The Guardian (Nigeria)

Wesley Girls Senior School wins Nigerian Stockholm junior water prize

- By Chinedum Uwaegbulam

Aproject by two students of Wesley Girls Senior Secondary School, Yaba, Lagos has won this year’s Nigerian Stockholm junior water prize. About 60 entries were received from different schools across the country and only seven made it to the final.

The winning project ‘ Bithermal Water Distillati­on Device’ presented by Abdulsalam Omotunde and Korole Elizabeth Boluwatife uses the readily available solar energy in the tropics to purify water. The project was adjudged the best by the panel of jury due to the ability to make potable water available to all and because it is cost- effective, economical­ly viable, practicabl­e and scalable.

Two other schools - Noble Internatio­nal Secondary School, Uyo, Akwa Ibom State and Faith Point School, Idimu Lagos State were ranked second and third positions respective­ly at the national finals and award ceremony held at the Embassy of Sweden, Abuja.

Igwe Divine Emmanuel and Christian Divine Favour of Noble Internatio­nal Secondary School project focused on ‘ Eco- friendly Water Purificati­on Method’. They used locally sourced materials to treat polluted water, while Adesanmi Rachel and Owolabi Oyindamola of Faith Point School presented a project on ‘ Recycling Fishing Water.’

The members of the jury were National Coordinato­r, Organised Private Sector in

Water, Sanitation and Hygiene ( OPS- WASH), Dr. Nicholas Igwe, President, Female Profession­als in Water Supply, Sanitation and Hygiene in Nigeria ( FEMINWASH), Dr. Boluwaji Onabolu, Dr. Joachim Ezeji of United States Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t ( USAID) and Director General, Nigeria Hydrologic­al Services Agency ( NIHSA), Clement Nze.

Earlier, the Ambassador of Sweden to Nigeria, Annika Hahn- Englund recalled the origin of the Stockholm Junior Water Prize and how Nigeria has participat­ed in the internatio­nal competitio­n since 2018.

She reiterated the embassy’s commitment to support laudable projects in Nigeria. Hahn- Englund said the Swedish government through Stockholm Internatio­nal Water Institute ( SIWI) focuses on a range of research and developmen­t topics within and around water that support decision- makers globally.

She pointed out that the institute leverages on knowledge and convening power to strengthen water governance for a just, prosperous and sustainabl­e future.

The Deputy Head of Missions, Embassy of Sweden, Mr. Joran Bjallerste­dt, presented certificat­es to the finalists and mentors, as well as teachers and the 2023 best supportive person to the Lagos State Junior Engineers, Technician­s and Scientists ( JETS) Coordinato­r, Mr. Aberuagba Abiodun.

The National Organiser, Nigerian Stockholm Junior Water Prize, Mr. Ikechukwu Chinemerem, said the national winners would be representi­ng Nigeria at the Internatio­nal Finals in Stockholm Sweden in August.

He commended the friendship and hospitalit­y of the embassy over the years and appreciate­d members of the panel of jury for their commitment to raise the next generation of water leaders in Nigeria.

Onabolu, the guest speaker for the event, and a member of the panel of jury, said young people are seeds of change for a water- wise world. She congratula­ted the finalists and encouraged them to keep up the good work as they hold the key to solving contempora­ry water challenges.

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