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Plastics treaty negotiations made achieving an inclusive just transition impossible – Groups

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As the INC-5.2 Global Plastics Treaty negotiations came to an end in Geneva, Switzerland, on Friday, August 15, 2025, affected groups aligned for justice have expressed strong disapproval of the treaty process and the state of the chair’s proposal text.

Indigenous Peoples, waste pickers, trade union workers, youth, and fenceline communities are drawing the line and are amplifying a shared message: The negotiations in Geneva made achieving an inclusive just transition impossible, by design.

Plastics treaty
Conor Carlin, immediate past president of SPE, speaks at the opening of the sixth round of global plastics treaty talks, in Geneva. Photo credit: Steve Toloken

During an August 13, 2025, press conference, consisting of justice-aligned groups, Aakaluk Adrienne Blatchford, an Inupiaq mother and land defender, testified to the embodied violence of erasures and exclusions at INC-5.2. Representing the Indigenous Environmental Network, she insisted, “A treaty about us, without us, is erasing history. Indigenous Peoples, waste pickers, People of Color, marginalised fenceline and frontline communities are here. Our bodies are born on the line. We will hold the line because we are the line.”

Critiquing the Unjust Process

The Just Transition Alliance critiqued negotiations taking place behind closed doors at INC-5, the Global Plastics Treaty negotiations in November 2024. Unacceptably, this violation of environmental justice principles continued at INC-5.2.

John Beard, of Port Arthur Community Action Network, decried the failures during the Global Plastics Treaty negotiation.

He said: “The redlining and bracketing acts of others have once again sacrificed us and our communities. They and the industry continue to devalue our lives, mute our voices, but we refuse to be sacrificed any further. Here we draw the line on their red line; an impotent treaty serves no one.

“We’ve been locked out of the meetings.”

Much of the negotiations were moved to closed informal sessions during the latter half of week one, continuing into week two. Four of the plenary sessions during INC-5.2 failed to open the floor to observers and their statements. The only publicly broadcast sessions of the negotiations were the plenaries. Failing to open the floor to observer statements undermined accountability to the watching world and further sidelined voices marginalised by dominant systems and structures of power. During INC-5.2, a member state delegation even proposed that observer participation should be tied to consensus.

Just transition depends on transparency and accountability to those most harmed by exploitative systems, not a consensus motivated by watered-down ambition that seeks to evaporate the collective strength and knowledges of Indigenous Peoples, frontline workers and waste pickers, and fenceline communities.

The United Nations Environment Programme also removed the option to host official side events, which were a successful way for movement groups to demonstrate solidarity and publicly name our priorities at INC-5. Concerningly, this exclusive decision made it harder to track side events being held by problematic actors outside the conference venue. For example, the PREVENT Waste Alliance held a side event that seemed not well-advertised to movement groups. This communication concern creates a host of problems, including limiting possibilities for intergenerational conversations and collaborations.

Nayana Cordeiro da Silva, of Youth Plastic Action Network and the Children and Youth Major Group, asserted: “Intergenerational equity is at the essence of protecting current and future generations.”

All affected groups need access to policy spaces, ample opportunities to participate and lead, and more physical seats in the negotiating rooms to ensure processes are accountable to those most harmed. Moreover, Indigenous Peoples must be recognized as distinct rightsholders, adhering to the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP), and should not be conflated with other observers, such as NGOs and industry. This recognition also requires obtaining Free, Prior, and Informed Consent.

Signaling Dangerous Issues in the Treaty

While there is much to critique about the Global Plastics Treaty chair’s text, the group especially opposes the deletion of key articles focusing on plastic production cuts and supporting health. We also condemn the text’s fully inadequate engagement with just transition.

Former Article 6 on supply-side measures was removed from the draft text, resulting in plastic production cuts not being included. Treaty drafters also deleted former Article 19 on health. Taken together, these eliminations severely weaken the treaty’s ability to prevent damaging health and environmental impacts caused by the full impact-cycle of plastics, from extraction to disposal and remediation.

Vi Pangunnaaq Waghiyi, a Yupik Mother and Grandmother and Tribal Citizen of the Native Village of Savoonga, linked plastics inextricably to health harms by describing the devastation of the arctic from microplastics.

As the Environmental Health and Justice Director with Alaska Community Action on Toxics, she testified, “This has resulted in environmental violence. We are being contaminated without our consent …. In the current plastics treaty negotiations, states have stripped essential language on health impacts, the rights of Indigenous Peoples, and the explicit listing of chemicals.” Blatchford similarly insisted, “The time is now for divestment from the petro-chemical industries, identifying and banning chemicals of concern and false solutions that allow big producers to continue business as usual. Indigenous Peoples will continue to show up to hold the line.”

The indispensable Just Transition section (now Article 9) of the treaty text is far too weak. Crucially, this article remains voluntary and repeatedly uses the language of “as appropriate” and “should,” rather than “shall.”

Just Transition Alliance Policy Organiser, Fernando Tormos-Aponte, also raised strong concerns with the article’s wording.

He cautioned: “The voluntary nature of just transition language weakens the prospects of holding governments accountable to their treaty obligations to compensate and include groups impacted by the plastic pollution crisis in decisions about how to address it and change fossil-fuel-based economies. The Paris Agreement on Climate is a telling example, where just transition was only mentioned in the preamble, and after 10 years, we have only gotten dialogues about just transition but no real commitments to enact it. These delays and weak policy efforts are at odds with the urgency of addressing the problem and neglect the historic and ongoing harms that various groups experience.”

The Just Transition Article also fails to mention and focus on Indigenous Peoples, a glaring oversight and dismissal of groups calling for an inclusive just transition rooted in Indigenous Traditional Knowledge.

As Soledad Mella Vidal, a Mapuche woman with the International Alliance of Waste Pickers, stated, “Over 40 million waste pickers are counting on member states to ensure a legally binding commitment to a just transition where no one is left behind.”

Recommitting to Just Transition with Frontline-Led Solutions

Frontline groups say they have the solutions for justly transitioning toward flourishing communities that are free of plastics pollution and poisoning.

“We will continue to call for and practice evidence-based and frontline-led solutions that center the rights, knowledge, and leadership of those most affected by the plastics-petrochemical industries and the violent systems and structures that uphold their wealth and power. To create a just transition away from the plastic-petrochemical industries and health and environmental harms, we need real solutions from the ground up, with roots in Indigenous Traditional Knowledge. This commitment includes the need for policymakers to support the Polluter Pays Principle and the creation of direct funding for affected communities, which looks different across groups.”

Beard, a retired petrochemical worker, articulates the way forward for an inclusive just transition: “Just transition has to be for all workers. Their lives have to have health. They have to have worth. We have to see that in all the people who work in that chain, not just the waste pickers but also those in the petrochemical sector who work from plastics from the well head to the end user.”

What harms workers, also harms surrounding communities. Focusing on decent work for workers across the full impact-cycle of plastics requires simultaneously focusing on fenceline communities and Indigenous Peoples, centering their experiences, needs, and demands.

Accordingly, policymakers must follow Just Transition and Indigenous Just Transition Principles. As an Indigenous elder, Waghiyi reflected, “An Indigenous just transition requires binding commitments, upstream protections, transparent listing of chemicals and hazard assessments. Indigenous leadership and consent must be included in the text and not slogans in a preamble. The treaty must center Indigenous health and sovereignty or risk erasing generations of knowledge and undermining the Arctic’s ecological integrity.”

The treaty falls far short of these requirements

Reflecting on the INC-5.2 drafting process and what could be ahead, Tormos-Aponte concluded: “Some bad-faith actors may want to renegotiate the UNEA mandate for creating a legally
binding Global Plastics Treaty that addresses supply-side measures, chemicals of concern, and health. That is not acceptable for us.”

Plastics treaty delegates, plastic waste workers in Kenya, Thailand face toxic exposures from hazardous plastic chemicals

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Data finds high-ranking UN officials, delegates and plastic waste workers are exposed to toxic plastic chemicals including phthalates, toxic flame retardants, and other hazardous substances

Data for IPEN studies on workers’ exposures to plastic chemicals, including a cross-section of participants of high level delegates to the Plastics Treaty negotiations and plastic waste and recycling workers in Kenya and Thailand show that all study participants were exposed to a wide range of hazardous plastic chemicals.

Toxic plastic chemicals
Toxic plastic chemicals

The new data from Kenya and Treaty delegates and UN officials released at the Plastics Treaty INC-5.2 talks add to reports released by IPEN last December with data from other UN officials (“global participants”) and Thai plastic waste workers.

In all cases, all participants experienced exposures to plastic chemicals, with plastic waste workers facing overall higher levels of exposure to most chemicals than office workers.

The study, produced by IPEN members Centre for Environment, Justice and Development (CEJAD) in Kenya, Ecological Alert and Recovery – Thailand (EARTH), and Arnika in Czechia, with lab analysis by the Department of Food Analysis and Nutrition at the University of Chemistry and Technology, Prague looked at 73 substances from six groups of common toxic plastic chemicals.

The chemicals assessed included endocrine disrupting phthalates (called the everywhere and everyone chemicals), phthalate alternatives, flame retardants (OPFRs), benzotriazole UV stabilisers, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), and bisphenols and phenols (eg, BPA). All participants experienced a mixture of chemical exposures to all six types of chemicals.

“The data clearly show that we are all at risk from hazardous chemicals in everyday products, and workers who deal with plastic waste face greater risks,” said Griffins Ochieng, Executive Director of CEJAD. “Toxic plastic chemicals like the phthalate ‘everywhere and everyone chemicals” pose significant health and environmental threats. A Plastics Treaty must provide global controls that protect our communities, workers, children and families from hazardous plastic chemicals.”

“All workers deserve a safe and healthy workplace, but our study shows this is especially important for workers involved in plastic recycling and waste disposal,” said Penchom Saetang, Director of Ecological Alert and Recovery – Thailand (EARTH). “A Plastics Treaty needs to address the release of toxic chemicals throughout the life cycle of plastics, to protect workers, communities near recycling and disposal facilities, and the environment. We urge delegates to ensure that worker protections and protections for human health are at the center of the negotiations.”

IPEN members CEJAD and EARTH coordinated with Kenyan and Thai plastic recycling workers, plastic waste workers, and workers in other settings, such as office settings or other settings without occupational exposures to plastic waste to assess their exposures to chemicals in plastics.

IPEN also enlisted Plastic Treaty delegates and high-ranking UN officials to participate in the study. Participants wore wristbands that capture environmental exposures to chemicals for five days. The wristbands were analyzed at an independent lab for 73 chemicals from six chemical groups, finding that:

  • All participants, including treaty delegates and plastic waste workers in Kenya and Thailand, were exposed to toxic plastic chemicals from all six chemical groups.
  • Among the plastic waste workers, in Thailand, each participant was exposed to at least 21 chemicals, and in Kenya at least 30 chemicals. Across the studies in both countries, 11 chemicals were found in every wristband tested.
  • Phthalates that are known endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) were detected at the highest concentrations of all the chemicals.
  • Plastic waste and recycling workers were exposed to more chemicals than office workers in each country. Plastic recycling workers were exposed to the highest number of chemicals in Thailand and plastic waste workers to the highest number of chemicals in Kenya.
  • Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) are cancer-causing chemicals found in plastics and generated when burning plastics and other materials. Both plastic recyclers and plastic waste workers were exposed to higher concentrations and higher numbers of PAHs than office workers in each country.
  • All the delegates (“global participants”) were exposed to a mixture of many chemicals; each wristband of the global participants contained at least 26 chemicals, showing exposure to all six groups of chemicals. 16 of the 73 chemicals were present in all their wristbands.

“Most plastic chemicals are not regulated by current international agreements and would not be covered by current global Conventions. Since chemicals from plastics and plastic wastes cross national boundaries, controls on hazardous chemicals should be an essential component of the

Plastics Treaty,” said Sara Brosché, IPEN Science Advisor and lead author of the study. “Plastics and plastic chemicals cross national borders without control, so national policies alone cannot solve the plastics crisis. We encourage the Plastics Treaty delegates to follow the science and develop a meaningful agreement to protect the human right to a clean, healthy and sustainable environment, including a safe and healthy working environment.”

Plastics are made with thousands of chemicals, mostly petrochemicals derived from fossil fuels. Many plastic chemicals are known to be hazardous to our health and/or the environment, and many more that have little or no hazard information. Hazardous chemicals are released throughout the life cycle of plastics, including when plastic wastes are handled during waste processing or recycling. Recycling plastic also passes toxic chemicals on, poisoning the “circular” economy and creating ongoing risks to health and the environment.

Volker Türk, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, said: Plastics and their byproducts are made of chemicals that are seriously harmful to people and the environment. They are present in every ecosystem on the planet, accumulating in food chains, contaminating water, soil, and air, and releasing hazardous substances into the environment. Most plastics derive from fossil fuels and emit greenhouse gases throughout their life cycle, exacerbating the multiple planetary crises.

“Each stage of the plastics life cycle from extraction through disposal, adversely impacts human rights, including the rights to health and to a clean, healthy and sustainable environment. The negotiation of a new treaty on plastic pollution is a unique opportunity to advance human rights and protect our planet. We must seize this moment and deploy human rights solutions to stop the senseless destruction caused by plastic pollution.”

Luis Vayas Valdivieso, Ambassador of Ecuador to the United Kingdom, said: “Chair of the INC to develop an international legally binding instrument on plastic pollution. Plastics and the chemicals used to make them surround us daily. As the INC Chair, I participated in this study to learn more about them. As we look ahead, we must succeed in the Plastics Treaty negotiations, for the well-being of our planet and human health.

Magnus Heunicke, Minister for the Environment, Denmark, said: Plastic pollution is a global challenge to both the environment and human health and the results underline the need for global action on plastic chemicals.

Camila Zepeda Lizama, Head of the Coordination Unit for International Affairs, Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources, Mexico, said: We are discouraged to find from the IPEN study that toxic plastic chemicals are trespassing into our bodies every day. Phthalates, for example, are ‘everywhere and everyone’ chemicals that are linked to serious health concerns like infertility and cancer. A Plastics Treaty must protect human health and provide global controls on toxic chemicals throughout the plastics life cycle.

Ms. Keima Gardiner, Waste Management Specialist, Republic of Trinidad C Tobago, said: It takes a certain level of ambition to cultivate a seemingly impossible future, and as knowledge increases so do expectations. Participation in this study not only brought to the fore the hidden chemicals and potential threats in plastics from routine exposure but more so underscored the urgent need to catalyse the development of a purposeful global Plastics Treaty that addresses plastic pollution and reflects our collective will to amplify action to protect human health and the environment, for those among us and the generations to come.

Dr. Maria Neira, Director, Environment, Climate Change and Health, World Health Organisation, said: Exposure to chemicals used in plastics that have long been regulated, like certain phthalates, is a public health concern. These chemicals are known to disrupt our bodies’ natural hormones and demonstrate the urgent need for strong global protections for our health and the environment. The Plastics Treaty should be a key global agreement to protect human health and future generations.

NCDMB backs move as PETAN, others form African Local Content body

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Oil and gas service providers across Africa have formed a continental forum known as the African Local Content Organisation (ALCO), with the goal of collaborating among themselves to deliver complex projects, creating and retaining value in the multibillion dollar African energy sector and growing the economy.

The organisation was unveiled on Wednesday, August 13, Day 2 of the 2025 Namibia Oil and Gas Conference, at Windhoek, Namibia. Membership is open to national associations of service providers in the oil and gas and mining sectors across the African continent.

Wole Ogunsanya
Chairman of the Petroleum Technology Association of Nigeria (PETAN) and member of NCDMB Governing Council, Mr. Wole Ogunsanya, speaking at the conference

Chairman of the Petroleum Technology Association of Nigeria (PETAN) and member of NCDMB Governing Council, Mr. Wole Ogunsanya, introduced the organisation and explained that the body would serve as the private sector arm of the African Petroleum Producers’ Organisation, (APPO), which comprises African governments engaged in oil and gas operations.

He underscored the pivotal and complimentary roles the private sector plays in building African local content, particularly in the development of competent human capacities, deployment of technologies and equipment, mobilization of private capital, and execution of projects.  

Ogunsanya said the organisation would be launched officially at the 2026 African Union (AU) conference, in view of its strategic importance to continent’s economy.

Key to the group’s plan is to institute close partnership with APPO and the African Energy Bank (AEB). The Bank was recently set up by APPO to fund big ticket energy projects across the continent and bridge the funding gap impeding the development of key energy projects.

Members of the group, Ogunsanya said, are well positioned to execute key scopes of the projects that would be financed by the Energy Bank. This would guarantee value and spend retention in the continent, helping to catalyze the economy.

Other key objectives of the forum include facilitating exchange of knowledge and capacities among African energy service companies, enabling collaboration on projects, and growing Africa’s gross domestic product (GDP).

The PETAN Chair added: “Through the forum we can carry out benchmark studies, join forces to solve industry problems. It is also a forum where African energy service companies can link up and find partners across the continent. It would enable the exchange of equipment and partnership on major industry projects. As Namibia or any other African country develops energy projects, you can count on your African brothers to share our over 70 years’ knowledge and experience in the oil and gas industry.”

Fourteen African countries have already joined the organisation, he said, including Nigeria, Morocco, Senegal, Angola, and the Democratic Republic of Congo. The PETAN chairman is serving as the interim chair of the African Local Content Organisation, while Ibrahim Talla from Senegal is the Secretary.

The new organisation has received endorsement from the Executive Secretary, Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB), Felix Omatsola Ogbe, who described it as a key platform for advancing African local content.

Represented at the Namibian event by the Director, Corporate Services, Dr. Abdulmalik Halilu, the NCDMB boss referenced the vital roles the Board played in the establishment of the African Energy Bank, assuring that it would continue to promote African local content and extend every possible assistance to the ALCO.

Illegal shoreline structures face demolition – Surveyor General

The Surveyor General of the Federation (SGOF), Abudulganiyu Adebomehin, has issued a stern warning to states, emphasising that all illegal structures built along Nigeria’s shorelines will be demolished.

This is contained in a statement signed by Mr. Henry David, Head of Information and Public Relations, on Thursday, August 14, 2025, in Abuja.

Abuduganiyu Adebomehin
Surveyor General of the Federation, Mr. Abuduganiyu Adebomehin

Adebomehin gave the warning during a visit by the executive teams of the Nigerian Institution of Surveyors (NIS) and the Association of Private Practising Surveyors of Nigeria (APPSN).

According to him, the demolition directive aligns with national urban planning laws and international maritime frameworks, particularly the Law of the Sea.

Additional roles and responsibilities have been attached to the Office of the Surveyor General of the Federation (OSGOF).

This follows its recent move under the direct oversight of the Presidency.

Adebomehin stated, “As part of the President’s directive, all requests for issuance of Certificates of Occupancy (C-of-Os), permits, and survey plans along the shoreline should be put on hold.

“This will be pending determination on merit for further processing by OSGOF.”

He further directed the National Inland Waterways Authority (NIWA) to collate and submit all prior shoreline-related approvals issued to individuals or corporate entities to the OSGOF.

“Any documents previously submitted to other organisations or MDAs concerning shoreline matters should now be redirected to his office.”

The Surveyor General expressed concern over the continued duplication of OSGOF’s functions by some MDAs, in spite of the official pronouncement of its relocation to the Presidency.

He also criticised states that were still allocating land within shoreline areas without involving the OSGOF.

“The enforcement unit will demolish anything within the right of way (ROW); this is an executive order.

“The Federal Government does not want any unapproved allocation around the shoreline.

“This is subject to the Law of the Sea, and there is a strong commitment to ensure compliance. The OSGOF has the right map,” he warned.

Adebomehin also commended the visiting surveyor bodies for their dedication to advancing the surveying profession in Nigeria and pledged continued collaboration toward shared goals.

Speaking during the visit, the Surveyor General of the NIS, Folakemi Odunewu, said the delegation came to congratulate Adebomehin on OSGOF’s transition to the Presidency and to present their demands.

“We have a seven-point agenda, which includes digital transformation of the National Secretariat, public relations and advocacy, and extending our engagements to other relevant stakeholders,” she said.

Odunewu added that their agenda also covered the re-agitation of the Survey Coordination Act and the development of additional professional excellence structures for NIS members.

She also highlighted a renewed push for the creation of a dedicated Ministry of Surveying and Geoinformatics.

By Angela Atabo

INC-5.2: Global South Member States, CSOs demand strong ambition to secure a robust plastic treaty

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Demonstrating strong unity, Global South Member States and Civil Society called for ambitious, legally binding global measures to curb plastic production, in a media briefing on Thursday, August 14, 2025, the closing day of the second part of the fifth session of the Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee (INC-5.2), held by the Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives (GAIA).

The event brought together civil society organisations (CSOs) from across the Global South, including the Association de l’Education Environnementale pour les Futures Générations- Tunisia, C4 Center – Malaysia, and Acción Ecológica Mexico. It also featured distinguished delegates from Ethiopia and Fiji, including Hiwot Hailu, Chief of Staff at the Environmental Protection Authority of the Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia, and Dr. Sivendra Michael, Permanent Secretary at Fiji’s Ministry of Environment and Climate Change.

Plastic Treaty
Global South Member States and Civil Society during GAIA’s INC-5.2 Global South Media Briefing. Photo credit: GAIA / Camila Aguilera

This gathering took place against the backdrop of the Chair’s latest text, released on Wednesday, August 12, which was universally rejected by countries and civil society groups. The text leaves out a key article on reducing plastic production, going against the treaty’s mandate to address plastics across their full life cycle, amongst other pressing issues. This position shaped the demands voiced by the panelists during the media  briefing.

Merrisa Naidoo, GAIA Africa’s Plastics Programme Manager, stressed that a flawed process cannot deliver good outcomes.

“Consensus is not democracy. It ignores the will of the vast majority of member states and, unfortunately, has to cater to the wish list of the petro-states and fossil fuel industry,” submitted Naidoo.

This sentiment was further emphasised by Semia Gharbi, Chairperson & Co-Founder, Association de l’Education Environnementale pour les Futures Générations, who stated that the article on health in the Chair’s text was deleted in the current version.

“We have to remind our delegates that we must protect the environment. With a growing plastic crisis, we cannot ignore science,” said Gharbi. 

SiPeng Wong  of C4 Center in Malaysia stated, “If we don’t control the amount of waste being produced, it will end up exported to my country and region. In Southeast Asia, the volume of waste that reaches our backyard is unmanageable”. SiPeng  noted that Malaysia alone receives over 415 million kg of waste from Global North countries.

“Without reducing the generation of waste, we will end up having to manage it”. 

Dr. Larisa de Orbe of Acción Ecológica México expressed that plastic pollution already exceeded the limits of what people and nature can handle.

“Our government must negotiate free from industry pressure in order to truly safeguard the health and well-being of current and future generations,” Orbe said. 

During the briefing, Member State representatives addressed questions about the role of Global South leadership in the treaty process. They were asked whether the critical priorities of the Global South were reflected in the Chair’s latest draft text, their reactions to it, and how civil society can support efforts to uphold ambitious commitments.

Responding to the question, a delegate from Fiji, Dr. Sivendra Michael, Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Environment and Climate Change, Fiji Government, said, “The last iteration of the text, which came out yesterday, we know is a serious regression from the UNEA Mandate 5/14 given to us as governments. We all agreed at UNEA 5 that we would address the full lifecycle of plastic.” 

Furthermore, he highlighted, “There are many metaphors that we use, but one is that we can’t continue mopping the floor without turning the tap. We need legally binding global measures to control production.”

A delegate from Ethiopia, Hiwot Hailu, Chief of Staff, Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia, Environmental Protection Authority, commented on the supportive role played by civil society within the INC-5.2, calling them the engine of our negotiating process. 

“We need civil society to continue to be a partner, providing pressure from the outside to ensure negotiations don’t lose sight of our shared goals, and to continue advocacy for a legally binding plastic treaty that protects people and our planet,” stated the delegate from Ethiopia. 

NAPE at 50: Calls for bold energy exploration, human capital investment

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The Nigerian Association of Petroleum Explorationists (NAPE) has called for deeper oil and gas exploration, innovation, and strategic investment in human capital as it marks its 50th anniversary.

Speaking during the Golden Jubilee celebration on Thursday, August 14, 2025, in Lagos, NAPE President, Mr. Johnbosco Uche, described the milestone as “a generational legacy of excellence”.

Johnbosco Uche
NAPE President, Mr. Johnbosco Uche

He urged the government, industry stakeholders, and young professionals to collaborate in unlocking Nigeria’s vast untapped energy resources.

NAPE was founded in August 1975 by 10 pioneering geoscientists, and has grown into Africa’s largest professional body of petroleum geoscientists and related disciplines.

Over five decades, the association has played a central role in shaping Nigeria’s oil and gas landscape.

Highlighting NAPE’s legacy, Uche noted the association’s influence in establishing the marginal field bid framework, which paved the way for indigenous operators in the industry.

He also pointed to members’ involvement in nearly every major hydrocarbon discovery in the Niger Delta.

He added that NAPE had contributed to petroleum education through its University Assistance Programme and consistently shaped industry discourse via its annual conferences.

“What began with 10 men has become a legacy that spans boardrooms, drill sites, and classrooms,” Uche said.

Looking ahead, Uche stressed the critical role of natural gas in Nigeria’s energy future, calling it a “transitional fuel” amid global energy shifts.

“With an estimated 600 trillion cubic feet of untapped gas, he emphasised the need for deliberate exploration and sustainable development.

“Gas exploration must become intentional. This is the time to go deeper and think smarter,” he said, urging the government to create attractive fiscal and regulatory incentives.

He also advocated a return to “the basics of exploration” – emphasing high-quality seismic data, digital transformation, and adoption of technologies such as AI and machine learning.

Uche highlighted the sector’s aging workforce and called for structured efforts to groom the next generation of professionals.

He proposed robust internship schemes, mentorship programmes, sabbaticals, and the establishment of new centres of excellence for petroleum studies in both northern and southern Nigeria.

“Human capital is our most precious reservoir – it must be developed intentionally,” he said.

The NAPE president pledged to enhance the association’s role in shaping national energy policy.

“Our members are not just professionals, they are nation-builders,” he said.

Uche made a rallying call for unity and forward-thinking action across the industry.

“Let the next 50 years be built on this legacy – with boldness, wisdom, and collaboration,” he said.

Also speaking at the event, Commission Chief Executive of the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC), Mr. Gbenga Komolafe, highlighted vast opportunities in new frontier basins.

He said this included onshore, shallow water, and deep offshore blocks, bolstered by Nigeria’s new licensing round regime.

He outlined transformative prospects in natural gas development, LNG projects, floating LNG (FLNG), and compressed natural gas (CNG) infrastructure, all aimed at boosting export capacity and enhancing domestic supply.

“Hydrocarbons still account for nearly 90 per cent of Nigeria’s foreign exchange and 70 per cent of government revenue, but the long-term sustainability of the sector lies in aligning growth with climate responsibility,” Komolafe said.

He reiterated the nation’s gas-centric transition strategy, anchored by key initiatives such as “The Decade of Gas: The Nigerian Gas Flare Commercialisation Programme (NGFCP) and The Presidential CNG Initiative”.

These programmes, he said, aim to eliminate routine gas flaring by 2030, and cut methane emissions by 60 per cent  by 2031.

Komolafe stated that Nigeria’s gas reserves, currently the largest in Africa at 210.54 trillion cubic feet,provide a springboard to become a global energy hub.

He said Nigeria also holds 37.28 billion barrels of crude oil and produces approximately 1.8 million barrels of oil and eight billion standard cubic feet of gas daily.

“Our ambition is to increase production to three million barrels of oil and 12 billion cubic feet of gas per day,” he said.

Achieving this, he explained, will require sustained investment in frontier exploration, mature field development, and critical infrastructure to support a growing population and industrial needs.

Komolafe said NUPRC was implementing a robust Upstream Decarbonisation Framework and Blueprint.

He said this included emissions monitoring, carbon capture and storage, and access to climate finance through carbon markets.

“We are developing a carbon services ecosystem – comprising monitoring technologies, advisory services, and deployment tools – while ensuring environmental and asset integrity,” he said.

On a continental level, Komolafe emphasised regional collaboration through the African Petroleum Regulatory Forum (AFRIPERF), which promotes regulatory harmonisation, cross-border financing, and energy infrastructure interoperability.

He said that NUPRC was also working with the Africa Energy Bank to channel transition capital into high-impact projects across the continent.

Komolafe reported strong investor interest, with Nigeria’s rig count rising from eight in 2021 to 43 presently, with projections to hit 50 by year-end.

“This momentum signals a bold new chapter for Nigeria – one defined by resilience, ambition, and opportunity,” said.

NUPRC unveils strategies to boost oil sector

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The Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC) has flagged inefficiencies and overlapping regulations as major obstacles to growth in Nigeria’s upstream oil and gas sector.

Other challenges are opaque fiscal structures and weak investor confidence.

Gbenga Komolafe
Gbenga Komolafe, the Chief Executive of NUPRC

NUPRC Chief Executive, Mr. Gbenga Komolafe, outlined these challenges at the Nigerian Association of Petroleum Explorationists (NAPE) golden jubilee lecture on Thursday, August 14, 2025, in Lagos.

Komolafe spoke on: “Evolution of Oil and Gas Regulation in Nigeria: Opportunities, Achievements, and Regulatory Strategies for Upstream Resource Optimisation”.

He said that lengthy approvals and uncompetitive regulations hinder resource exploitation.

He traced sector development to the Petroleum Act of 1969, which initially provided structure but became outdated over the decades.

This, he said, changed with the 2021 Petroleum Industry Act (PIA), which brought new governance, fiscal reforms, and institutional realignment.

According to him, the PIA shifted Nigeria from static regulation to dynamic, investor-focused governance anchored on transparency and global competitiveness.

The Act also created NUPRC as a forward-thinking regulator tasked with positioning Nigeria as a world-class upstream oil and gas jurisdiction.

Komolafe commended NAPE at 50, describing it as a pillar of geoscientific excellence and a vital bridge between academia, government, and the energy sector.

The anniversary theme, ‘NAPE @ 50: Pioneering the Future of Energy in Africa,’ reflects a drive to build a resilient and innovative energy future.

Under his leadership, NUPRC has issued 19 PIA-aligned regulations, matching global standards and fostering a stable environment for investors.

He said the Commission has also launched a Regulatory Action Plan (RAP) within its 2023–2033 Strategic Plan to remove bottlenecks and speed up licensing.

The RAP seeks to regain Nigeria’s upstream investment share, which fell from 44 per cent in 2014 to 30 per cent in 2022.

Komolafe noted that NUPRC has integrated data intelligence and digital tools into upstream operations to boost efficiency and investment decisions.

He said the revitalised National Data Repository—Africa’s largest petroleum data bank—offers high-quality geoscientific data, advanced seismic analysis, and improved exploration de-risking.

Recent bid rounds, including the 57 Petroleum Prospecting Licences in 2022 and the 2024 Licensing Round, were marked by transparency and competitiveness.

“Fiscal reforms, such as competitive royalties and tax incentives, have further enhanced project viability,” Komolafe added.

Through the Project One Million Barrels Initiative, launched in 2024, Nigeria targets raising output from 1.46 million to 2.5 million barrels per day by 2026.

Current production, he noted, averages between 1.7 million and 1.83 million barrels per day.

Security measures include approving 37 new evacuation routes and partnering with security agencies to curb crude theft.

The Domestic Crude Supply Obligation policy ensures steady refinery feedstock, strengthening domestic supply chains and resilience.

On development, Komolafe said the Host Community Development Trust, managed via the HostComply platform, promotes transparency and reduces conflicts in host communities.

He added that NUPRC’s digital transformation aims to streamline regulation, enhance investor clarity, and deliver smarter, faster oversight. 

Lagos engages stakeholders on pilot PPP for water corporation

The Lagos State Government has convened a stakeholders’ engagement on a pilot Public-Private Partnership (PPP) initiative for the Lagos Water Corporation (LWC), to explore innovative and technology-driven approach to improving water service delivery.

The meeting with the theme, “Attracting Investment for Improved Water Supply in Lagos State through Public-Private Partnership,” was held on Thursday, August 14, 2025, in Lagos.

Lagos Water Corporation (LWC)
Dignitaries at the stakeholders’ engagement on a pilot Public-Private Partnership (PPP) initiative for the Lagos Water Corporation (LWC)

The two-day event was organised by the LWC with the support of WaterAid Nigeria.

Speaking at the event, the Special Adviser, Ministry for the Environment and Water Resources, Mr. Rotimi Akodu, described the initiative as a critical step in addressing the state’s growing water demand, driven by rapid urbanisation and population growth.

Akodu said the initiative reflected the state’s recognition that achieving universal access to potable water required both substantial capital investment and operational efficiency-elements that could be enhanced through strategic PPP.

The Permanent Secretary, Office of Drainage Services and Water Resources, Mr. Mahamood Adegbite, noted that the state had made commendable progress in expanding water infrastructure.

Adegbite, however, said the scale of current challenges, from aging facilities to the impact of climate change, demands innovative partnerships that prioritise sustainability, resilience, and accountability.

According to him, the government’s vision is clear – to guarantee uninterrupted access to clean and safe water for all Lagosians.

He added that the partnership model would ensure enhanced  infrastructure to serve future generations.

“We urge stakeholders to support and embrace this new structure for the greater good of our citizens,” Adegbite said.

Also, the Permanent Secretary, Office of Environmntal Services, Dr Omobolaji Gaji, said that shortage in funding and reduction in foreign supports had made it compelling for the governments to be innovative in funding the water sector.

“Therefore, there is no better time to partner with the private sector to bring in funding and to improve water services than now,” Gaji said.

Speaking at the event, the Managing Director of Lagos Water Corporation, Mr. Mukhtaar Tijani, reiterated the government’s vision to transform the water sector into a modern, efficient, and sustainable system.

Tijani said the government envisioned a system capable of meeting the current and future needs of residents, supporting economic growth, and aligning with global best practices in water resource management.

He noted that the PPP framework offered a unique opportunity to combine public oversight with private sector innovation, operational efficiency, and investment capacity, to boost production, reduce water losses, and ensure efficient distribution to underserved communities.

According to him,  the PPP initiative is not an attempt to privatise water resources, but rather a strategic collaboration to improve service quality, expand coverage, and ensure the financial viability of operations.

“The decision to pilot the model through selected mini and micro waterworks is guided by the need to leverage private sector expertise, innovation, and funding,” he said.

Reeling out the overview of the Pilot Public-Private Partnership for the LWC, Tijani described the initiative as a crucial step in the state’s broader strategy to modernise public utilities, safeguard public health, and stimulate economic growth.

He assured the state’s committed to transparent procurement processes and robust regulatory oversight to safeguard public interest and foster a commercially attractive investment climate.

He commended WaterAid Nigeria for its commitment to supporting the Lagos Water Corporation to improve urban water supply in Lagos State.

In her remarks, the Country Director of WaterAid Nigeria, Evelyn Mere, called on the government to scale up the Akilo water scheme management model that is aimed at achieving sustainable urban water supply.

Mere said that PPP remained a feasible panacea to improve urban water supply in Lagos to ensure residents have access to affordable and quality potable water.

She commended Gov. Babajide Sanwo-Olu for assenting to the WASH policy in February 2024.

She dsclosed that Akilo waterworks, which is being rehabilitated by WaterAid Nigeria, would be inaugurated in September.

The country director charged  the state government to use Akilo as a model to resuscitate others.

Stakeholders at the meeting lauded the state government’s strategic drive to provide essential water resources and its openness in involving communities and private partners in decision-making.

By Fabian Ekeruche and Olaitan Idris

Stakeholder engagement on PPP in water sector is against wishes of Lagosians – CSOs

A coalition of water justice organisations has taken a swipe at the management of the Lagos Water Corporation (LWC) on its planned stakeholder engagement on the pilot Public Private Partnership (PPP) in the water sector.

A statement signed by the Managing Director of the LWC, Muktaar Tijani, and dated August 8, 2025, had stated that the event which has a theme: “Attracting Investments for Improved Water Supply in Lagos through Public Private Partnership”, intends to create awareness and gather support for the sustainability of the initiative.

Mukhtaar Tijani
Managing Director of the Lagos Water Corporation (LWC), Muktaar Tijani

In response to the announcement, three civil society organisations – the Renevlyn Development Initiative (RDI), the Environmental Defenders Network (EDEN) and the Citizens Free Service Forum (CFSF) – said that the engagement rides against the popular opinion expressed by Lagos citizens who have firmly rejected privatisation in any form and want public sector solutions to the water challenges in the state. 

The groups particularly frowned at what they described as “the stubborn push for privatisation of Lagos water resources” built with public funds, at a time that countries that experimented with the privatisation of water are remunicipalizing. 

RDI Executive Director, Philip Jakpor, said: “We have stated time and again that the major challenge militating against access to water in Lagos is the unwillingness of the state government to listen to popular opinion which has rejected privatisation and firmly supports public sector solutions to the Lagos water crisis. 

“The so-called stakeholder engagement being planned by the management of LWC is not a gathering of the real stakeholders who reject the attempt of the Lagos government to be stampeded into accepting a new form of colonialism “

EDEN Executive Director, Barrister Chima Williams, said: “By coming up with the so-called stakeholder engagement to endorse the PPP plan in the water sector it would seem that the Lagos State Government is stubbornly determined to push through privatisation despite glaring evidence of the failure of water privatisation across the globe including in the UK which the Lagos government used to cite as a model of successful water privatisation.” 

CFSF Executive Director, Comrade Sani Baba said: “It is disturbing that the LWC is not sensitive to the implications of pressing ahead with the planned privatisation of utilities built with public funds. It is adding insult to injury to want labour and civil society to endorse the handover of such utilities to for profit only entities. It is unacceptable.” 

The groups said the stakeholder engagement is a one-way discussion with predetermined outcomes hence Lagosians should not expect anything meaningful from it. 

They insisted that the solution to the Lagos water crisis is for the Lagos government to jetisson privatisation and instead prioritise sustainable funding of the water sector and for expertise, adopt the Public Public Partnership (PuP) which has worked in other parts of the world.

Oil subsidy removal freed up resources for infrastructure – Enugu gov 

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The Executive Governor of Enugu State, Peter Mbah, has attributed the financing of numerous infrastructure projects embarked by the state government to the oil subsidy removal policy of the President Bola Ahmed Tinubu administration.

He made this declaration at the Government House, Enugu, during a courtesy visit by a delegation of federal government led by Minister of Information and National Orientation, Mohammed Idris, as part of activities lined up for the two-day Citizens’ Engagement Series in the South East geo-political zone, on Thursday, August 14, 2025.

Peter Mbah
Gov Peter Mbah of Enugu State

“For us in Enugu, we are able to accomplish all we promised our people during the campaign, thanks to the bold decision taken by President Bola Tinubu, which has freed up resources needed to execute humongous capital projects,” said the Governor, while listing ongoing projects in the state, which include the construction of 7,000 classrooms, 3,300 hospital beds and 2,000-hectare of 260 farm estates across the 260 wards of the state.

Governor Mbah also pledged more support for the policies of the federal government, saying they are in the best interest of the people of the state.

Speaking, Mohammed Idris said that  in Nigeria’s march towards development and prosperity, no region will be left behind.

“The Tinubu administration is committed to ensuring that no region is left behind in Nigeria’s development drive,” said the Minister, adding, “What we are seeing in Enugu – modern roads, upgraded schools, improved public facilities, is proof that President Tinubu’s policies are translating into real benefits for the people.”

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