Environment
Study Team Tasks FG On Environment
The Nigeria Environmental Study Team, Ibadan, has advised the Federal Government to take environmental problems seriously as climate change has the capacity to negatively affect all aspects of national life.
The Executive Director of the team, Prof. Chinedum Nwajiuba, gave the advice in an interview with newsmen in Abuja.
He said that “we have lived too carelessly“ in spite of the threat posed by the Lake Chad and desertification problems in the country.
“The environmental issues are very serious in Nigeria.
“We have lived too carelessly but our country is unique in the sense that while some countries might have coastal challenges and not have desert challenges, we have all (of them).
“We have the Lake Chad problem, we have desertification problem, we have the coastal and Island communities being swallowed.
“Nearly every problem you talk about when it comes to climate change is represented and is happening in this country.
“We cannot continue to live as if we are living in the Stone Age; we live in knowledge-driven age.’’
The executive director, however, expressed satisfaction with the interest President Muhammadu Buhari had shown in the state of the environment.
“For the first time, we heard a Nigerian President at inauguration, talk on environmental issues, specifically climate change.
“I was very excited to hear the President of Nigeria in his inaugural speech talk about climate change.
“I said ‘wow that is something; may be something is going to happen this year‘.
“We need to continue to rescue and enlighten, and to let people in power understand that the problem is real; that it is affecting everybody.
“It has consequences on health; it has consequences on transportation; it has consequences on communications; it has consequences on agriculture, poverty, nutrition, everything.’’
Nwajiuba urged Nigeria to show commitment to tackling the environmental problems in the country by making funds available to roll back the desert, set up the Green Wall and take steps to save coastal communities from being consumed.
He advised Nigeria not to depend too much on donor agencies such as the United Nations Development Programme for financing of projects designed to protect the environment.
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