Nigeria Currently Losing An Alarming 4% Of Forest Annually

At the just concluded COP28, environmentalists voiced serious concerns, citing Nigeria’s startling 4% yearly forest loss—the highest rate worldwide.

In a seminar organised by Development Agenda Magazine and EMCAN in Abuja, the experts emphasised the dire consequences of illegal tree logging in states like Cross Rivers, Ondo, Ogun, and North-central region of the country.

The seminar was themed, ‘Climate Change and COP28: The Way Forward For Nigeria.’

The seminar underscored the urgency to address the estimated daily felling of 1.5 million trees, contributing to a 3.5% deforestation rate annually.

In a welcome address at the seminar, the Publisher and Editor-in-chief of Development Agenda Magazine,

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Paddy Ezeala, lamented the reckless destruction in various states and highlighted the exacerbating impact of a foreign-owned charcoal factory in Nsukka, Enugu state.

Ezeala underscored the absence of a valuation system for forest resources, calling for adequate compensation for negligent destruction.

According to him, between 1981 and 2000, Nigeria lost 3.7 million hectares of forests, resulting in a colossal loss of biodiversity.

Ezeala stressed the need to stop the wanton destruction of forests across the country and called for a transition towards environmentally and socially equitable forest management techniques.

He favoured using the potential of forests for scientific study and ecotourism as opposed to illicit logging and wildlife trafficking.

According to him, Nigeria’s remaining rainforests are considered essential resources for sustainable development, as they are home to some 4,000 plant varieties and distinctive animals.

The Emir of Nasarawa, Ibrahim Usman Jibril, highlighted environmental challenges such as rising sea levels, climate change, deforestation, drought, and desertification affecting Nigeria.

The Conservator-General of the National Parks Service, Dr. Ibrahim Goni, stressed the crucial role of national parks in mitigating climate change.

He, however, said the delay in the establishment of 10 new national parks, approved in 2020, was attributed to delay in releasing the gazette by the Ministry of Justice.

He recalled that the federal government had in 2020 approved the establishment of 10 new national parks to complement the existing parks across the country.

Three years down the line, the parks were yet to take-off, a situation that Goni attributed to delay in the release of official gazette by the Ministry of Justice.

The CG hinted that as soon as the gazette is released, the parks will take off immediately, saying that the NPS has received approval from the Federal Government.

Africa Today News, New York

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