Daily Trust

ENVIRONMEN­T Poor sanitation, water top environmen­tal ‘Green economy is a tool for challenges in Nigeria – Data economic growth, diversific­ation’

- By Chidimma C. Okeke

Widespread poor sanitation and unhygienic drinking water remain top environmen­tal challenges Nigerians are grappling with.

The 2017 Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS) released by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) show that many Nigerians are exposed to lifethreat­ening environmen­t due to poor sanitation and drinking water.

The report showed that 42.1 per cent of households in Kano State do not use improved sources of drinking water and only 0.7 per cent of households using unimproved drinking water use an appropriat­e water treatment method.

The situation is no better in Lagos, Nigeria’s second most populous city after Kano going by official records, as only 8.9 per cent of household members in Lagos have an improved drinking water source located on premises, free of contaminat­ion and available when needed.

This is an indication that Nigeria has a long way to go if she hopes to meet the Goal Eight of the United Nations (UN) Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs) which targets to “Ensure availabili­ty and sustainabl­e management of water and sanitation for all.”

Data sourced from UNICEF show that over 110 million lacked access to improved sanitation with open defecation put at 28.5 per cent.

Daily Trust monitored the sanitary condition of some urban clusters in the nation’s capital, Abuja and reports that the situation calls for urgent attention.

A visit to Wumba, a community in Apo district of the Abuja Municipal Area Council (AMAC) shows a lengthy heap of refuse oozing a disturbing stench welcoming visitors and residents to the community.

A resident of the community, George Uremi, said the heap had not been cleared for the past three years and now posed embarrassm­ent to the residents in addition to the health risk.

Uremi said the poor sanitary condition of the community should be a cause of worry to both the residents and Abuja Environmen­tal Protection Agency considerin­g recent outbreak of Monkey Pox disease said to have been linked to poor hygiene.

Similarly, the city centre of Abuja accommodat­es many urban slums that have serious sanitation and portable water challenges.

A resident in Jabi, Musa Muhammad, decried the poor state of sanitation in Jabi area of the nation’s capital.

Muhammad expressed worry that heaps of waste gathered along walkways and drainages have been neglected for a very long time by relevant authoritie­s, exposing residents to health dangers. Pointing at a heap of refuse in Daki Biu axis, he said, “This waste has been here for years. Only scavengers come to explore it. That’s why it is like this.”

Another resident of Daki Biu, Amaka Nwankwo, said portable water supply has been a problem.

“I have been here for three years now and have never seen water pumps here. The only thing that happens here is we buy water from water vendors,” she said.

She said buying the water is expensive even as it was difficult to ascertain the purity of the water and the source.

Another resident of Daki Biu, Abdullahi Kura, said that improper sanitation starts from personal hygiene.

Kura called on the government to regularly visit Daki Biu in Jabi to evacuate waste as well as provide pipe borne water for the residents.

UNICEF estimates that over the years, 70 million people, out of a population of 171 million, lacked access to safe drinking water.

The Fund reports that Nigeria has made substantiv­e progress in mapping out strategies for water supply and sanitation service delivery, but faces major challenges in translatin­g these strategies into action.

The report stated that Nigeria lack safe, private toilets and hand-washing facilities, noting that the impact of water, hygiene and sanitation falls disproport­ionately on women and girls, the main carriers of waters.

The report revealed that the economic impact of poor sanitation and hygiene cost the Nigerian economy the equivalent of almost 1.3 per cent of gross domestic product.

Conflict and natural disasters are also very paramount causes of unsafe environmen­t which causes dangerous health risk to the human system.

A baseline data for the monitoring of the SDGs targets also released recently by the NBS showed that on the national level, Nigeria has been making slow improvemen­t in the supply of safe water that Nigerians drink.

The NBS estimated the population using safely managed drinking water services as 58.5 per cent in 2011, 57.8 per cent in 2012, and 62.2 per cent in 2014.

As at 2015, it was estimated that 69.6 per cent of Nigerians had safe sources of drinking water, but the report did not include data for 2016 and 2017. However, the 2017 Multiple Indicator Cluster Report for Kano and Lagos show that the problem is still rife.

The levels of safely treated water have been low and the 2011 MICS puts it at 0.04 per cent in 2011 and 0.09 per cent in 2012. The volume safely treated water reduced considerab­ly from 2013 to 2015.

WaterAid Nigeria reported that hygiene is not widely seen as a big health risk, making it a more difficult issue to address. 68 per cent of the population has no access to a toilet and it is these communitie­s that face a higher risk of disease from poor hygiene standards. The Federal Government has said green economy has become a veritable tool for economic growth and diversific­ation in some countries that are not as endowed with natural resources as Nigeria.

The Minister of State for Environmen­t, Ibrahim Usman Jibril who noted this said Nigeria’s challenge at this point is how to harness and leverage on the huge opportunit­ies in the environmen­t.

Speaking in Abuja on the focus of this year’s National Council for Environmen­t, which is currently going on in Abeokuta-Ogun State with the theme, “Unlocking the Investment opportunit­ies in the Environmen­t sector towards Nigeria’s Economic Recovery, Diversific­ation Growth and Sustainabl­e Developmen­t,” he said the green economy is fulcrum of national economic advancemen­t as it cuts across every aspects of a nation’s economy.

“With proper harnessing and leveraging on our natural resources the root of our economic recovery will be faster when we consciousl­y support the green economy by investing in the environmen­t sector to increase other sources of revenue in the Nigeria economy,” he said.

He said the opportunit­ies include reposition­ing of the National Agency for Great Green Wall (GGW), Renewable Energy, Eco-Tourism, Green Bond, implementa­tion of the UNEP Report among others.

While noting that the government has vigorously pursued and sensitized the Nigerian citizens towards going green and achieving toxic-free environmen­t, the minister desired that after the meeting, the decisions reached will be such that is capable of re-engineerin­g the sector to expand the frontiers to meaningful­ly contribute to a speedy economic recovery.

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