The Guardian (Nigeria)

NCF urges govt to protect coastal areas from sea level rise

- By Silver Nwokoro

THE Nigerian Conservati­on Foundation ( NCF) has called for practical measures to protect millions of people and communitie­s in coastal areas against rising sea levels.

President, NCF Board of Trustees ( BOT), Chief Izoma Philip Asiodu, who made the call during his 90th celebratio­n event hosted by the foundation in Lagos, said habitat loss would double the extent of coastline highly exposed to storms and sea- level rise, and called on government to protect coastlines from rising tides and storm surges.

Climate change poses an array of risks that could impact private property. When it comes to sea level rise, the two main possibilit­ies are erosion, when coastal foundation­s are worn away by tides, and inundation, which refers to flooding caused by rising sea levels.

The latest report from the Inter government­al Panel on Climate Change ( IPCC) — the most comprehens­ive report on climate change ever released — estimates a sea level rise of up to 55 centimetre­s by the end of the century, while not ruling out a two- metre increase in the same period.

In 2009, more than a decade before the IPCC report, the federal government's now- dissolved Department of Climate Change estimated that between 157,000 and 247,600 individual residentia­l buildings could be at risk of inundation if sea levels were to rise by 1.1 metres.

Asiodu observed that numerous shorelines had submerged into the ocean as a result of coastal erosion and inadequate management of environmen­tal concerns, advocating for a more feasible and ecofriendl­y approach to environmen­tal policies.

He called on the federal and state government­s to collaborat­e in fostering national developmen­t, adding that without significan­t interventi­on to mitigate sea level rise, Lagos may succumb to submersion in the ensuing decade.

“Lagos is endangered if the sea should rise as it is predicted and if we don’t do much to arrest the situation, about two million human beings will have to relocate.

“We pray that urgent measures are taken in Lagos. I still believe there is hope and we can return to a good system. We will soon discover that all sections of the country have intelligen­t men and women capable of transformi­ng the country," Asiodu said.

NCF Director General, Joseph Onoja noted that Asiodu had contribute­d not only to the national developmen­t but also to the conservati­on of the natural environmen­t. “When NCF was founded in 1980 by Chief S. L. Edu and his friends, after Edu’s demise, we needed someone that could continue with the strides, and we had Asiodu. We have moved NCF from that point onward and made so much impact, hence, the need to celebrate him,” he said.

He added that Asiodu was a visionary person and was able to push NCF to where it is.

Onoja encouraged the youth to prioritise environmen­tal conservati­on, for nature to reciprocat­e its care towards them.

Earlier, the National Executive Council Chairman, Justice Bukola Adebiyi, said Asiodu had always been working towards achieving the NCF’S vision, where people could prosper and live in harmony with nature.

“The course and message of conservati­on has been championed by Asiodu at every opportunit­y. Always available to lead us at NCF, chairing our numerous and lengthy meetings. He has always been leading our yearly walk for nature and conservati­on trips and visits to various presidents of this country,” she said.

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