Opinion
Saving Niger Delta Environment
Rivers State with its peculiar geographical terrain and resources base, coupled with the trend of developmental requirements, have been severely subjected to untold environmental problems ranging from land resource degradation, environmental pollution and renewable resource degradation.
It has therefore become rather very necessary to educate Rivers people of “The Environment and the Quality of Life” in commemoration of the “World Environment Day” celebration which comes up on 5th of June, of every successive year.
This year’s World Environment Day entitled “THINK-EAT-SAVE …. “ is to reflect the need for each and everyone of us to recognise our role in preserving our fragile planet; the ecosystem and proper management of food items.
The quality of good life depends on a large measure on how man reacts to his natural environment and we cannot destroy one without diminishing the other. We shall get some insight into this assumption by trying to answer the question.
How far do we Rivers people care about our environment and what is the quality of the life of the average Rivers man?
We acknowledge the fact that the answers to the above question would be varied and majority perception and approach to it, may not be very definitive.
However, our responses to this “poser” would be based on long term observation and interaction with a number of experts whom we presume should know. The first portion of the “poser” i.e.; How far do Rivers people care about their environment … ? We would want to submit that Rivers people from inception of Dr. Peter Odili’ s administration, have done quite well to consider environmental protection and preservation as a matter of priority.
This is understandable in the transformation of the then Rivers State Environmental Protection Agency to a full-fledged Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources in July, 1999.
The Ministry of Environment by virtue of its operational guide-lines then, was charged with responsibilities to:
* Protect, Conserve and Develop the environment and biodiversity of the State’s natural resources on a sustainable basis.
* Prepare a state environmental policy, standards and guide-lines for sustainability .
* Develop and encourage environmental technology and researches .
* Control pollution, flood and erosion, and solid waste management.
* Develop an efficient forestry and natural resources base for Rivers State
In accordance with these responsibilities, the Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources under the pioneer Commissioner, Hon. Pawariso Horsfall, facilitated the first “green book” for the state. The Green Book was the Environmental Standards and Guide-lines aimed at providing monitoring criteria on all facets of the State’s environment.
It is important to note that the Ministry then also acquired Differential Geographical Positioning System (DGPS), for sensitivity index mapping and environmental data base gathering. With regards to the second aspect of the “Poser”, the average Rivers man like his counterparts elsewhere in the world with similar resource base is presently burdened with the pressure of survival. Rivers people are so saddled with the dire consequences of poverty and fear, that scant attention is paid to treating the environment with desired respect. Most procedures attached to the average Rivers man’s system of private sector earning degrades the environment.
For instance, forests and farm-lands are denuded, rivers are over fished and contaminated by oil exploration operations, garbage can be found in most open places in and around local and urban cities. Our land-use-system is criminal to say the least.
Infact, one can go on cataloguing evidence of Rivers people’s disregard for the environment. If we accept that our people do not show enough concern for the already endangered Niger Delta environment, we can then begin to examine how this wrong attitude has affected the quality of life we live.
The problems that have lowered the quality of life of Rivers people is not entirely due to environmental degradation though, sizeable proportion of them allied to the issue. The life expectancy of Rivers people is considerably shortened by the rapid rate at which we allow to “pollute” the air, contaminate the water, kill the wild-life, and defoliate the landscape.
Rivers people already have the “technical skills” to halt destructive trends and to place their economics on a sustainable footing. It is not the knowledge and scientific research per say, but the political and economic factors, that will determine whether or not the wisdom accumulating in our laboratories and libraries will be put into practice.
This year’s World Environment Day tagged “THINK-EAT-SA VE” is indeed a reminder that the earth with all its complex, interlocking ecosystems, is the foundation of our lives.
Every animal and plant species known and unknown has its place, role and function, deserving of protection just as a family protects all its members. This is the role envisioned for us Rivers people in this year’s World Environment Day, whose main focus is specifically, to draw attention of all Rivers people to minimize wastages of food production, processing, preservation and consumption where applicable. It should be noted that a lot of resources go into production, processing and preservation of food before it is finally consumed.
According to the food and Agricultural Organization (FaA), every year, about 1.3 billion tonnes of food is lost or wasted. This is equivalent to the same amount produced in the whole of sub-Saharan Africa. At same time.in every one out of seven people in the world go to bed hungry and more than twenty-thousand children under the age of five die daily from hunger. If the scarce food is wasted for whatever reason, it means the resource used in producing these 1.3 billion tonnes of food is also wasted.
Therefore what is required of us now is a fundamental change in the way we meet our needs and a re-assessment of what those needs really are … why do we eat what we eat? When do we eat what we eat? How do we manage what we eat?
Government alone cannot do the job of protecting the environment. We need every individual citizen, communities, the business world to help ensure a strong environmental protection system. In conclusion, may I stress that sustainability is in every body’s interest. One in every two activities in biodiversity depends directly on the sustainability of the environment. The Ministry of Environment in the present dispensation is hereby advised to ensure adequate development of an efficient forestry and natural resources base for Rivers State. It is also a sincere appeal that Government should put in place adequate preservation systems including power generation to conserve and preserve likely food wastage where applicable.
Tonye Fuayefika – Writes from Port Harcourt.
Tonye Fuayefika
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