper management of food waste from eateries has direct and measurable consequences for the global climate system. Organic waste deposited in open dumps or landfills undergoes anaerobic decomposition by methanogenic bacteria, producing methane (CH₄) – a greenhouse gas with a 100-year global warming potential (GWP) approximately 25 times greater than carbon dioxide (CO₂).

Improperly stored or disposed organic food waste in and around eateries creates favourable microhabitats for disease vectors and opportunistic pathogens. Open waste containers, clogged drains, and exposed organic matter attract Musca domestica (house fly), Periplaneta americana (American cockroach), and murid rodents – each capable of mechanically transmitting bacterial, viral, and parasitic pathogens to food preparation and dining surfaces.

Regulatory and Governance Framework

The Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) and the National Agency for Food and Drug Administration and Control (NAFDAC) additionally prescribe standards governing food handling, storage, and waste management in food-producing establishments.

At the Oyo State level, the Oyo State Environmental Protection Agency (OYSEPA) is mandated to enforce environmental compliance, including waste management obligations for commercial establishments. In practice, however, compliance levels among eateries in Ibadan remain low, largely attributable to infrequent inspections, inadequate penalties for violations, limited public awareness of regulatory requirements, and the informality of a large proportion of the food service sector.

Recommendations and Conclusion

Waste management is essential for maintaining a clean and healthy environment. As the population increases, the amount of waste produced also grows. Proper waste management helps reduce pollution of air, water, and soil.

The 3R hierarchy; Reduce, Reuse, Recycle provides the foundational conceptual framework for sustainable eatery waste management and is endorsed by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) as the primary strategy for achieving SDG 12.3, which targets halving per capita food waste at the consumer and retail levels by 2030.

The effective recovery of recyclable materials – glass, metals, PET plastics, and clean packaging – from eatery waste streams requires a prerequisite: source separation at the point of generation. Without segregation of recyclables from organic waste, contamination renders both fractions unsuitable for recovery, and all materials default to mixed disposal.

Eateries in Ibadan should establish a three-bin system: an organic waste bin (green), a recyclables bin (yellow), and a residual waste bin (black). This low-cost intervention has been shown across multiple African and Asian contexts to dramatically improve material recovery rates and reduce disposal volumes.

Composting represents the most scientifically validated and practically feasible strategy for managing the dominant organic fraction of eatery waste in Ibadan. Composting is the controlled aerobic decomposition of organic matter into humus – a nutrient-rich soil amendment that enhances soil structure, moisture retention, and agricultural productivity, while eliminating the need for synthetic chemical fertilisers.

Waste management in Ibadan’s eateries, from large sit-in restaurants like Aroma Place, Eleyele, to informal street-side food vendors is a microcosm of the broader municipal solid waste governance challenge confronting Nigerian cities. Effective waste disposal also reduces harmful greenhouse gases that contribute to climate change.

Nigeria’s food service market is projected to grow at over 15% annually through 2032 which means that the waste challenge will intensify substantially without proactive intervention. Regulation, enforcement, industry self-regulation, and community engagement must advance at the same rate with this growth.

Aligning waste management practices in Ibadan’s eateries with the 3R framework and the SDG 12.3 food waste reduction target is not merely an environmental imperative it is an economic and public health necessity for a city and a sector with enormous, untapped potential for sustainable development.

By Ehiszele Mabel Isimeme, Nigerian Environmental Study Action Team (NEST) Ibadan

Group empowers Kaduna women with clean cookstoves, targets 50% less charcoal use

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A non-governmental organisation (NGO), Bridge That Gap Hope for Africa Initiative (BTG), is marking the International Women’s Day 2026 (IWD) by distributing energy-efficient cookstoves to women in vulnerable communities in Kaduna State.

The energy-efficient cookstoves are expected to reduce charcoal use by more than 50 per cent, helping to curb tree cutting and slow deforestation.

The distribution, scheduled to commence on March 11, is targeting women in climate-affected communities in Chikun, Zaria and Zango Kataf Local Government Areas.

Clean cook stoves
Clean cookstoves

Gloria Bulus, Executive Director of Bridge That Gap Hope for Africa Initiative, disclosed this in a statement issued to newsmen on Sunday, March 8, in Kaduna.

Bulus said the gesture is aimed at supporting women’s empowerment while strengthening climate resilience in underserved communities.

She explained that the intervention was part of the Women Empowerment and Climate Resilient Initiative under the Partnership for Agile Governance and Climate Engagement Programme implemented by BTG.

According to her, the project promotes community-driven climate adaptation strategies that address desertification, promote energy-efficient technologies and strengthen inclusive environmental governance.

Bulus said the initiative focused on women and vulnerable groups as key actors in climate action while improving livelihoods and strengthening adaptive capacity.

She added that the project also seeks to build long-term socio-economic resilience in communities affected by climate change.

International Women’s Day, commemorated annually on March 8, celebrates the social, economic, cultural and political achievements of women.

The 2026 celebration marks 115 years of collective advocacy and global progress toward gender equality.

Bulus said the cookstove distribution aligned with this year’s theme, “Give to Gain,” which emphasises that investing in women would lead to wider social, economic and environmental benefits.

She noted that providing clean cookstoves would help reduce indoor air pollution, lower household energy costs and promote climate-smart living.

The ED explained that the initiative would also reduce pressure on forests by limiting dependence on firewood and charcoal.

According to her, women and girls in many underserved communities bear the burden of sourcing firewood and managing household energy needs.

She said the intervention would provide safer cooking technology while enabling communities to benefit from improved health outcomes and increased time for productive activities.

Bulus said the activity formed part of BTG’s broader strategy to integrate climate action with women’s empowerment and sustainable community development.

She called on government institutions, private sector actors and development partners to deepen investments in gender-responsive climate solutions and inclusive development initiatives.

Bridge That Gap Hope for Africa Initiative is a Kaduna-based non-profit organisation committed to building sustainable communities by closing gaps in access to opportunities and basic rights among vulnerable populations.

Through grassroots programmes, the organisation supports governance, education, climate action, livelihood development, disaster risk management, peace-building, mental health support and the creation of safe spaces for women and girls.

By Sani Idris Abdulrahman

Strait of Hormuz closed, 3,000 vessels, 20,000 seafarers stranded in Middle East – IMO

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The International Maritime Organisation (IMO) says no fewer than 3,000 vessels and 20,000 seafarers are stranded in Middle East over the ongoing war by the U.S. and Israel against Iran.

The crucial Strait of Hormuz global shipping corridor marking the entrance to the Persian Gulf, is essentially closed due to the threat of strikes from Iran and elsewhere, IMO declared.

IMO Secretary-General, Arsenio Dominguez, warned of the global “knock-on” effect from the closure of the sea lane responsible for 20 per cent of the world’s oil.

Strait of Hormuz
Strait of Hormuz

Dominguez disclosed that the Strait of Hormuz was closed after a tugboat assisting another vessel in the strait on Friday morning was struck killing four seafarers.

The UN shipping agency chief condemned the attack and that the overall situation was “deteriorating” and urged ships to avoid navigating in the region.

Dominguez urged member states to “find solutions through dialogue in order to de-escalate” and restore free and safe movement across the region.

UN Emergency Relief Coordinator, Tom Fletcher, further warned that the widening conflict in the Middle East could trigger far-reaching humanitarian consequences well beyond the region.

Fletcher said disruptions to key maritime routes such as the Strait of Hormuz could drive up food prices.

The UN relief chief added that the disruption could strain health systems and make humanitarian supplies harder to deliver, hitting the most vulnerable people first.

By Tiamiyu Prudence Arobani

International Women’s Day: Joe-Ezigbo seeks sustained momentum in appointing women to lead energy firms

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The Chief Executive Officer of Falcon Corporation Limited, Audrey Joe-Ezigbo, has called on Nigeria’s energy industry to deepen its commitment to appointing women to top leadership positions, particularly across the gas value chain, as the sector commemorates International Women’s Day 2026.

Joe-Ezigbomade this call as part of the global celebration of women’s social, economic, and political achievements. She highlighted the growing presence of female chief executives and managing directors in Nigeria’s energy sector, describing it as a pivotal transformation in the industry’s leadership structure, which has long been dominated by men.

Audrey Joe-Ezigbo
Audrey Joe-Ezigbo, Chief Executive Officer of Falcon Corporation Limited

She reflected on the remarkable progress made by women who have assumed top leadership roles in the energy sector at the turn of this decade. She highlighted trailblazers and key national energy leaders, including Mrs. Olu Arowolo Verheijen, the Special Adviser to the President on Energy, whose policy advocacy has helped elevate strategic dialogue on energy reforms and sector investment, and Mrs. Oritsemeyiwa Amanorisewo Eyesan, the newly confirmed Chief Executive Officer of the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC), whose leadership represents a historic milestone in regulatory governance and a strong signal of inclusive industry stewardship.

She also celebrated the rise of influential female energy leaders, including Folake Soetan, Managing Director of Ikeja Electric; Jennifer Adighije, Managing Director of Niger Delta Power Holding Company; Wola Joseph-Condotti, Interim CEO of Eko Electricity Distribution Company; Elozino Olaniyan, Chief Executive of Midwestern Oil & Gas Company; and distinguished upstream industry figures such as Catherine Uju Ifejika of Brittania-U Nigeria Limited and Seinye Lulu-Briggs of Moni Pulo Limited.

According to her, the willingness of boards and shareholders to elevate women into the highest decision-making roles signals maturity within the industry and a growing recognition that competence, discipline, and vision are not gendered attributes.

“Each of these appointments sends a powerful message beyond boardrooms and balance sheets,” Joe-Ezigbosaid. “It signals to the world that Nigeria’s energy sector is prepared to compete on the strength of its full talent pool. It signals to investors that governance and leadership selection are becoming more merit-driven. And most importantly, it signals to the girl child that there is no part of the energy value chain that is beyond her reach, not the control room, not the trading desk, not the executive suite.”

She commended the organisations that have taken what she described as “bold and forward-looking decisions” to entrust women with complex, capital-intensive operational mandates, adding that such choices strengthen institutional credibility and long-term sustainability.

Joe-Ezigboemphasised that the gas sector, in particular, stands at a pivotal moment as Nigeria advances its industrialisation and energy security agenda through expanded domestic gas utilisation. She noted that leadership diversity must accompany infrastructure expansion if the sector is to deliver resilient growth.

“As we build pipelines, scale distribution networks, and finance critical gas infrastructure, we must also build leadership systems that reflect inclusion and foresight,” she said. “Gas is central to Nigeria’s transition story. The leadership shaping that story must reflect the diversity of the nation it serves.”

She added that the current decade presents a rare opportunity to reset expectations around who leads energy institutions, urging boards, regulators, and investors to institutionalise inclusive succession planning rather than treat female leadership appointments as isolated milestones.

“At Falcon, we see inclusion not as a campaign theme but as a governance principle,” she stated. “The progress we are witnessing across the sector should not be episodic. It should be sustained, measurable, and irreversible.”

She concluded that International Women’s Day 2026 offers the industry an opportunity not only to celebrate achievements but also to consolidate momentum and ensure that the next generation of female engineers, economists, and energy executives inherits a sector defined by merit, opportunity, and equal access to leadership.

Women, girls in Africa paying the price for rising debt, fossil fuel extraction, climate change – Report

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A new report has shown that climate change, fossil fuel extraction and debt all reinforce gender injustices on their own. The injustices only compound and worsen as the associated and growing crises they create overlap. As a result, Africa is at the frontlines of the global climate, fossil fuels and debt polycrisis that is largely based on unjust systems perpetuating extraction of resources to the Global North. 

The report, titled: “Gender, Debt and Fossil Fuels: A Mapping of Key Insights from the African Continent”, which is based primarily on the work of African feminist scholars and practitioners, looks at evidence related to the impact on women and girls related to debt and the structural entrapment of Africa caused by macroeconomic injustice and investment gaps; debt and extractivism driven by neocolonial policies; and energy colonialism and gender injustice related to petromasculinity, embodied risk and the treatment of women involved in fossil fuel resistance.

Women
Women

The report also outlines models for international cooperation ranging from entrapment to sovereignty and offers recommendations on a pathway away from oil, gas and coal towards diverse, resilient and gender-just economies. 

Much of the evidence base focuses on women and girls. More research is needed to better understand how these trends impact gender diverse people. 

Key findings from the report include:

  • Existing unjust economic structures result in African nations prioritising paying off debt over delivering health, education and other critical services. Debt in Africa has doubled since 2020 to more than $1 trillion. Interest on existing debt has doubled in the last 15 years to more than $163 billion as well. Structural adjustment programmes, trade liberalisation and International Monetary Fund imposed austerity have forced African governments to prioritize debt repayments. As a result, more money is being spent to service debt arising from extractive, colonial policies and systems than on public services such as health care and education which have a disproportionate impact on women, girls and gender diverse people. During moments of economic austerity shocks, interpersonal and domestic violence against women and girls can spike.
  • Governments are often forced to expand fossil fuel production to service debt, locking in health, economic and security risks. Fossil fuel extraction imposes a spectrum of violence against communities and women and girls are most vulnerable. Whether Mozambique, Nigeria, Uganda or Tanzania, women and girls are more at risk to the impacts of land dispossession and displacement by oil and gas projects. Militarisation aimed at securing extraction projects drive repression, surveillance and sexual violence by corporate and state security forces. Fossil fuels also cause environmental destruction that is linked to health and social crises due to pollution, food insecurity, land degradation and water contamination. Women’s and Indigenous civil society movements have been at the frontlines of environmental defense given they bear the greatest brunt of this insecurity and degradation. They face violence as a result. 
  • Growing loss and damages from climate change and the associated costs are harming lives, communities and livelihoods while increasing gender injustice at the same time. Global warming affects women and girls the most. Existing societal barriers and exclusions means most women do not have land rights and women and girls are excluded from adaptation programs and funding. The lack of climate finance also means that although Africa possesses 40 percent of global renewable energy potential, the continent receives less than two percent of global renewable investment. This puts a just transition to a diverse, safe economy that meets the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals out of reach including gender rights.
  • International cooperation is needed to allow for a just transition away from oil, gas and coal. African feminist scholars have outlined steps that could be taken to improve international cooperation which includes advancing a Fossil Fuel Treaty. Nations participating in a Treaty could create a platform for renegotiating and cancelling some external debt to create space for an equitable transition away from fossil fuels towards decentralized, accessible renewable energy for all, and phase out of oil, gas and coal while building diverse, resilient and gender-just economies. 

Bemnet Agata, PR & Communications Specialist – Tax Justice Network and Co-author of the report “Gender, Debt and Fossil Fuels: A Mapping of Key Insights from Africa”, said: “Africa is being pushed to drill its way out of debt under a global economic model that treats debt service as sacrosanct. When governments cut health, education and social protection to reassure creditors, the strain does not disappear; it is displaced – into women’s unpaid labour, dispossession and the violence through which fossil fuel extraction is enforced. Women become the shock absorbers of this model, functioning as the hidden subsidy that sustains both debt service and drilling. Any serious conversation about a just transition must begin by naming this political reality.”

Dr. Amiera Sawas, co-author of the report and Director of Research for the Fossil Fuel Treaty Initiative, said: “African feminists have long been calling our attention to the myriad ways that debt, fossil fuel extraction and climate change are impacting women’s and girls’ rights. It’s time the international community listened.  Despite facing disproportionate risk, women and Indigenous leaders have been at the forefront of calling for a just energy and economic transition rooted in feminist and decolonial principles where all people, societies and nations have equal opportunities to lead and benefit. This includes demanding international cooperation and solidarity via a Fossil Fuel Treaty to support nations to cancel and renegotiate debt repayments and to access fairer finance for renewable energy systems.” 

Conservationists tag Formula 1’s sustainability claims as ‘greenwashing’

A new season of Formula 1 races begins in Melbourne, Australia, where the Australian Grand Prix is set for Sunday, March 8, 2026. The organiser, International Automobile Federation (FIA), presents it as the beginning of a new era of sustainability.

However, observers insist that the changes that have been put in place are disappointing from an environmental point of view.

“It’s typical greenwashing,” noted Dalibor Dostal, director of the conservation organisation, European Wildlife, on the changes to Formula One racing. 

Formula 1 Australian Grand Prix 2026
Formula 1 Australian Grand Prix 2026

This is because the new F1 single-seater cars will continue to use internal-combustion engines. The organisers present biofuels to emphasise sustainability.

“Exhaust emissions from the combustion of biofuels have an equally negative impact on nature as combustion products from fuels made from oil. They significantly increase the concentration of nitrogen oxides in the air, which supports the growth of weeds and displaces the original diversity of species from the countryside. Flowers and butterflies disappear. The landscape is changing into a green desert,” Dostal pointed out, adding that this negative effect occurs regardless of how and from what the biofuels are made. 

According to findings made by scientists, exhaust emissions from biofuels also have a similarly negative impact on human health as combustion gases from petrol or diesel oil. Exhaust gases from internal-combustion engines increase the risk of cancer, heart attack, and stroke. They cause respiratory diseases, and may lead to damage to the brain and nervous system. 

That being said, biofuels themselves are no novelty in the motor sport world. For example, Rudolf Diesel demonstrated his internal-combustion engine in 1900 with the use of plant oil.

“This technology is obsolete and long outdated. The motor sport world has already made tremendous progress to truly pure technologies with no adverse impact on nature and human health. European cities should switch to truly modern car races and leave this advertising of internal-combustion engines that are coming to the end of their life to other regions of the planet if they are interested. Celebrating the planet being destroyed in this way contradicts the values that are essential to us in Europe,” added Dostal. 

The technology of electric cars has undergone rapid development in recent years and leaves ICE cars far behind in most of the parameters. In a key indicator – zero local emissions – it is absolutely unbeatable.

“F1 has been unable to follow this trend; on the contrary, it managed to find its footing in the field of greenwashing very well and effectively employs this marketing ploy on outdated technologies with negative impacts on nature and human health over and over again,” concluded Dostal. 

As in recent years, electric motors will generate part of the power output in combination with internal-combustion engines. Although the share of electricity will rise from the previous 20 per cent to 50 per cent, it is still too little when compared to pure electric cars. 

Forest damage in Europe to rise by around 20% by 2100 – Study

Forest damage in Europe caused by wildfires, storms and bark beetle outbreaks is projected to increase compared to recent decades under all analysed climate scenarios, according to a new international study, published in the scientific journal Science, with contributions from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK).

Even in a scenario with warming limited to roughly 2°C, annually disturbed forest area could rise from about 180,000 to roughly 216,000 hectares per year by the end of the century, compared to the already unprecedented levels of disturbances from 1986 to 2020. In a scenario in which fossil fuel use continues to increase, annually disturbed forest area could double, reaching nearly 370,000 hectares per year by the end of the century.

Forest damage in Europe
Forest damage in Europe

“In the future, Europe’s forests are likely to absorb less carbon,” says Christopher Reyer, scientist at PIK and co-author of the study. “If forests take up less carbon, or potentially even release more than they absorb, this increases pressure on other sectors such as transport and agriculture to reduce their emissions more rapidly. At the same time, forest management needs to focus more strongly on building resilient forests.”

According to the study, forests in Southern and Western Europe will be particularly affected and will undergo the strongest changes in forest disturbance. Northern Europe is expected to be less severely impacted overall, though hotspots of future forest damage are also likely to emerge there. The study was led by researchers at the Technical University of Munich (TUM).