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Global warming, bumpy rides and green flights

Experts have warned that jet streams intensified by global warming will increase the frequency of turbulence on transatlantic flights by 50 percent.

Emirates Airline’s Boeing 777-300ER Jet

Flights encountering air turbulence will double and the average strength of turbulence will also increase 10 percent to 40 percent,” says Paul Williams, a Royal Society research fellow at the University of Reading.

“Turbulence causes more than bumpy flights,” says Manoj Joshi, lecturer on climate dynamics at the University of East Anglia in Norwich, England. “It can potentially cause injuries and even airplane damage in extreme cases.”

Airlines pay tens of millions of dollars in damages caused by turbulence every year, state Joshi and Williams in their report published recently and titled: “Intensification of Winter Transatlantic Aviation Turbulence in Response to Climate Change.”

Turbulence is caused by several factors, including atmospheric pressure, jet streams, mountain waves, cold and warm fronts and thunderstorms.

It can strike when the sky seems clear. In fact, the clear-air turbulence is the most dangerous because it is undetectable and usually encountered at the higher flight levels utilised by airliners.

Passengers who have experienced it often say the aircraft hit an “air pocket” or it “suddenly dropped”. As the aircraft moves up and down, passengers experience rapid changes in vertical acceleration, creating the dropping sensation. Most injuries are caused by air turbulence and happen when passengers are not wearing seat belts.

Williams says airlines can avoid turbulence by choosing a different route, but it will affect travel time. Longer travel time will also mean greater fuel consumption. Greater fuel consumption will lead to higher carbon dioxide emissions, which will contribute to global warming.

He adds that more fuel also means “higher costs for the airlines that can probably also lead to higher fares.”

The researchers used a climate model to study the jet streams at their peak strength during winter over the North Atlantic Ocean. They chose to focus on this area because of its heavy flight traffic, with over 600 transatlantic crossings daily.

“In the future, we will also study other regions,” says Williams. “Jet streams are expected to be stronger and will probably affect Pacific flights as well.”

On the other hand, airlines seem to be taking their destinies into their own hands by investing in measures to become environment-friendly, by curbing fuel use as well as carbon emission.

For instance, Emirates Airline has described its Dubai-San Francisco flight as the longest green journey.

The airline said it worked closely with government agencies in Dubai, Russia, Iceland, Canada, the United States and other countries to plot what it calls “the most environmentally-sophisticated route and trip possible to help save an estimated 2,000 gallons of fuel and 30,000 pounds of carbon emissions on the 16-hour non-stop service.”

The Dubai to San Francisco cross-polar flight

The firm prefers the Boeing 777-300ER jet to the massive, two-level Airbus A380 jetliner to service the route, believed to be part of the airline’s multi-billion-dollar investment in economic and environmental efficiencies.

Rather than fly horizontally around the globe, the over 8,000-mile, cross-polar journey instead adopts an innovative flight path that takes the aircraft vertically and northward towards and over the North Pole onto the other side of the world, downwards to the western end of the US where San Francisco (and other cities like LA) is located.

Flight path across the North Pole

Departure route out of Dubai provides an unimpeded climb through to cruise altitude, allowing the plane to reach optimum cruise altitude as quickly and efficiently as possible.

Negotiations with the Russian government allows for a preferred route over Russian and Canadian airspace for the most efficient path, taking into account prevailing winds and the aircraft’s weight.

Picture of polar ice sheets taken from the aircraft’s downward camera as it flies over the polar region

Real time updates of current weather and wind conditions will allow the flight crew to modify their flight path enroute, say officials of Emirates.

Also, Boeing says that its 787 Dreamliner aircraft uses 20 percent less fuel than similarly sized planes.

The outfit describes the Dreamliner “as a super-efficient airplane with unmatched fuel efficiency reported. Advances in engine technology as well as the aircraft’s design and build process were the biggest contributor to the 787’s fuel efficiency improvements, Boeing says.

For example, manufacturing a one-piece fuselage section eliminated 1,500 aluminum sheets and 40,000 – 50,000 fasteners. Also, composite materials make up 50 percent of the primary structure of the aircraft including the fuselage and wing.

Airbus says it continues to work on quieter and more fuel efficient jetliners, describing its A380 as a benchmark for fuel efficiency and low noise levels, and such new-generation jetliners as the A350 XWB will push this envelope even further. With 25 per cent less fuel consumption than current-generation aircraft, the A350 XWB, the company adds, is designed to be eco-efficient from gate-to-gate, providing the long-range market’s leading environmental performance.

Similarly, a solar-powered airplane that developers hope eventually to pilot around the world has landed safely in Phoenix, Arizona, USA on the first leg of an attempt to fly across the United States using only the sun’s energy, project organisers said.

The plane, dubbed the “Solar Impulse,” took 18 hours and 18 minutes to reach Phoenix on the slow-speed flight, completing the first of five legs with planned stops in Dallas, St. Louis and Washington on the way to a final stop in New York.

The Solar Impulse in flight

The spindly-looking plane barely hummed as it took off Friday morning from Moffett Field, a joint civil-military airport near San Francisco.

It landed in predawn darkness at Sky Harbor International Airport in Phoenix, according to a statement on the Solar Impulse’s website.

The flight crew plans pauses at each stop to wait for favourable weather. It hopes to reach John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York in about two months.

Swiss pilots and co-founders of the project, Bertrand Piccard and Andre Borschberg, will take turns flying the plane, built with a single-seat cockpit. Piccard was at the controls for the first flight to Arizona.

The lightweight carbon fibre Solar Impulse has a wingspan of a jumbo jet and the weight of a small car and from a distance resembles a giant floating insect.

The plane was designed for flights of up to 24 hours at a time and is a test model for a more advanced aircraft the team plans to build to circumnavigate the globe in 2015. It made its first intercontinental flight, from Spain to Morocco, last June.

The aircraft is propelled by energy collected from 12,000 solar cells built into the wings that simultaneously recharge four large batteries with a storage capacity equivalent to a Tesla electric car that allow it to fly after dark.

The lightweight design and wingspan allow the plane to conserve energy, but make it vulnerable. It cannot fly in strong wind, fog, rain or clouds.

The plane can climb to 28,000 feet and flies at an average of 43 miles per hour (69 km per hour).

The project began in 2003 with a 10-year budget of 90 million Euros ($112 million) and has involved engineers from Swiss escalator maker Schindler and research aid from Belgian chemicals group Solvay.

 

By Michael Simire (with Agency Reports)

Lokoja, others partner UN-Habitat on City Resilience Profiling Programme

The United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-Habitat) has announced plans to partner with Lokoja in Nigeria and nine other cities for its City Resilience Profiling Programme (CRPP).

Lokoja, during the 2012 flooding

Working through partnerships with stakeholders including international agencies such as UNISDR, academic and research institutes, private sector actors, and NGOs, the CRPP will develop a comprehensive and integrated urban planning and management approach for profiling and monitoring the resilience of any city, to all plausible hazards.

The tools and guidelines developed under the Programme will be tested and refined in: Balangoda (Sri Lanka), Barcelona (Spain), Beirut (Lebanon), Dagupan (Philippines), Dar es Salaam (Tanzania), Lokoja (Nigeria), Portmore (Jamaica), Concepcion/Talcahuano (Chile), Tehran (Iran), and Wellington (New Zealand). The cities were selected based on the proposals submitted to UN-Habitat against its call for proposals in November 2012, and represent a good balance of geographical and economic distribution, population size, hazard profiles, and commitment to the resilience agenda.

Executive Director, Dr. Joan Clos, welcomes the partnership with all 10 city governments, and looks forward to achieving mutual goals of; reducing loss of lives and assets, protecting development gains, and ensuring continuity of public and private services through any potential crises impacting cities throughout the world.

“UN-Habitat is also grateful for the contributions by the City of Barcelona which includes hosting the office of the secretariat of the Programme. Furthermore, UN-Habitat highly appreciates the speech made at the Governing Council of UN-Habitat by Mr. Yosuke Wakabayashi, Deputy Director-General, National and Regional Policy Bureau, Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism of the Government of Japan “to support this Programme by sharing its rich experience, knowledge and technologies in disaster risk reduction field”. UN-Habitat encourages support for the balance of the programme funding from other donor partners,” he says.

Partner city profiles:

Balangoda (Sri Lanka): Located in southern Sri Lanka, the city has a population of 23,220, and is mainly prone to landslides and floods due to recurrent cyclones. The city recently established a unit within its city council for disaster risk reduction and climate change adaptation.

Barcelona (Spain): Barcelona is one of the major cities in Europe with a strong commitment to building urban resilience with its Urban Resilience Board for Infrastructure and Services Supply to counter the impact of various types of crises and to strengthen infrastructures and services supply capacities.

Beirut (Lebanon): Beirut is the capital and largest city of Lebanon. The estimates of Beirut’s population range from as low as 938,940 to less than two million. It is a coastal city and prone to earthquakes and associated tsunamis. The City is highly committed to building disaster risk management with the collaboration of the National Government. Currently Beirut city is preparing its disaster response plan and assessing the impact of its major potential disaster to enhance further its resilience.

Dagupan (Philippines): A city with over 163,000 citizens with a multi-hazard profile of earthquakes, floods, cyclones, tsunami, among others. The city has established a full-time unit in charge of disaster preparedness, response, recovery and mitigation.

Dar es Salaam (Tanzania): One of the largest cities in Africa with roughly 5 million inhabitants, prone to recurrent floods. The city is now developing a Disaster Risk Resilient Strategic Plan to address all potential hazards.

Lokoja (Nigeria): A rapidly urbanizing city with a population of over 500,000, experiencing a huge flood in 2012, and several residential areas in vulnerable, low-lying neighborhoods in the city.

Portmore (Jamaica): A city with approximately 250,000 inhabitants, prone to hurricanes, sea surge, floods and earthquakes. The city has developed a Disaster Preparedness Programme in 2004 to cope with the recurrent hurricanes in the region.

Concepción/Talcahuano (Chile): Concepción and Talcahuano are part of the greater metropolitan area of the Bio Bio Region, located in the south central coast of Chile. They were both struck in 2010 by an 8.8 catastrophic earthquake and subsequent tsunami. The “Talcahuano 2020” plan encompasses its views and strategies on reconstruction.

Tehran (Iran): Tehran has experienced 4 major earthquakes of over Magnitude 5 since the 1960s and established the Tehran Disaster Mitigation and Management Organization, winning the Sasakawa International Award for Disaster Reduction.

Wellington (New Zealand): Surrounded by sea and intersected by two major tectonic plates, Wellington is exposed to a wide range of hazards – from earthquakes to floods, to landslides and storm surges. The city has been conducting extensive research and education programmes and a significant expenditure has been committed for mitigating disaster impacts.

Linking Boko Haram to climate change, shrinking Lake Chad

Congregation of the People of Tradition for Proselytism and Jihad (Jamā’a Ahl al-sunnah li-da’wa wa al-jihād), better known by its Hausa name Boko Haram (“Western education is sinful“), is a jihadistmilitant organisation based in the northeast of Nigeria. It is an Islamist movement which strongly opposes man-made laws and westernisation.

Founded by Mohammed Yusuf in 2001, the organisation seeks to establish sharia law in the country. The group is also known for attacking christians and bombing mosques and churches.

The movement is divided into three factions. In 2011, Boko Haram was responsible for at least 450 killings in Nigeria. It was also reported that they had been responsible for over 620 deaths over the first six months of 2012. Since its founding in 2001, the jihadists have been responsible for between 3,000 to 10,000 deaths.

The group became known internationally following sectarian violence in Nigeria in July 2009, which left over 1,000 people dead. It appears as if they do not have a clear structure or evident chain of command. Moreover, it is still a matter of debate whether Boko Haram has links to terror outfits outside Nigeria and its fighters have frequently clashed with the Federal Government. A US commander stated that Boko Haram is likely linked to Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), although professor Paul Lubeck points out that no evidence is presented for any claims of material international support.

Expectedly, the group has been severally criticized, even though government has decided to grant amnesty to its members. President Goodluck Jonathan has inaugurated a panel to that effect.

Dr Mu’azu Babangida Aliyu, the Niger State governor, has criticised the group, saying, “Islam is known to be a religion of peace and does not accept violence and crime in any form” and Boko Haram doesn’t represent Islam.

The Sultan of Sokoto Sa’adu Abubakar, the spiritual leader of Nigerian Muslims, has called the sect “anti-Islamic”.

The Coalition of Muslim Clerics in Nigeria (CMCN) has called on the Boko Haram to disarm and embrace peace.

The Islamic Circle of North America, the Islamic Supreme Council of Canada, the Muslim Council of Britain, the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation and the Council on American Islamic Relations have all condemned the group.

But the National Security Adviser, Col .Sambo Dasuki (rtd), introduced an entirely new dimension to the discussion. Last Tuesday, he attributed the increase in kidnappings, activities of Boko Haram and other criminal acts across the country to climate change.

Speaking on the recurring Fulani herdsmen’s attack on villages in several parts of Nigeria, he recommended the establishment of National Grazing Routes by the country as a sure means of ending the crisis between herdsmen and farmers, which often result to heavy casualties.

Dasuki stated this when he appeared before the House Committee on Climate Change. The NSA was represented by five senior officials from his office, led by the Special Adviser on Economic Intelligence, Prof. Soji Adelaja.

Responding to a question from a member of the committee, Kingsley Chinda, on whether Boko Haram, restiveness in the Niger Delta, kidnappings in the South East and myriads of cases of violence and killings across the country had anything to do with the climate change, Nyam stated that there was a connection between the current state of insecurity and climate change, which he said is affecting the economy base of almost everyone.

He explained that the rising sea level in the Niger Delta and the problem with Lake Chad have forced young people out of job in the Niger Delta and Borno axis resulting in their involvement in crimes.

He said: “In the state of joblessness, the youth can easily be forced into crime”.

On the recurring clashes between herdsmen and farmers in several states, Adelaja described the situation as disturbing.

He disclosed that President Goodluck Jonathan, in an attempt to find a lasting solution to the problem, recently held a meeting with governors, where he (Jonathan) canvassed for a grazing route to be approved by governors, to ease the problem.

The governors, he said, did not buy the idea and therefore, turned down the President’s proposal.

He solicited the cooperation of the National Assembly in helping to formulate legislation for the establishment of National Grazing Route, describing the measure as the most effective way of addressing the problem.

Chairman of the Committee, Eziuche Ubani, accused the Federal Government of not attaching the desired seriousness to the challenge posed by climate change.

He re-echoed Nyam’s stand, saying that there is indeed a link between the changing weather situation to the current insecurity in the country, urging Jonathan to give more ear to issues concerning climate change.

He also tasked the Federal Government to quickly come up with workable ways of addressing the recurring loss of lives as a result of clashes between herdsmen and farmers.

He assured that the House of Representatives would be ready to work with the executive and other stakeholders to come up with legislations, if need be, to address the problem.

Smallholder farmers and climate extremes

Basil Oru, a migrant farmer in Igbe, Ikorodu in Lagos, frowns at the rising temperatures, along with the irregular rainfall pattern he claims is affecting farm yield and threatening his source of livelihood.

He complains that, just as it has been the trend in recent years, the rain is late in coming and thus delaying the planting of certain crops whose cultivation coincides with the advent of the rainy season. The ripening of crops cultivated several months ago is also being affected, he says, adds.

As a way out, he discloses, he deals more in plantain cultivation, which he claims is resistant to harsh weather conditions. To complement this, he stresses, he has shifted the farming site to swampy land, apparently because the soil there is still laden with moisture despite the drought condition upland on the conventional farmland.

Louisa Ono, a Lagos-based single mother of two children, ventured into rice faming under the Lagos State Ministry of Agriculture & Cooperatives’ “Rice for Job Project” and was allocated one hectare of land to do the farming at Udena in Ogun State. She brought in experienced farm workers from Edo State to till the ground while she diligently applied the herbicides, fertiliser and weeding at the directed time.

Suddenly, the rains were nowhere to be found and drought set in and the rice got blistered and led to an appalling harvest. The almost N300,000 she invested in the venture went down the drain as there was not a single grain of rice to show for her effort.

Several weeks later however, Oru’s prayers were heard as the rains came, albeit intermittently. But, days later, on a Sunday, the rain that day was unprecedented. It started at about 5.00am and poured continuously all through the day in torrents. Rather than rejoicing for what he has prayed for, Oru is instead lamenting.

“A lot of the cassava I planted in March that is to be harvested in about 10-12 months’ time have become rotten due to too much water as a result of the flood that affected my farm. About one hectare and half of cassava farmland is affected,” he groans, continuing:

“I am desperately trying to save over 100 plantain tress affected by flood, as the leaves are getting discoloured. I am currently creating a channel to drain away the flood water here.”

But Ono’s plight seems worse off. She resides in a rented three-bedroom bungalow at Orisha in Magodo, which the rain has now rendered inhabitable.

She recalls that, after struggling to get home from church with her kids, she could not believe what confronted her.

“My compound is situated down a hill and the house up the hill directly behind my compound has this gigantic fence that we have always been critical of. With the intensity of the rain, the water from the top of the hill found openings at the sides of the fence, gushing out dangerously and digging chunks of sand that were falling close to my kitchen door and increasing the level of water to the kitchen steps. Suddenly, I heard an ear-deafening and heavy crash, smash, breaking of glasses and mad rush of muddy water that rose inside the living room. The concrete fence had fallen against the house, crushed the sand beneath it, and pillars of concrete crashed into the house, smashed the kitchen iron door where I was standing minutes before and breaking glass windows and pouring in mud, water and dirt.

“I rushed to my bedroom to see to my important documents and certificates; boxes, beddings clothing, and everything was covered in thick mud flowing everywhere. The rain continued and the flood continued from the kitchen whose door had been destroyed by the concrete pillars protruding inside the house with iron rods and chunks of the concrete all over the floor. It was terrible.”

Basil and Louisa are a typical example of what smallholder farmers experience regularly, in the face of an increasingly unpredictable and apparently changing global weather pattern. They have to eke out a living while struggling to adapt to the vagaries and extremes of the climate.

Environmental activist, Titilope Akosa, attributes the scenarios to extreme weather conditions as a result of global warming that, according to her, results in sea level rise, flooding, drought, storm surges, irregular rainfall pattern and rise in temperature in the state and beyond.

She says, “The current and potential impacts of climate change in Lagos indicate that the phenomenon will affect men and women differently and that climate change may likely exacerbate the existing gender inequality skewed against women. In Lagos, women constitute a significant proportion of people living below the poverty line; they constitute 41 percent compared to 59 percent men in formal public employment, they are under-represented in decision-making positions and make up majority of subsistence farmers lacking access to and control of critical resources such as land, water and agricultural extension services.

“Ono is a typical example of the case of women’s vulnerability to climate change, which is also touching other issues like parenting because her ability to properly take care of her kids is seriously in doubt as a result of her current poor financial situation.”

FG, Ondo commit $5m to UN-Habitat partnerships

The 24th Governing Council Meeting of the United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN Habitat) ended at the weekend in Nairobi Kenya, with the Federal Government of Nigeria and the Government of Ondo State, Nigeria, announcing contributions totaling $5 million to boost the work of the global city agency.

Minister of Lands, Housing and Urban Development, Ms Amal Pepple (left); with UN Habitat Executive Director, Dr. Joan Clos; and Ondo State Governor, Dr Olusegun Mimiko, at the UN Habitat Governing Council meeting in Nairobi, Kenya …last week.

The contribution comprises $3 million through the Federal Ministry of Lands, Housing and Urban Development aimed at research and strengthening UN-Habitat’s engagement with Habitat Agenda Partners and other non-governmental actors across sub-Saharan Africa.

A further $2 million from the Ondo State Government will be used to prepare a range of programmes including youth empowerment schemes, slum upgrading, local economic enterprises, and land reform in the State, Nigeria.

The new partnerships enhance Nigeria’s status among emerging economies supporting UN-Habitat with core funds. The continental initiative is aimed at mobilising and building the capacity of CSOs and non-governmental actors towards a New African Urban Agenda which focuses on transformational initiatives and governance, anchored on the core values of transparency and inclusiveness.

African countries have been actively engaged with the urban challenge over the past two decades. Following the African Union’s Decision 29 in 2003, African countries established the African Ministerial Conference on Housing and Urban Development (AMCHUD) in 2005, and have addressed themselves at national levels to the challenge of urban poverty, slums and access to land for development. This initiative is aimed to strengthen the second and third legs of the engagement with private sector firms and civil society actors as the continent prepares itself to benefit from urbanisation.

The New Urban Agenda recognises Africa as a rising continent which prosperity will be shaped by its cities as the drivers of growth, equity and sustainability. It is expected that the process will contribute to a shared vision for sustainable urban development.

The Ondo State initiative is coming on the heels of a N100 million partnership brokered between the State Government of Osun and UN Habitat in July last year, under which Structure Plans are being developed for nine cities in the state, namely: Oshogbo, Ile Ife, Ilesa, Iwo, Ede, Ejigbo, Ila Orangun, Ikire and Ikirun. Earlier partnerships had seen the completion of Structure Plans for three cities in Anambra State (Awka, Onitsha and Nnewi), as well as work nearing completion on Masterplans fpr four cities in Nasarawa State (Lafi, Doma, Keffi and Karu).

In Ondo Stae, the administration has risen to the urgency of governance and is addressing the needs of its people through programmes that touch and impact on peoples livelihoods. The Governor who is a winner of UN-Habitat’s Scroll of Honour pledged to further the recognition by aligning the State’s development priorities with the new vision of UN-habitat.

The official signing ceremony took place at the residence of the Permanent Representative of Nigeria to UN-Habitat and High Commissioner to Kenya Akintola Oyateru and was done by Ms Amal Pepple, the Honorable Minister of Lands, Housing and Urban Development who led the Nigeria delegation to the meeting and Dr Olusegun Mimiko, Governor of Ondo State of Nigeria. Un-Habitat Executive Director Dr. Joan Clos, signed on behalf of the agency.

In her remarks, Ms. Pepple said:  “The New Urban Agenda recognizes that Africa’s prosperity will be shaped by its cities as the drivers of growth, equity and sustainability. It is expected that the process will contribute to a shared vision for sustainable urban development”.

According to Governor Mimiko, “The collaboration between UN-Habitat and the Ondo State government that we are here to formalize today is to ensure that together we are able to transform our vision to reality in the areas of youth employment, urban economic development, urban infrastructure rehabilitation and better land reform management. To us, these areas are strategic and important for both individual development and improved state economic growth.”

Dr. Clos, while receiving the two contributions, was clearly happy by what he called “the energy and freshness brought in by Nigeria’s move”, and expressed hope that other countries in the global South will follow suit.

Africa’s biggest solar photovoltaic plant unveiled in Mauritania

Africa’s largest solar photovoltaic (PV) plant was launched last Thursday in Nouakchott, the capital of Islamic Republic of Mauritania.

Built by Abu Dhabi-based renewable energy specialist Masdar, the $32 million 15 megawatts (MW) scheme, which is the first utility-scale solar power installation in the country, will provide up to 10 percent of Mauritania’s power.

The plant consists of 29,826 micromorph thin-film panels and will be capable of displacing around 21,255 tons of carbon dioxide (CO2) a year. The PV modules were piled into the ground instead of using a concrete foundation, which reduced the project’s carbon footprint and cost.

Mauritania’s electrical grid, which is powered mostly by expensive diesel generators, currently has an installed capacity of only 144MW, resulting in severe energy shortages.

With energy demand increasing by 12 percent annually, the addition of solar power will help meet future electricity shortfalls and supply the energy demand of approximately 10,000 homes, Masdar said in a statement.

The International Renewable Energy Association (IRENA) also commended the inauguration of the new plant.

On his part, Mauritania’s President Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz at the inauguration said: ”This new solar power plant not only provides much-needed grid capacity for our people, it also proves that renewable energy can play a major role in the development of our country.”

Masdar’s CEO, Sultan Ahmed Al Jaber, said: “With energy demand expected to nearly double by 2030, renewable energy will play an increasingly important role, especially in countries where demand is rapidly outstripping supply.”

With strong solar and wind energy resources, Mauritania has the potential to derive a significant portion of its electricity capacity from sustainable and reliable sources of energy.

The launch of the newest solar energy is not the only attempt to explore Africa’s solar power potential. In 2012, UK firm Blue Energy said it would build a 115MW solar plant that could provide electricity to 100,000 homes in Ghana by 2015. Another of such project was launched in Egypt in March, to build a $1 billion 140MW solar plant that will address energy shortage in the country.

Observers believe that can take a similar step, in the light of its power supply challenges.

A source said: “Can you imagine that Nigeria can use a day’s oil sale (about $200 million) to generate 90MW from solar energy> If we just devote two weeks’ sale, the nation can generate 1350MW (about 1/3 of what we currently have). If this is distributed among the rural areas in non-grid fashion, can you imagine how many households will have electricity in the country?

“The money is not up to what our leaders are already using to fight for position and authority in 2015 within a framework of stupid politiking. All point to the fact that we are not serious as a nation.”

Living under the shadows of death

Due to the untidy and environmentally-unfriendly nature of mechanic villages – they are said to arbitrarily dispose discarded auto parts and waste oil – the authorities feel they deface the cityscape. But the idea of gathering automobile servicing technicians at specified locations has considerably contributed to the eradication of roadside practice.

In the 1980s, Oladipo Diya, then Governor of Ogun State, relocated mechanic villages within the Abeokuta metropolis. Similarly in Lagos, Governor Lateef Jakande allocated plots of land to the technicians within newly established mechanic villages at various locations in the state.

A few years ago, the Lagos State Government committed to establishing a Mechanic Village Environmental Management Committee towards ensuring that the existing villages are more meaningful, functional and effective. Government is likewise weighing the option of establishing more of such facilities.

Some of the mechanics at Ogba in Ikeja complain of the activities of land speculators, who they fear want to grab the land that was allocated to them and upon which they have been paying ground rent. The mechanics operate under the aegis of the Nigeria Automobile Technician Association (NATA).

Perhaps this development spurred some NATA members at the sprawling mechanic village located under high-tension power lines by the Low Cost Housing Estate (LCHE) at Oke-Afa, Isolo in Lagos, to take their destiny into their own hands. Overnight, they dumped their work overalls and became realtors.

A land allottee started by converting frontages and setbacks of his plot into shops. While some went further to sell the land, others chose the option of transforming theirs into dwelling units. A typical plot in the Oke-Afa mechanic village now features three different land uses: auto work, residential and commercial. Some even feature nursery and primary schools.

The rooms, measuring about three metres by three metres, are usually built against the fence. In most cases lacking cross ventilation, the home features an entrance door and a window. A makeshift, usually unroofed structure, serves as the bathroom and toilet.

A “landlord” begins with one or two rooms and gradually expands. Some units are designed as self-contained apartments. Some developers have built multi-storey residential – and fully occupied – structures on lands purchased from the mechanics.

One of the technicians fear that the development is threatening their source of livelihood as available space to practice the profession is shrinking. He says the trend started several years ago and intensified chiefly because the act is being perpetrated by senior colleagues who, ironically, were supposed to oppose it.

He attributes the spate of conversion to the fact that allocation per plot in the village was done individually and not to a team (a mechanic, panel beater, electrician and blacksmith), such that no one has the sole right over the parcel of land. But the reverse is the case and, contrary to regulations, the mechanics have resorted to erecting permanent structures on the land, even in the face of complaints by government.

According to an official of the Power Holding Company of Nigeria (PHCN), even though there is a guideline that stipulates that people should not erect any structure over a certain distance from power lines, they have refused to comply.

His words: “It is not our job to drive people away from under the lines. Whoever is giving them approval should please put a halt to it. If we erect lines where structures already exist, we pay the owners, but most people build illegally after we erect our lines. They have told us that state and local government officials do come to collect different forms of levy from them.”

A source close to the Lagos Physical Planning & Urban Development Ministry stresses that government only granted approval for citing of mechanic villages and horticultural gardens under high-tension power installations, but that permanent structures are not supposed to be there.

An occupier of one of such units discloses that whenever it rains, he perceives vibrations of electrical current passing through the wires. He admits he is aware of the danger involved in residing underneath the power lines, but that he has resorted to faith.

But experts have warned that people who live under or close to high voltage power lines risk health hazard as the radiation emanating from the facility is potentially carcinogenic, that is having the ability to induce the growth of cancerous cells.

A study conducted by the University of Lagos indicates that persons living in such locations may end up with acute lymphoblastic leukaemia or other forms of cancer because of constant high level exposure to power frequency field or power radiation.

“With about 33,000 volts of electric current flowing through high tension wire, a large electric current – a large electric field is created in the vicinity. If any electric conductor, such as iron rod, metal or wet bamboo is brought within the electric field, it will result in current flow due to difference in potential,” says an electrical engineer.

PHCN, state government and local council officials need to urgently take up the matter and take appropriate steps to effect a turnaround.

Nigeria sets standards for wood cooking stoves

The International Centre for Energy, Environment & Development (ICEED) in collaboration with Energy Commission of Nigeria (ECN), Standards Organisation of Nigeria (SON) and the Nigerian Alliance for Clean Cookstoves (NACC) have concluded  plans to set up national standards for wood burning stoves  in Nigeria. This was disclosed by Ewah Eleri, Executive Director of ICEED, during a workshop held recently in Abuja on clean cookstoves design, production and testing.

Ewah Eleri (Executive Director, ICEED) (left), Dr. Roseline Kela (representing the Director General, Energy Commission of Nigeria) and Babatunde Olaleke (of Shell Nigeria Gas Limited) during the workshop on “Taking Stock – Clean Cookstoves Design, Production and Testing in Nigeria,” in Abuja, recently

Eleri said, “Over 20 million households in Nigeria are dependent on the traditional use of fire wood for their daily cooking. As improved and efficient wood stoves come into the Nigerian market, we must ensure that these stoves demonstrate value for their users. Quality assurance in terms of smoke reduction, wood and cost savings are important in building market confidence for these stoves.”

According to observers, smoke from cooking fire causes 95,300 deaths in Nigeria. They add that poor families using three-stone fire spend much of the food budgets on buying wood and charcoal, while others spend hours collecting wood. They note that inefficiency in the combustion of wood raises the cost of cooking for the poor and contributes to deforestation, adding that enhancing efficiency in biomass energy use will address health, poverty and environment challenges and create a market of over N300 billion in new cooking stoves.

Eleri stressed that, today, an independent stove testing and certification facility for biomass stoves does not exist in Nigeria. “Progress towards modern stove design, production, standardisation and testing has been slow. There is lack of regulations and standards for stove manufacturers. The lack of standards and regulations also hinder stove manufacturers’ efforts to differentiate their stoves, and prevent consumers, investors and donors from making informed decisions,” he added.

According to Professor Eli Bala, Acting Director General of ECN, “the standardisation of the energy efficient cookstoves must be taken seriously in order to save our markets, homes and restaurants from being jampacked with quack and inefficient cooking appliances”.

In his remarks, the Director General of SON, Dr Joseph Odumodu, called for closer partnership with stakeholders in developing standards and building the capacity to test locally produced and imported stoves. According to him, “SON will not impose standards for woodstoves. National standards must be a product of close consultation and dialogue among key stakeholders.”

With support from the Global Alliance for Clean Cookstoves, ICEED is establishing the Nigerian Clean Cookstoves Design and Testing Centre at Afikpo, Ebonyi State. The centre will provide stove producers and users, and other relevant stakeholders the opportunity to confidently compare stove performance and safety.

In addition, it will provide a common set of terminology for wood stoves for easier understanding and communication; give stove producers, marketers and users assurance of product quality; let stove users know that they are making worthwhile investments; and drive innovation in the industry. The setting up of the centre will contribute to the Nigerian Alliance for Clean Cookstoves’s goals of 10 million clean cookstoves disseminated to Nigerian homes and institutions by 2020.

Study reveals high cost of degradation, drought

The global community is losing up to five percent of global agricultural gross domestic production (GDP) due to land degradation, according to a recent scientific study.

The study titled, “The Economics of Desertification, Land Degradation and Drought: Methodologies and Analysis for Decision-Making,” was presented during the UNCCD 2nd Scientific Conference which held last week in Bonn, Germany.

Halonen

Former President of Finland,Tarja Halonen; Luc Gnacadja, UNCCD Executive Secretary, and Walter Ammann, President, Global Risk Forum (GRF) Davos, addressed the opening session.

Over 600 hundred scientists and representatives of government, international and civil society organisations attended the conference.

It was organised by a consortium led by the GRF Davos, under the theme, “Economic assessment of desertification, sustainable land management and resilience of arid, semi-arid and dry sub-humid areas.”

Gnacadja

“Poverty eradication will still be the main goal of the international community. The trinity of green growth, social justice and global environmental boundaries should guide the work on Sustainable Development Goals for the post 2015 period,” said Tarja Halonen, former President of Finland and Chairman of the Global Sustainability Panel.

“Sustainable land management, prevention of land degradation and rehabilitation of land is a most effective and cost benefit way to eradicate rural poverty. Land will provide food, decent job and income to the rural people. Sustainable land management is also closely linked with availability of energy and water sources,” she stressed.

She said that the information presented to the 2nd Scientific Conference of UNCCD indicates that integration of sustainable land management as a central part in the development policies and international cooperation will be smart economics, contribute to better life in rural areas and mitigate the environmental challenges.

Ammann

According to Luc Gnacadja, “This is the first economic valuation of the cost of desertification and drought in over twenty years. It shows that desertification, land degradation and drought are key constraints to building social and environmental resilience, achieving global food security and delivering meaningful poverty reduction. Without action they will remain development’s Achilles Heel.”

“The study also points to significant opportunities for action but shows that unless scientific understanding of all land degradation and drought is strengthened, especially in the context of a changing climate, the global community is poorly positioned to deal with the impact of change. Business as usual is no longer an option,” he warned.

President GRF Davos, Walter Ammann, on his part declared: “Fertile soil is our most valuable non-renewable resource. It lays the foundation for life, feeding the billions populating of our planet. Nevertheless, each year an area three times the size of Switzerland is lost for good due to desertification. We are cutting off the branch we are sitting on! We need to move from Thoughts to Action now! This conference is an important step.”

The study shows that between 4-12 percent of Africa’s agricultural GDP is lost due to environmental degradation. The direct economic costs of land degradation at country level vary widely, with some as high as 6.6 percent of agricultural GDP in Paraguay, nine percent in Burkina Faso and 24 percent in Guatemala.

Thirst of a nation

Water is an essential resource for human existence and survival. Over the past century, the use of water has been growing at more than twice the rate of global population increase – a development which has raised diverse concern on man’s access to clean and portable water.

According to the World Water Assessment Programme (WWAP), 70 percent of the world’s freshwater  is used for irrigation, 20 percent for industrial productions  and 10 percent for domestic activities.

Water scarcity or lack of access to clean drinking water is one of the world’s leading problems affecting more than 780 million people globally, meaning that one in every eight people lacks access to safe drinking water.  In Africa, over 346 million people make up this global figure with Nigeria – 66 million, ranking first in Africa and third on the global list of countries with low access to clean water.

Apparently, access to clean and portable water is a daily challenge for most Nigerians. 66 million is sure a disturbing figure considering the country’s 160 million population and the 75 percent access to safe drinking water target of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), which Nigeria has only achieved up to 32 percent barely two years to the expiration of the MDGs framework. There is therefore the need to intensify action in the provision of clean and affordable water sources to the Nigerian populace.

From urban centres to rural settlements, the reality of an ever-changing climate is constantly driving man’s quest for more water, all for daily survival. This is worse off in developing countries – Nigeria inclusive, where little or no attention is given to the mitigating and adapting to the huge effects of global warming and climate change.

The problem of unsafe water consumption is particularly acute in the rural Northern Nigeria, where only about 30 percent of the population has access to safe drinking water and adequate sanitation. This situation leads to high prevalence of waterborne diseases, threat to the livelihoods of smallholder farmers and contributes to low levels of school enrollment, especially among girls.

Dirty water is the world’s greatest single killer. Yearly, over 3.4 million people die from water, sanitation and hygiene-related diseases. Every hour, 200 children die of water-borne and related diseases globally. Half of the world’s hospital beds are filled with people suffering from water related illnesses. What more can we say? Water is life, yet it is killing us.

Water withdrawals are predicted to increase by 50 percent by 2025 in developing countries. By 2025, 1,800 million people will be living in countries or regions with absolute water scarcity, and two-thirds of the world’s population could be under stress conditions.

In Nigeria, activities to make for easy and affordable access to clean water have been on a low level. Government at all levels continue to pay little or no attention to the provision of clean water to citizens. Policies on water are often not well thought-out and implemented. Consciously or unconsciously, private and public efforts on water distribution are concentrated in the urban centres, whilst neglecting the rural centres which are home to over 65 percent of the Nigerian populace.

Appropriated funds for water projects are misappropriated. Looting thrives at the expense of citizens’ health and wealth. Epileptic power supply hinders the functionality of installed water-generating systems. Regulatory bodies barely keep up with the responsibility of examining water production companies and their products, thus, the consumer is at the mercy of profit and not hygiene conscious business enterprises.

Lack of access to safe water is not a technical problem – it is a human, logistics, funding and efficiency issue. Nigeria of course has the money to make it happen. In fact it has been exposed that it would only take one third of what Nigeria spends on bottled water in one year to pay for projects providing water to everyone in need.

While it is not uncommon to see millions of sachet and bottle water in urban cities, one’s mind only question though helplessly if the purest of pure water is pure enough for human consumption. Considering the medical and social effect of these packaging content as non-biodegradable, a swift action must be taken by relevant agencies to avert these anomalies.

As a signatory to the 2007 International Convention on the Economic, Social & Cultural Rights (ICESCR) framework which provides the legal basis for the rights approach to water and sanitation, Nigeria must explore all means possible to ensure the provision of clean and safe water to citizens in every part of the country. This is so imperative because no appreciable development can be made without life – which water is a sustainer.

It is highly disappointing that, in this 21st century, a Nigerian parliamentarian takes delight in throwing a village party to commission a borehole water project for a single community, of which no sustenance plan has been made.

If the country’s vision of achieving the MDGs is real, then adequate and productive investment must be made in water, else the country’s hope of emerging as a leading economy by the year 2020 will only remain a mirage.

Report has shown that Nigeria needs N356 billion annually to overcome its water challenges. This is a good step in tackling the country’s water challenges. However, beyond the financial projections, government should engage viable private firms, provide enabling environments for such firms and projects to thrive, supervise and regulate activities, provide sustainable means of water production and distribution.

The investment on water can never be unproductive as experts have revealed that for every $1 invested in water and sanitation, there is an average return of up to $9, depending on the region and technology. Getting clean water to rural villages is the most effective strategy to help the poor.

Water is life. A thirty nation is a dying nation. Save Our Nation, Save The Planet!

 

By Tayo Elegbede, Development Journalist and Assistant Editor – www.yourcommonwealth.org

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