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Group describes UK’s withdrawal from Mozambique LNG funding as ‘a blow to African energy justice’

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The African Energy Chamber condemns the UK’s withdrawal of $1.15 billion from Mozambique Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG), highlighting how Western climate agendas undermine Africa’s urgent need for energy security and economic growth

The UK government’s recent decision to withdraw $1.15 billion in support from the TotalEnergies-led Mozambique LNG project is a concerning example of Western policy priorities undermining Africa’s development. Announced on Monday, December 1, 2025, the decision comes at a moment when global energy markets face unprecedented pressure. Yet, the UK appears more focused on ideological signaling rather than practical solutions to persistent energy poverty.

Mozambique
President Daniel Chapo of Mozambique

The Mozambique LNG project is far more than another fossil fuel venture. It represents a transformative opportunity for the continent, with the potential to deliver 13 million tons of LNG annually – powering industries, fueling domestic growth and supporting economic development in a region where millions still live without reliable electricity.

By withdrawing support, the UK has chosen to prioritise its green and “woke” agenda over African progress, focusing on counting emissions rather than taking into consideration African energy poverty and the need to prioritise energy security, affordability and sovereignty.

Security challenges in northern Cabo Delgado forced TotalEnergies to suspend operations in 2021. Since then, improved conditions have allowed the company to lift the suspension and resume planning, contingent on government approval for a revised development roadmap. Rather than recognize this progress, UK Export Finance cited ‘risks’ as justification for withdrawal – a rationale that reflects priorities driven more by political optics than by Africa’s urgent energy needs.

The same risk has been evaluated by the US, with the US Export-Import Bank moving to reapprove a loan earlier in 2025 in recognition of the improved situation on the ground. The decision to withdraw financing reflects a broader trend by the UK to follow an anti-fossil fuels agenda, one that has already put North Sea production in great decline.

The African Energy Chamber (AEC) condemns the decision to withdraw, deeming the decision as not only a setback for Mozambique but for the entire continent. The withdrawal undermines African energy security, industrial ambitions and efforts to lift millions from energy poverty. This pattern has repeated across the continent: projects delayed or blocked, investments withheld, all justified in the name of climate or security concerns, while energy poverty persists.

Africa does not need moral instruction on climate from nations that consume energy at levels far beyond the continent’s needs. What is essential are partnerships that respect African priorities, timelines and the sovereign right to develop sustainably.

“Withdrawing support from Mozambique LNG is a betrayal of Africa’s right to energy security and a slap in the face of progress for the continent’s millions living without reliable power. This moment should serve as a call to action: it serves as a stark reminder that Africa’s energy future cannot rely solely on foreign financing or conditional support.

Mozambique LNG, and projects like it across the continent, must be championed by Africans for Africans, with a focus on responsible development, job creation and the eradication of energy poverty,” states NJ Ayuk, Executive Chairman of the AEC.

The Mozambique LNG project highlights what African energy development should look like: ambitious, transformative and responsible. Gas‑liquefaction projects in Cabo Delgado are expected to create at least 10,000 direct jobs by 2025, focusing on local populations and supporting young graduates with SME development. Construction of the Mozambique LNG facility alone has been estimated to create around 5,000 jobs.

Beyond employment, LNG production and exports have already generated rising government revenues – with state LNG‑related earnings increasing by over 20% last year. Once fully operational and supported by stable financing, Mozambique LNG could deliver the energy, revenue and human capital needed to power industry, boost public services and lift communities out of energy poverty.

Africa is rich in natural resources – including its 620 trillion cubic feet of natural gas – yet these resources are too often treated by Western governments as tools of influence rather than drivers of growth. The UK’s withdrawal underscores the urgent need for Africa to develop independent financing mechanisms, attract investors who respect its priorities and strengthen regional cooperation to protect critical energy projects.

Mozambique LNG exemplifies how African energy development can create jobs, drive industrial growth and reinforce economic sovereignty. Energy security cannot be dictated by shifting foreign political priorities. Led by Africans with a focus on responsible development, projects like Mozambique LNG can deliver tangible benefits, empower communities and help eradicate energy poverty across the continent.

Surge in gas production and Africa’s path to economic transformation

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If African nations can collectively support upstream scalability, midstream connectivity, and downstream certainty, gas production will not merely surge – it will transform the entire continent for the better, writes NJ Ayuk, Executive Chairman, African Energy Chamber

Natural gas will be a pivotal component of Africa’s energy future as it is uniquely poised for growth despite the move toward a surplus liquefied natural gas (LNG) supply in the global gas cycle.

Tanzania LNG
Tanzania Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) project

As detailed in the African Energy Chamber’s 2026 Outlook Report, “The State of African Energy,” African demand for gas is forecast to rise 60% by 2050. In fact, gas is the only fossil fuel expected to expand its share of primary energy demand globally. Furthermore, as North Africa’s dominance in the sector diminishes, the report expects sub-Saharan Africa to drive this gas surge as the region holds over 70% of the continent’s remaining recoverable resources.

Export revenues and domestic use are the two avenues down which Africa will find the transformative benefits that gas offers, but actually getting there depends on successfully navigating infrastructure gaps, pricing disputes, and the transition from associated to non-associated gas.

The Next Gas Epicentre

Two-thirds of gas production on the continent takes place in North Africa with Algeria, Egypt, and Libya holding the top spots as leading producers with high gas penetration in their own power mixes. However, we expect North Africa’s share of total continental production to decrease to below 40% by 2035 as output from other regional producers accelerates. While sub-Saharan production currently accounts for the remaining third of current gross output, the region will dominate future growth.

With the 2021 launch of its “Decade of Gas,” a government initiative to develop gas resources and aid in the transition to cleaner energy, Nigeria will likely lead this expansion, as it already produces more than half of the region’s commercialised gas. Emerging producers like Mozambique, Tanzania, Senegal, Mauritania, and Angola are set to follow. Notably, Mozambique’s Coral Sul project, Senegal-Mauritania’s Greater Tortue project, and Congo LNG have all added new export streams since 2022.

Our 2026 Outlook Report also forecasts that total African gross gas demand will have climbed steadily from roughly 55 billion cubic metres (Bcm) per year in 2020 to over 90 Bcm by 2050. Residential, industrial, and other power sectors are anticipated to drive the growth.

With sub-Saharan Africa holding more than 400 trillion cubic feet (Tcf) of recoverable gas resources, which amount to 70% of the continent’s total reserves, the region is poised to meet that demand.

Also, unlike North Africa’s mature, pipeline-linked markets, sub-Saharan gas is increasingly non-associated or “dry,” meaning it is not found alongside crude oil in reserves. While non-associated gas is more expensive per million British thermal unit (MMBtu), the fact that it is not cross-subsidised by oil essentially frees it from the operational and pricing constraints of oil-centric projects, making the gas available to new domestic, regional, or export pathways to monetisation.

Transformative Avenues: Exports and Domestic Industrialisation

As our report explains, gas development can transform host government economies through two primary channels: exports and in-country value creation.

Exports: Last year, Africa supplied 34.7 million metric tonnes (MMt) of LNG (8.5% of the global supply). Sub-Saharan volumes in 2024 reached 26.9 MMt, with 60% destined for Asia and 25% for Europe. Adding Tanzania to the export roster, the 2026 Outlook Report projects a quadrupling of the sub-Saharan supply by 2050.

Furthermore, as west and southwest African LNG producers are in proximity to both Atlantic and Indian Ocean markets, producers in these regions specifically can function as swing suppliers, taking advantage of fluctuations in European and Asian LNG spot prices or global supply disruptions.

Also, where gas export projects have domestic market obligations (DMOs), like in Nigeria, Senegal-Mauritania, Angola, and Cameroon, growth in exports grows the gas supply for domestic use. For example, Senegal has plans of achieving 3 gigawatts (GW) of gas-fired power by 2050, largely fed by DMOs from the Greater Tortue LNG project and the Yakaar-Teranga LNG project.

Domestic Monetisation and Industrialisation: In addition to the revenue collected from exports, gas can empower a producing nation by fueling transport, powering industry, and electrifying homes all within its borders.

Although only a few sub-Saharan countries currently have power mixes that include gas, generation from natural gas has shown a steady increase across the region over the last decade. As detailed in our report, Nigeria’s gas-fired capacity is at 12.6 GW, and installations in Ghana and Mozambique are at 2.9 GW and 1.1 GW, respectively. Tanzania, Senegal, Angola, Côte d’Ivoire, and South Africa are also home to smaller gas power plants. In countries such as Senegal and Ghana, that have coastal demand centers, floating power ships operating on natural gas are in place to satisfy demand.

What’s more, Nigeria, South Africa, Senegal, Angola, Ghana, Tanzania, and Mozambique all have stated ambitions of developing or furthering gas-to-power infrastructure. Our report also sees a coming increase in demand for gas-derived products such as fertilisers and petrochemicals, as well as for implementation in industrial applications like metals processing.

Angola’s recently approved National Gas Plan targets these sectors with a focus on curbing import reliance, while Nigeria’s push for compressed natural gas (CNG) vehicles under the 2020 National Gas Expansion Programme officially commenced in March 2022. These are just two examples of how sub-Saharan Africa’s gas sector is poised to deliver an economic one-two punch through exports and in-country monetisation that would enable nations to cut down on imports, grow their revenues, and provide energy access to their people for decades to come.

Challenges to Realising Africa’s Gas Potential

Africa holds both abundant gas resources and significant unrealised potential. In fact, Africa ranks second in the world behind only Russia for discovered yet undeveloped gas resources. In two examples, the Rovuma basin, off the coasts of southern Tanzania and northern Mozambique, holds 129 Tcf, and the Niger Delta basin along the Nigerian coast holds 113 Tcf, but these basins remain largely untapped.

There are numerous obstacles between Africa’s current position and the economic transformation that gas development could deliver. Our 2026 Outlook Report identifies four essential success factors that Africa must manage if it is to navigate those obstacles: upstream economics, market access and offtake, adequate infrastructure, and country risk/fiscal terms.

As international majors have been known to exit discoveries due to a lack of integration of these factors, support from governments and regulators is critical to finding alignment between them.

Upstream Economics: Currently, over 50% of sub-Saharan production is tied to associated gas, which carries very low production costs. This has contributed heavily to regional gas sector expansion as seen in Nigeria and Angola. By contrast, non-associated gas – though not constrained by oil production rates, enhanced oil recovery reinjection requirements, or oil price fluctuations – demands a competitive dollar-per-MMBtu price to justify future investment and infrastructure development.

Market Access and Offtake: To ensure transparent pricing, adequate returns, and reliable long-term demand all while maximising domestic benefits, success with this factor will require long-term contracts with creditworthy offtakers (buyers held to specified purchase amounts through long-term agreements), predictable consumption patterns, and government-backed incentives that encourage producers to sell and consumers to buy.

Adequate Infrastructure: Linking supply hubs to demand centres requires LNG facilities and pipelines. With this factor, the “chicken-and-egg paradox” emerges: Investors who can provide the necessary infrastructure expect guaranteed demand yet demand only grows once that infrastructure is in place. This dynamic is why governments must put in place predictable regulatory and pricing frameworks that attract investment while advancing national economic and energy priorities.

Country Risk and Fiscal Terms: To keep gas production projects attractive to investors, national governments must find the correct balance of royalties, production sharing terms, taxation, DMOs, and local content requirements. Governments must also align their export and domestic priorities to satisfy operator needs and achieve their own local supply or revenue ambitions. Maintaining overall political stability to ensure long-term investor confidence is another critical component of this success factor.

Seizing the Surplus

The 2026 Outlook frames gas as Africa’s bridge fuel: cleaner than coal or oil, versatile for power generation and industrial applications, and increasingly competitive as global prices decrease in the coming years.

Sub-Saharan Africa’s anticipated non-associated gas production surge can deliver energy security, export revenues, and new industrial jobs. Success in this effort will require a resolution of the infrastructure-demand paradox through reliable contracts, transparent pricing, and balanced fiscal policies.

If African nations can collectively support upstream scalability, midstream connectivity, and downstream certainty, gas production will not merely surge – it will transform the entire continent for the better.

Waste management: Lagos to acquire 500 tricycle compactors

The Lagos State Waste Management Agency (LAWMA) is to acquire 500 mobile tricycle compactors in 2026 to tackle the rising waste challenge in the state.

LAWMA’s Managing Director/Chief Executive Officer, Dr Muyiwa Gbadegesin, disclosed this at a media parley on Wednesday, December 3, 2025, in Lagos.

Gbadegesin said the mobile tricycle compactors already in hard-to-reach areas, such as Ibeju Lekki, would be extended to other parts of the state for effective waste management.

LAWMA
LAWMA

He said that Lagos State would need a minimum of 2,000 compactors to tackle the rising waste issue caused by humans and infrastructure challenges.

Gbadegesin said the state, comprising  four million households, generated between 13,000 and 15,000 tonnes of waste daily to be collected by 450 Private Sector Partnership (PSP) operators.

He disclosed that the PSP operators had the capacity to collect only between 4,000 tonnes and 5,000 tonnes daily out of the 13,000 tonnes generated daily.

“The balance is going into the drains, canals, lagoons and wetlands, among others.

“We have about 12 per cent of wetlands in Lagos, and people have been dumping waste on the wetlands,” he said.

Gbadegesin urged Lagos residents to embrace the state government’s waste-to-wealth initiative and avoid littering the environment with refuse.

According to the managing director, about 90 per cent of waste generated in the state has value.

He said that the state has a limited space to open up new landfill sites because of its aquatic nature.

Gbadegesin added that the state was moving from a linear waste management system to a proper waste management system.

“We are moving from a linear waste management system to a proper waste management system that is environmentally friendly and sustainable, in a way that waste is now seen as a resource.

“The quantum and the quantity of waste that will end up in the landfills will be to the barest minimum.

“The biggest issue right now in waste management is the infrastructure.

“When I talk of infrastructure, I am talking about the equipment and facilities that we will use to collect, transport, treat and dispose of the 13,000 tonnes of waste generated daily in the state.

“The infrastructure includes the whole logistics chain from the bins. Risk management begins from the containerisation, the households, business and the industry.

“We don’t have enough bins. Right now, we have 80,000 smart bins that we are rolling out, and we need a lot more.

“We have four million Lagos households,” he said.

He appealed to the residents to ensure regular payment of their bills to enable PSP operators to function more effectively.

Gbadegesin disclosed that 22 PSP operators had been axed and had their slots withdrawn and given to other companies for failure to discharge their duties effectively.

He said that LAWMA would continue to work with local government chairmen to ensure a cleaner Lagos.

He called on the chairmen to take charge of their communities in terms of waste management and street trading.

By Chinyere Joel-Nwokeoma

NCDMB emerges best agency in Ease of Doing Business for fourth year

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The Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB) has won the Presidential Enabling Business Environment Council (PEBEC) Transparency and Efficiency Champion Award for the fourth consecutive year. The Board topped the Ease of Doing Business rankings in 2022, 2023, 2024, and 2025.

The award was presented on December 2, 2025, at the State House in Abuja. Executive Secretary, Felix Omatsola Ogbe, was represented by Acting Director, Monitoring and Evaluation, Mr. Omomehin Ajimijaye, who highlighted the Board’s alignment with policy reforms and commitment to management goals.

The recognition reportedly underscores the Board’s operational excellence, teamwork, and consistent engagement with partners and industry stakeholders. It reflects NCDMB’s focus on efficiency, transparency, and quality service delivery.

NCDMB
NCDMB’s Acting Director, Monitoring and Evaluation, Mr. Omomehin Ajimijaye, recieved that award on behalf of the Executive Secretary, Felix Omatsola Ogbe

The PEBEC Awards and Gala Night celebrated public service reforms. The event was chaired by Vice President, Senator Kashim Shettima, while PEBEC Director General, Princess Zarah Audu, commended the Board for automating processes to minimize human interference, urging other agencies to adopt similar approaches.

The Board also received the Reform Champion Award, presented to Cityfaith Baribor Zorasi for exceptional performance as NCDMB’s liaison to PEBEC.

NCDMB says it remains committed to strengthening service delivery and institutional performance, advancing local industry growth under the NOGICD Act of 2010, and raising standards in the years ahead.

“The Board thanks PEBEC for the recognition and appreciates its staff for their dedication and hard work. Congratulations to the entire NCDMB team,” stated the organisation.

Southeast Asia: A call for resilient recovery in the wake of climate disasters

The United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-Habitat) has expressed its profound sorrow and solidarity with the governments and people affected by the catastrophic flooding and landslides triggered by the convergence of tropical cyclones Senyar and Ditwah.

UN-Habitat calls on all partners and humanitarian actors to support life-saving activities to prevent more losses and support vulnerable affected communities, while appreciating ongoing efforts by people, communities, governments and international humanitarian organisations.

The cyclonic events that have affected several countries in South and Southeast Asia have severely impacted cities and human settlements, homes, infrastructure, and livelihoods in Indonesia, Sri Lanka, Thailand, and Malaysia.

Southeast Asia
Flooding in Southeast Asia

The staggering toll of the twin cyclones

The scale of this disaster is staggering and calls for a unified and robust response rooted in climate resilience and sustainable urban recovery. Preliminary reports indicate a heavy humanitarian toll, with nearly 1,000 lives lost across the region.

In Indonesia, Northern Sumatra was severely affected, with over 500 fatalities and many more people missing as of December 1, 2025. Large-scale deforestation worsened the impact, triggering landslides that swept debris into residential areas. More than 1.4 million residents have been affected.

Sri Lanka is experiencing its worst flooding in two decades, with over 1.3 million people affected and more than 360 confirmed dead and many more still missing as of 2 December 2025. The cyclone damaged critical infrastructure across the entire island, rendering many cities inaccessible due to damage to roads and rail networks. Power outages and damage to communication infrastructure are affecting multiple communities, including the most vulnerable.

In Thailand, floodwaters reached up to 2.5 meters in Hat Yai, a major economic hub, causing daily trade losses estimated at nearly $47 million. The southern floods have killed 170 people and injured more than 100 others, with numbers expected to rise.

In Malaysia, although the number of evacuees has decreased, 14,040 flood victims from 4,518 families remained displaced across 8 states as of December 1, 2025.

Beyond the immediate loss of life, the storms have forced hundreds of thousands of people from their homes into emergency shelters. Critical urban and rural infrastructure – including roads, bridges and communication networks – has been severely compromised, cutting off aid access to vulnerable and often informal settlements. These dynamics worsen the already critical global housing crisis affecting almost 3 billion people globally.

Resilient settlements and urban planning

These climate-induced disasters are a stark reminder of the extreme vulnerability of the region’s unplanned and rapidly growing cities and towns to the intensifying impacts of the climate crisis. Informal settlements and slums remain the most vulnerable. For UN-Habitat, the most urgent concern is the devastation to the housing sector, which usually makes up around 80 per cent of the infrastructure in cities and provides access to basic services and safety.

Thousands of housing units have been destroyed or severely damaged, underscoring the need to always integrate disaster risk reduction and climate adaptation strategies into all settlement planning, both urban and rural, and policy frameworks, building resilience.

Building back better

As the immediate life-saving efforts are made, focus should, gradually, intensify towards the principles of building back better. UN-Habitat believes in building the foundations for a sustainable and resilient development right from the emergency phase. We have seen in many urban disasters, that “temporary shelters” become de-facto permanent, adding future vulnerability to the already high-risk areas in fragile landscapes and cities. The poor and vulnerable communities suffer the most and cannot quickly recover after such disasters.

UN-Habitat, therefore, has activated its emergency protocols and is preparing to deploy technical expertise to Sri Lanka in support of national and local authorities in three priority areas essential for urban recovery and resilience building:

  1. Resilient housing and basic services: Providing technical support for community-driven housing reconstruction and basic service recovery that incorporates climate-resilient designs and promotes the use of sustainable, locally available and appropriate materials.
  2. Risk-informed spatial planning: Supporting the integration of climate risk mapping and disaster risk reduction measures into urban and regional planning, avoiding risk prone areas and guiding safe land-use and settlement development.
  3. Strengthening tenure security: Assisting local authorities to use recovery efforts as an opportunity to formalise land tenure for vulnerable families, enabling secure investment in permanent and resilient housing.

The road to recovery and resilience building requires sustained commitment and significant resources. UN-Habitat urges the international community, development partners, and financial institutions to stand in solidarity with the affected countries and contribute to a resilient response and sustainable reconstruction efforts ensuring resilient housing solutions.

UN-Habitat reaffirms its commitment to supporting the governments and people of the affected countries as they rebuild their homes and create stronger, safer, and more resilient communities.

Global urban population far higher than reported, UN data show

The United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN DESA) has released the World Urbanisation Prospects 2025, presenting a clearer global picture of where people live and how settlements are changing. For the first time, the report uses the Degree of Urbanisation (DEGURBA) – a harmonised, geospatial method for classifying cities, towns and rural areas.

The new approach shows that the world is considerably more urban than national statistics indicate. According to DEGURBA, 81 per cent of the global population lives in cities and towns, compared to 58 per cent under conventional national definitions. The report also confirms that most population growth through 2050 will occur in cities, with towns absorbing much of the remainder.

Urban centre
Urban centre

“This edition of WUP is transformative,” said Anacláudia Rossbach, Executive Director of UN-Habitat. “It gives us unprecedented clarity on the realities of human settlements, from large metropolitan regions to fast-growing secondary towns.”

The integration of DEGURBA – developed by the European Commission and endorsed by the UN Statistical Commission with UN-Habitat’s support – also reveals that many settlements functioning as towns remain labelled “rural” in national statistics, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa and in Central and Southern Asia. The report highlights that built-up areas have expanded almost twice as fast as population since 1975, underscoring risks linked to unplanned growth and land conversion.

UN-Habitat has supported countries in adopting DEGURBA since 2018, helping national statistical offices use the method for SDG 11 monitoring, urban policy development and geospatial data systems. More than 100 countries have engaged in global and regional workshops, with direct technical assistance provided to 17 countries.

“These findings reinforce the need for well-planned, inclusive cities and towns, especially in Africa and Asia,” Rossbach said. “The world is more urban than we thought – which makes it even more urgent to tackle the global housing crisis now. How countries manage rapid urban growth will shape progress on the SDGs and climate resilience.”

The 2025 findings strengthen the case for integrated territorial planning, improved urban–rural linkages and better use of geospatial and statistical data – priorities central to UN-Habitat’s mandate and essential for implementing SDG 11 and the New Urban Agenda.

Akwa Ibom ranked cleanest state in Nigeria for 2025 – Report

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Akwa Ibom has been ranked the cleanest state in Nigeria for 2025, with a accumulative score of 79 per cent, according to the State of the Nigerian Environment (STONE) Report 2025.

Mr. Ene Owoh, National Coordinator, Clean-Up Nigeria, said this in an interview in Abuja on Wednesday, December 3, 2025.

“Akwa Ibom won the STONE 2025 Unbroken Green Crystal award trophy and medal of service award for the 8th consecutive time, from 2018 to 2025.

Uyo
Uyo, Akwa Ibom State

Owoh, who is also the Secretary of the National Technical Study Group (NTSG), said that the results were arrived at during the State of the Nigerian Environment (STONE) Report 2025 Unbroken and the Cleanliness Performance Index Ratings of all states in Nigeria, held in Abuja.

“Ebonyi and Enugu states followed closely, ranking 2nd and 3rd place with 65 per cent and 56 per cent respectively.”

Owoh stated that the six geopolitical zones produced cleanliness champions namely: Akwa Ibom State (South-South) 79 per cent, and Enugu State (South-East) 65 per cent.

“Lagos State (South-West) 48 per cent, Bauchi State (North-East) 50 per cent, Plateau State (North-Central) 52 per cent, and Kaduna State (North-West) 35 per cent,” he said.

He revealed that the nine clean states are Akwa Ibom, Enugu, Ebonyi, Bauchi, Plateau, Cross River, Anambra, Lagos, and FCT.

Akwa Ibom
Stakeholders gathered in Abuja for the public presentation of the State of the Nigerian Environment Report (STONE 2025 UNBROKEN) and Cleanliness Performance Index Ratings for all Nigerian states

“The 15-member NTSG, led by Prof. Solomon Balogun, conducted the yearly study from November 2024 to November 2025.

“The study combined physical verification of all states and towns in Nigeria with a score point of 20 per cent and satellite imagery system that collects spectral data scoring 80 per cent monthly.

“The study used five variables namely: street/road cleanliness, vegetation and drainage control, waste management services, public opinion poll (POP), and knowledge, attitude, and practice (KAP) of hygiene and sanitation measures by the people.

“The report stated that in 2025, there was an 8 per cent performance in the procurement of waste management equipment by governments at all levels.

Owoh said that, however, the health of sanitation workers dropped from 31 per cent in 2024 to 28 per cent in 2025.

“The incidence of sanitation-related diseases increased to 43 per cent in 2025, against 29 per cent recorded in 2024.

“The hygiene and sanitation practice of the people dropped to 32 per cent in 2025, against 36 per cent recorded in 2024.

“Open defecation has reduced from 24 per cent in 2024 to 19 per cent in 2025, but Nigeria remains the second country with the highest open defecation rating globally.

“Notably, in 2025, out of Nigeria’s estimated 240 million population, 187.2 million people are living in unclean environments, based on satellite imagery data.

According to him, The STONE report states that the life expectancy of ordinary Nigerians has dropped from 50 years in 2024 to 47 years in 2025.

He therefore called on governments at all levels to increase funding for waste management services and urged citizens to prioritise hygiene and sanitation practices.

Owoh advocated for increased construction of public toilets to reduce open defecation and supported the establishment of health and environment clubs in schools nationwide to promote environmental awareness.

He expressed Clean-Up Nigeria’s willingness to partner with government and private sectors to improve cleanliness ratings nationwide.

He commended Sen. Oluremi Tinubu, the Wife of the President, for her green initiative project and urged the Tinubu administration to adopt a green environmental agenda, focusing on city and nature living, energy research, green economy, and resources management.

By Abigael Joshua

Over 2m rural Nigerians now have clean water – Utsev

Minister of Water Resources and Sanitation, Prof. Joseph Utsev, has said that over two million rural Nigerians now have access to clean and safe drinking water, following the completion of hundreds of government water-supply projects.

The minister made the announcement while delivering the keynote address at the Citizens and Stakeholders’ Engagement on the ministry’s achievements in Abuja on Wednesday, December 3, 2025.

He explained that 500 new installations, including solar-powered boreholes, storage tanks, reticulated pipelines, and water fetching points, have been constructed nationwide to improve rural livelihoods and sanitation.

Prof. Joseph Utsev
Prof. Joseph Utsev, Minister of Water Resources and Sanitation

Utsev noted that sanitation had also been strengthened under the Clean Nigeria Campaign, with 5,238 public sanitation facilities constructed and 162 Local Government Areas certified Open Defecation Free (ODF).

He said the ministry’s efforts were supported by UNICEF, the World Bank, and other development partners through the Sustainable Rural Water Supply and Sanitation (SURWASH) and the Partnership for Expanded Water Supply and Sanitation (PEWASH) programmes.

“These programmes provide sustainable Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) services across the country, benefiting millions of Nigerians.”

The minister added that two National Water Quality Reference Laboratories in Asaba and Umuahia have been completed to enhance water-quality monitoring nationwide.

Utsev emphasised that community engagement remains central to the ministry’s work, noting that Water Users’ Associations have been established across regions to empower farmers and ensure sustainable management of irrigation and WASH infrastructure.

On dams and hydropower, the minister explained that the Kashimbilla Multipurpose Dam and its 40-megawatt hydropower plant are fully operational, while the Gurara and Dadin Kowa Dams now contribute renewable energy to the national grid.

He reported that other dams under construction include Mangu Dam (90%) in Plateau, Adada Dam (78%) in Enugu, Ogbesse Dam (65%) in Ekiti, and Farin Ruwa Dam in Nasarawa.

“Smaller dams, including Irawo Earth Dam in Oyo and Otukpo Multipurpose Dam in Benue, along with the rehabilitation of Tiga, Challawa Gorge, and Ruwan Kanya reservoirs, are improving capacity and operational efficiency,” he said.

On irrigation, Utsev said the Dadin Kowa Scheme now provides 2,000 hectares of farmland to farmers in Gombe State, boosting productivity and livelihoods.

He reported that the Middle Rima Valley Project in Sokoto and Middle Ogun Project in Ogun are operational, using solar-powered sprinklers to reduce energy costs for farmers.

The minister added that small-scale renewable-energy irrigation projects in Gari (Jigawa), Ipapo (Oyo), and Duku-Lade (Kwara) have been completed, while additional schemes in Kebbi State are ongoing.

He said river basin development authorities now play a major role in national food security, revitalising dry-season farming schemes that benefit over 1.6 million farmers.

Utsev highlighted the maiden National Sanitation Conference, which brought together stakeholders, religious, and traditional leaders to develop strategies for eradicating open defecation.

He reaffirmed that water security, irrigation, renewable energy, and sanitation remain central to Nigeria’s vision for inclusive growth, public health, food security, and national prosperity.

The minister said, “Our government is committed to achieving Sustainable Development Goal 6, targeting universal access to clean water and sanitation by 2030.”

Earlier, the Permanent Secretary of the Ministry, Dr Emanso Umobong, said the Citizens and Stakeholders’ Engagement aims to strengthen accountability, transparency, and stakeholder inclusion.

She noted that the water and sanitation sector is central to public health, economic development, food security, and national well-being.

Umobong said the forum provides a platform for dialogue on sector performance, challenges, and collaboration.

“Close interaction with stakeholders is essential to obtain meaningful feedback and improve service delivery.

“The Ministry values all contributions, and outcomes of today’s session will help refine policies and enhance programme implementation,” she said.

She highlighted that citizen and stakeholder engagement was first anchored in Presidential Executive Order 12 of 2022, later amended by Executive Order 13 to strengthen coordination and accountability in implementing government priorities.

Umobong said ministries are required to hold at least one stakeholder engagement meeting every quarter, chaired by the Minister and supported by Permanent Secretaries, Directors, development partners, and civil society actors.

Highlights of the meeting included questions and feedback from partners on repositioning the Ministry and its agencies to align with its mandate and strengthen the water and sanitation sector.

By Tosin Kolade

Authors retract climate change study, will resubmit for peer review

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Following the publication of two critiques as “Matters Arising”, and in conversation with the journal Nature, the authors of the study “The economic commitment of climate change” at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) have retracted the paper. In response to the critiques, the authors undertook revisions to constructively address the issues raised.

Nature determined the changes exceeded those of a correction, so the authors will resubmit a new version of the paper for peer review.  A revised analysis, including data and methodology, was made open access in August 2025 for the wider scientific community to engage with, though the authors emphasise that this has not yet undergone peer review.

Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research
The Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK)

The revised analysis shows economic damages from climate change till mid-century are substantial and outweigh the costs of mitigation, they are mainly driven by temperature changes and affect regions with low incomes and low historical emissions most.

The authors and PIK take full responsibility for the original oversight which has led to the retraction. The authors would like to thank Thomas Bearpark, Dylan Hogan, Solomon Hsiang and Christof Schötz for bringing the issues to their attention. By resubmitting a new version of the paper, they hope to contribute to the further development of this important field.

PIK is one of the leading research institutions addressing relevant questions in the fields of global change, climate impacts and sustainable development.

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Intensified cyclones, floods expose urgent need for climate action in Indonesia, Southeast Asia

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Unusually heavy rains have triggered deadly flooding across Indonesia’s Sumatra Island, affecting 3.2 million people and causing more than 700 deaths, with over 500 still missing.

These floods are part of a wider regional crisis linked to Cyclone Senyar which struck Indonesia, Thailand, and Malaysia and Cyclone Ditwah, which hit Sri Lanka. Together, these extreme weather events have resulted in over 1,300 deaths across Southeast Asia as of December 3, 2025.

Thailand’s Hat Yai province recorded its highest rainfall in 300 years, while Cyclone Senyar formed in the typically calm Malacca Strait an event experts consider “rare” due to the lack of rotational force near the equator. Scientists warn that such anomalies are becoming more common as warmer ocean temperatures supercharge storms and intensify rainfall.

Indonesia Flood
Residential houses damaged by flash floods in Meureudu, Pidie Jaya district Indonesia’s Aceh province. Photo credit: CHAIDEER MAHYUDDIN / AFP/Chaideer MAHYUDDIN / AFP

Sisilia Nurmala Dewi, 350.org Indonesia Team Lead, said: “With human-induced climate change intensifying storms and deforestation destroying our capacity to cope with climate impacts, this is a man-made disaster. The Indonesian government has mismanaged the environment by failing to protect our forests and allowing continued fossil fuel use.

“World leaders including President Prabowo of Indoneisa need to confront climate change by addressing its root cause: burning fossil fuels and clearing forests. While the President has made public statements about phasing out coal and shifting to renewable energy, this has not been reflected in actual policy.

“Rich countries and big polluters must pay their climate debt now, not in the future, because lives are being lost now. Fossil fuel, mining, and palm oil companies that have profited from destroying our environment must pay up for loss and damage. Communities must be provided what they’re owed to rebuild from disaster and be protected from future harm. The money for a better future exists – it’s just in the wrong hands.

Climate disaster victims are also becoming increasingly aware that polluters and their own governments are accountable for these clearly preventable tragedies. As the citizen lawsuit initiated by Bali’s flood victims shows, people are rising up and taking climate justice to court.” 

The UN World Meteorological Organisation has raised alarms over rising extreme rainfall across Asian nations, including Indonesia, the Philippines, Sri Lanka, Thailand, and Vietnam. A recent attribution study by the Grantham Institute confirms that human-induced climate change has intensified both wind speeds and rainfall in recent typhoons, adding to the urgency for decisive climate action.

Rescue operations in Sumatra have been severely impeded by blocked roads, broken bridges, and thick mud conditions typical of rural and mountainous areas hit hardest by climate disasters. These compounded challenges illustrate how the most vulnerable communities are the least likely to receive timely assistance, deepening the injustices they already face despite having contributed least to the climate crisis.

Environmental degradation has further amplified the disaster. Driven by mining, logging, and palm oil industries, Sumatra has lost 4.4 million hectares of forest in the last two decades an area larger than Switzerland, leaving landscapes more prone to landslides and floods.

During a visit to flood-hit North Sumatra, President Prabowo Subianto acknowledged climate change as a challenge Indonesians “must confront.” However, his statements continue to frame climate change as a natural phenomenon rather than the man-made crisis it is, driven by fossil fuel combustion and deforestation. Indonesia’s own climate policies remain heavily reliant on fossil fuels and fail to protect forests, despite public claims of transitioning to renewable energy.

At COP30, nations pledged to triple adaptation finance but provided no concrete dollar commitment and delayed the goal to 2035. Observers believe that, for vulnerable communities already losing lives and livelihoods, this delay is unacceptable. They insist that rich countries and major polluters must pay what they owe now, not in the future.

Communities across Indonesia are demanding accountability. Survivors of September’s deadly floods in Bali, supported by 350.org organisers, are preparing a climate lawsuit against the Indonesian government for failing to prevent the disaster, citing the International Court of Justice advisory opinion affirming governments’ responsibilities to protect citizens from climate harm.