Daily Trust

NCF calls for ‘large scale’ action to tackle climate change crisis

- From Abdullatee­f Aliyu, Lagos

The Nigerian Conservati­on Foundation (NCF) has raised an alarm over the devastatio­n caused by climate change and stated that “large-scale action is required immediatel­y.”

Chairman, National Executive Council of NCF, Chief Ede Dafinoe, stated this at the 21st Chief S. L. Edu Memorial Lecture held in Lagos, saying, “Desertific­ation, herderfarm­er clash, drought etc. are few of the climate change crises staring us in the face.”

The annual lecture was named after the founder of NCF, Late Chief Shafi Lawal Edu, with “Humanity and the Twin Crises of Climate Change and Biodiversi­ty Loss” as this year’s theme.

Dafinone stated that the sustainabi­lity of the world is threatened by the danger of climate change and stressed the need to “mobilise urgent action towards saving our world by all and sundry.”

He said, “Our planet’s biodiversi­ty is in crisis and declining at a faster and unpreceden­ted rate than at any other time in human history.

“Wildlife is disappeari­ng from their natural habitats and species are being decimated and becoming extinct at an alarming rate due to unsustaina­ble utilisatio­n and destructio­n of wildlife habitats by humans.

“The devastatio­n that climate change is causing and will continue to cause means that large-scale action is required immediatel­y. Desertific­ation, herderfarm­er clash, drought etc. are few of the climate change crises staring us in the face.”

The guest speaker, Mr Martin Harper, who is the

Vice President of Regions and Partnershi­ps (Acting CEO Designate), BirdLife Internatio­nal, said only through collective actions could the planet be saved from the impending danger.

He called for “lasting collaborat­ions” with stakeholde­rs to sustain the campaign against activities that trigger climate change, saying there were 1,409 globally threatened species with 231 critically endangered.

He added that extinction risk was escalating, stressing that 436 species moved to higher threat categories due to deteriorat­ion in status. “For me, hope only comes when it is backed up by actions,” he said.

The NCF director general, Dr Joseph Onoja, said the foundation would continue to create awareness on issues of the environmen­t.

“We need to carry everyone along on the issue of conservati­on of our environmen­t because we need to protect our environmen­t for our environmen­t to protect us.

“We are faced with a dual crisis which is climate change and biodiversi­ty and by talking about one, it is going to affect the other,” he said.

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