Climate change has finally come home; yes our lives have been
invaded by floods of fury and other freak weather events that we currently
grapple with. From Lokoja to Onitsha, down to Yenogoa and moving north of
the Niger to Makurdi, Adamawa and Taraba; it has been tales of woe, sorrow,
anger and disappointment.
Confusion and utter bewilderment were clearly written on the faces
of the governors of these states but if you ask Governors Wada, Obi, Suswan,
Dickson, Nyako and Uduaghan if they have ever considered climate change as a
game changer and greatest impediment to our collective development and
survival, you would be lucky to get an answer in the affirmative. Evidence –I
do not know of any state governor or minister in Nigeria today, including the
Federal Capital Territory, that has appointed a cabinet level Adviser or
Special Assistant on Climate Change –strictly climate change! Climate
change deserves to be unbundled from the environment portfolio –at least at
advisory levels -because of its cross cutting nature that requires specialized
multi-sectoral knowledge.
Nevertheless, our lives will not remain the same, yes our
individual and national lives are changing with the climate. Politicians say it
is a global phenomenon but global and local scientists as well as climate
change policy specialists have been warning about the need for governments at
the federal, state and local levels to take proactive measures to mitigate the
impacts as well as adapt the citizens to this new unwelcome reality. It
is high time Nigeria focused on
the reality of adapting to climate change by finding ways to live with
overflowing sea levels, scarcer drinking water, higher peak temperatures,
depleting species and agriculture altering weather patterns. Proactive
governments are beginning to realize that, in the long term, climate change
adaptation needs to be supported by an integrated, cross cutting policy
approach.
Climate change mitigation and adaptation experts have been
forthcoming with innovative mitigation strategies and creative adaptation
routines that could be implemented by our decision makers but the business-as-usual scenario continues to dominate the
minds and hearts of people who take decisions on our behalf –for good or bad- a
direct fall out of the fact that the Crown,
Gown and Town have stubbornly refused to find a
meeting point with each bloc working at cross purposes.
The “Crown” via Nigerian Meteorological Agency [NIMET] and
National Emergency Management Agency [NEMA] said they warned the citizens of
the imminent catastrophe but the “Town” refused to heed doomsday admonitions
while the “Gown” has been accusing both “Crown and Town” of neglecting well
researched papers and other empirical body of evidence of the dangerous times
ahead heaped on their doorsteps but the “Town” was too busy trying to make ends
meet.
The blame game continues at costs of Himalayan proportions!
Yes, I remember the press releases of NIMET/NEMA but that was Communication
Failure 101. We are talking of press releases when we should be engaging
thousands of town criers with gongs and songs in local dialect to drive the
message home to the local people in need of critical information that would
save their lives and properties. We are talking of press conferences when we
should be talking of National Orientation Agency [NOA] invading every nook and
cranny of the red-flagged states to engage the locals in their market places,
worship centres and village squares.
We must retool our mechanisms of intervention. We must rethink our
approach and strategies. We must embrace “proactivity” and shun “reactivity” as
a way of our national life. Yes, we must because climate change is
already contributing to the deaths of nearly 400,000 people a year worldwide
and costing the world more than 1.2 trillion USD, wiping 1.6% annually from
global GDP, according to a new independent report written by more than 50
climate scientists, economists and policy experts, and commissioned by 20
governments in 2012. The recently released report warns that these figures could
triple in the next decade if nothing urgent is done to stem the imminent drift
into the bottomless pit!
In Nigeria, we can only extrapolate the figures and count the
losses in our imagination because of our legendary record keeping and bean
counting deficits that made Professor Chukwuma Soludo to ask in his newly
commissioned column in Thisday Newspapers: Do
You Believe Nigeria’s Statistics? Soludo
was the immediate past Central Bank of Nigeria helmsman and he does not seem to
get a handle on our statistics sadly ever after! Now you understand why I
have been asking the question: Who is counting Nigeria’s climate change induced
economic losses?
In the light of the collateral damage inflicted on the people and
resources of these flood ravaged States, some of which house the best
agricultural resources of Africa’s most populous country; perhaps the most
powerful response to climate change would be the development of a resilient,
robust local economy across the length and breadth of Nigeria. This is
particularly true because most of the projected future global economic growth
is set to take place in developing countries where Nigeria is well positioned
to participate in that growth if we do not allow climate change impacts to wash
away our potential gains.
Being part of the “business as usual”, currently distressed,
global economy that divorces the environment from the economy poses a risk of
devolving into social, economic and environmental crisis such as the one
currently ravaging Nigeria! We seriously need to look inwards and apply
some out-of- the-box adaptation initiatives that have multi-dimensional
positive implications for our economy as well as the health of our citizens in
particular and global environment in general.
Like I opined in my June 2012 article titled Nigeria and Climate Change
Adaptation that was published
by the Oregon, United States based International
Society of Sustainability Professionals [ISSP]:
“The dangerously uncertain effects of a changing climate on Nigeria’s economy
pose significant setbacks for meeting development targets like Nigeria’s
aspiration to be among the twenty best performing economies of the world by the
year 2020 [Vision 20:20:20] and achievement of the Millennium Development Goals
[MDGs]”. President Goodluck Jonathan, while presenting the 2013
budget to the national assembly few days back, acknowledged this fact when he
informed Nigerians the GDP growth estimate for 2013 budget has been corrosively
eroded by the floods of fury ravaging more than 20 states of the Nigerian
federation.
Climate change is already affecting the
political, social and economic context within which government decisions are
made even as climate change economic and business impact assessment continues
to be an area of increasing necessity for government economic gate keepers and
corporate captains for obvious reasons. But
we must quickly move from lamentations to wise actions by acting decisively to
address the issues at hand.
Again my ISSP article shines some light on the best way forward: “Pursuing
sustainable development, just like implementing climate change adaptation,
requires political will at the highest level…... the way out is a central
oversight body that will coordinate research and policy response, harmonize
roles for sister agencies, and aggressively pursue implementation master plans
in a seamless collaborative partnership with the Annex 1 countries and the UN
climate change response organizations….. good news is that the out gone sixth
national assembly of the country’s parliament courageously passed the Nigerian
Climate Change Commission [NCCC] Bill which currently awaits President
Jonathan’s ink to transform it from a mere paper to a “toothful bulldog” in the
fight against our greatest impediment to development -climate change. Nigeria’s
Climate Change Commission, when fully operational, would be the very first in
Africa and the country must be commended for this bold stride”.
Indeed with an operational NCCC, it would be easy for NIMET, NEMA,
NOA, Ministry of Environment [MOE], Ministry of Water Resources [MOWR], etc to
work in unison to respond to climate change induced emergencies. While still on
an independent, privately sponsored assessment tour of the affected states, it was easy for me to publicly
disclose that key climate change impacts and vulnerabilities arising from the
flash floods gravitate around water as being of the highest priority for
adaptation in terms of urgency, certainty and severity of impact.
Why water? Well, human health and agriculture derive their
meaning or lack of it from water! Flooding threatens human health through
spread of diseases, followed by agriculture where declines in yield, damaged
farm lands as well as compromised storage facilities would lead to breach of
food security and by extension, national security. Even the United States of
America’s Central Intelligence Agency [CIA] has consistently been warning their
governments about the threat to their national security posed by climate change
-starting with water resources.
Truth be told, we cannot run away from extreme weather conditions
occasioned by climate change. Massive floods and other freak weather
events would become more common because of the warming of the earth but government
institutions that have hitherto limited their operational jurisdiction to mere
weather forecasting should invest in technologies to enable more accurate
predictions and advance warning systems. There is also need for accurate
environmental data, particularly from sensors located in the soil, ocean,
atmosphere, flood zones and arid, drought-stricken lands. It will be important
to track the changes in order to have timely and quality information that will
assist disaster aversion/emergency management strategies to minimize losses.
For starters, financial resources from the Ecological Funds Office
would need to be deployed towards acquiring these innovative weather monitoring
technologies, at least in the short to medium term. Also there is
an urgent need for President Goodluck Jonathan to begin mainstreaming climate
change adaptation into Nigeria’s economic blueprints and development master
plans as an important strategic action at this stage of our development by
signing the Climate Change Commission into law now to enable and activate the
mechanism for articulating a national framework that would leverage the
critical line ministries, agencies and parastatals of government like the
National Emergency Management Authority [NEMA], Ministry of Health, Nigerian
Metrological Agency, Ministry of Agriculture, Ministry of Water Resources,
Ministry of Housing/Urban Development, National Insurance Commission, Institute
for Peace and Conflict Resolution and the Ministry of Niger Delta Affairs,
etc to build capacity in conflict management, work through coordinated,
robust national mechanisms to address climate induced security challenges as
well as ensure transparent management and allocation of interventionist
resources.
The task at hand requires the participation of even the
private sector, especially the Insurance companies who do not seem to
understand they face the risk of extinction if they do nothing now to align
their business with the reality of climate change. The insurance industry is already
saddled with the biggest responsibility as the costs of climate change often
accrue directly to them but there is an opportunity for them to leverage their
position to help spread the risk of extreme weather events by encouraging
adaptation behaviors through the construction of new policy clauses.
These measures would come at a cost to insurance buyers, but
taking action today could stave off greater losses that would otherwise incur
from infrastructure and asset damage in the future. For instance, insurance
companies covering property development in coastal areas could see the need to
assess the potential for sea-level rise, increased storm severity, flooding,
and other climate change impacts on their clients and incorporate appropriate
measures in their policy document. The
National Insurance commission [NAICOM] will need to understand these issues
before they can reach out to other stakeholders in the industry. NAICOM and other stakeholders in
the insurance industry must be made to understand that it is in their best
interest to be more proactive and see how they can protect the entire insurance
industry from the envisaged shocks of the impacts of climate change.
More importantly, climate change adaptation in Nigeria must be
approached from the standpoint of necessity in the context of sustainable
development with greater emphasis on the generally accepted principle that
economic empowerment, social development and poverty eradication constitute the
first and overriding priorities of a developing country like Nigeria. For
maximum effect, resources should be invested and concentrated on allowing our
Climate Change Commission to develop specific adaptation measures that are
peculiar to Nigeria as a country, with focus on the ones that correspond to our
most urgent and immediate needs while aligning and leveraging numerous
international initiatives and financing mechanisms aimed at assisting African
countries like Nigeria with climate change adaptation.
My patriotic instinct would not allow me conclude this exercise
without offering my services on honorary basis to states governments and
organizations that are willing to frontally engage climate change as a
sustainable development priority with a matrix of well conceived mitigation and
adaptation strategies. Finally, it appears to me that much of the
adaptation work that needs to be done would concentrate on “reforming” the
psyche of our people to be able to accept and embrace new ways of life in tune
with the emerging realities of our changing climate! Nigeria, as the undisputed
giant of Africa, needs to set shining examples for other developing countries
in the tropics to emulate.
Stanley Ijeoma, a Corporate Climate Change Consultant, writes from schrodinger.limited@gmail.com
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Note: This article was originally published by the Guardian
Newspapers Nigeria in the last quarter of 2012 immediately after the 2012
flooding that ravaged parts of Nigeria.
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