Daily Trust

Nigeria may become desert, NCF warns

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Nigeria is losing about a half of its land mass annually encroachme­nt and time is before the entire country desert.

The Director-General of the Nigerian Conservati­on Foundation, Dr Muktari Aminu-Kano, raised the alarm in Lagos on Sunday.

He made the disclosure at the 2018 edition of the Green Ball series with theme: “Green Recovery Nigeria: Restoring Mangroves and Reclaiming the Desert.”

Aminu-Kano said that mangroves were also being lost in the Niger Delta and that the nation had already lost up to 95 per cent of its forest cover.

He warned that urgent measures must be taken to curb deforestat­ion and forest degradatio­n to stop what he described as ugly consequenc­es of climate change for the nation.

The NCF chief also kilometre to desert of essence becomes a warned on the “firewood crisis,’’ saying that the problem must be addressed to discourage use of fire wood use as cooking gas.

He stressed the need to strengthen the Green Recovery Nigeria scheme, aimed at retaining a significan­t proportion of Nigeria’s landmass under forest.

Aminu-Kano also called for sustained intensive awareness campaign among all tiers of government­s to change the practice of tree felling to tree planting.

He noted that government must have to promote clean sources of cooking energy to protect the nation’s forests form being used as firewood.

“Green Recovery Nigeria is our push to bring the agenda that Nigeria is pathetical­ly loosing 95 per cent of its forest cover and we have only five per cent left.

“350,000 hectares of land are being lost annually to desertific­ation and the land lost is about 0.6, which is about half a kilometre every year.

“If you think you live in Lagos and it cannot reach you, it will only take some time. Imagine the annual movement of 0.6 kilometres.’’

The Chairman of the NCF Board of Trustees, Chief Philip Asiodu, in a speech, recalled that Nigeria entered an agreement with the Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on in 1988 to restore 25 per cent of its forest cover.

Asiodu said that while other African countries commenced implementa­tion of the agreement, Nigeria had done nothing and had lost almost all its forest cover.

He noted that with increasing population, the effects of climate change were manifested through gully erosions in the South East and desertific­ation in the Sahel.

“There is a lot of work to do to persuade the government into action,’’ he said. (NAN)

 ?? CEO/Editor-in-Chief Chief Operating Officer Associate Director/Deputy Editor-in-Chief Editor, Daily Trust Deputy General Manager (IT) ??
CEO/Editor-in-Chief Chief Operating Officer Associate Director/Deputy Editor-in-Chief Editor, Daily Trust Deputy General Manager (IT)
 ??  ?? Rufa'atu Saidu, a blind orphaned girl offered schorlashi­p by ASATTAHIR Internatio­nal Foundation
Rufa'atu Saidu, a blind orphaned girl offered schorlashi­p by ASATTAHIR Internatio­nal Foundation

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