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Osun and illegal mining: A cancerous tumour that must be tamed

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By Waheed Adekunle

In Osun state, it amounts to stating the obvious saying that illegal mining has come to stay. This development has become a pain in the neck of citizens of the state particularly dwellers of the gold-rich rural communities.

The discovery of the huge deposits of mineral resources in Osun which ordinarily should be a blessing has turned into a curse given the challenges bedeviling the valued sector.

From the early 1950s, gold mining operations have remained a permanent feature in Osun state, although the bulk of the activities have been by illegal miners. This has contributed, in no small measure, to the socio-economic, security and environmental threats being experienced in the state.

The quest for gold continuously attracts commercial and artisanal miners, resulting in an influx of artisanal miners predominantly from Northern Nigeria.

The unending outcries of affected communities on the negative impact of activities of illegal miners who invaded large acreage of land, chasing away farmers, degrading the soil and depriving communities and the public treasury of the benefits of their natural resources largely remain unheard. They have been drawing attention of the concerned authorities in the state and beyond to the nightmare they are experiencing with the aim of nipping the situation in the bud.

It is unfortunate that today, illegal mining has indeed become a major problem posing a threat to other critical sectors of the economy and human existence. The unfortunate situation has led to considerable environmental degradation, economic losses and insecurity in the country.

Mining is the extraction of minerals from the earth’s crust that offers socio-economic benefits and infrastructure development. However, it also produces ecological and environmental effects which often negatively impact the environment.

Nigeria is rich in diverse solid mineral deposits, including precious metals, stones, and industrial minerals like coal, tin, gold, marble, and limestone but gold, which is one of these minerals, is found in various forms in the South-West and other parts of Nigeria.

Aside Itagunmodi, Igun, and Iperindo in Ife-Ijesa zone in Osun with rich-gold deposits, other areas where gold domicile in Nigeria include Okolom-Dogondaji, Luku; Gurma; Bin Yauri; Maru, Anka, Malele, Tsohon Birin Gwari-Kwaga respectively.

In Osun, Ijesha land is renowned for large gold deposits and other minerals in considerable quantity. Due to the heightened mining activity, waste, heavy metals, volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and chemicals are washed into the river after the miners must have used the water pressure to separate gold from ore.

According to the former Deputy Chief of Staff to the immediate past Osun Governor, Abdullahi Binuyo, the inclusion of mining activities on the exclusive list of the Nigerian Constitution has rendered the States handicapped in exercising control over the mining sector.

Binuyo said the state government has no regulatory power over the activities of the miners saying, “I can say to you for certain that a lot of miners will come into the state without the knowledge of the government due to this constitutional provision. Just like the oil blocs, it’s not the state government that gives it out. That is why it is incumbent on the state government to partner with the federal government through NESREA to fish illegal miners out.”

Despite the fact that Nigeria has 44 types of untapped deposits of minerals, including gold, tin, and zinc, the convoluted federal structure that places mining on the exclusive legislative list hinders the States from taking full advantage of these resources. The states are not allowed to legislate on the sector and lack the powers to police or regulate mineral resources extraction in the country.

Experts revealed that Nigeria’s mining sector is diverse in mineral resources that make a significant contribution to the nation’s gross domestic product as the country is endowed with an estimated USD700 billion of commercially viable minerals with the capacity to diversify its revenue sources and boost foreign exchange earnings.

However, the mining sector is faced with multiple challenges and its current poor performance can be attributed to various factors including opaque extraction, insecurity and organised crime. No doubt, Nigeria’s natural resources have been exploited by foreign criminals for decades, and the extractive sector is the most targeted of late and several Chinese nationals have been arrested in Nigeria for their involvement in illegal mining.

Findings showed that Nigeria loses over USD 9 billion to illegal mining annually with the only money accruing to the sector being a paltry 3 percent royalty paid by the few licensed miners. It is unfortunate that despite the clamour to revamp the sector for the ultimate benefit of the nation, Nigeria is yet to maximise the abundant opportunities and potential enriched in the lucrative sector of the economy.

It is on record that illegal exploration of mineral resources is responsible for the formation of sinkholes, soil contamination, ground, and surface water pollution, and loss of biodiversity.

The continued perpetration of the illegality, according to experts, has been the bane of socio-economic advancement of the sector resulting in serious economic loss, as it causes poor soil fertility and limits access to land for agriculture.

According to a report of a mining agency – “Mining Growth Roadmap” in 2016, Nigeria has an untapped 200 million ounces of gold, scattered across 13 states including Osun state with great potential capable of fetching trillions of dollars over time, but unfortunately, the revenue from the sector has remained paltry.

Similarly, the Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative, [NEIT] recently submitted that, royalties received from 39 minerals was just N2.5 billion, with limestone contributing 37.68 percent, granite 31.31 percent and gold 0.26 percent, despite the high volume of mining activities by illegal miners.

The UN Comtrade reveals that between 2012 and 2018, about 97 tonnes of gold worth over USD3 billion was illegally smuggled out of Nigeria as this claim corroborated the reports of the NEITI which revealed that gold has potential to attract foreign exchange for Nigeria if the sector receives the attention it deserves.

In Osun State, gold mining is conducted at both industrial-scale and artisanal levels. Artisanal miners employ surface mining techniques, often without technology to mitigate environmental harm. Illegal miners, who are unknown to the government, make regulation and environmental management challenging.

The global rise in gold prices and the desire for improved livelihoods are fueling a growing demand for gold mineral resources worldwide. However, artisanal gold mining is having a significant negative impact on the environment. These miners prioritise mining primary and alluvial gold deposits without regard for the ecological consequences. As a result, heavy metals and toxic by-products associated with quartz are released into the environment and water sources like wells and rivers, leading to landscape degradation and harm to local ecosystems and biodiversity.

In Osun today, illegal mining has become a threat to livelihood as artisanal gold mining is considered an anthropogenic activity responsible for various environmental challenges, including deforestation and the disruption of ecosystem services.

According to experts, artisanal gold mining leads to environmental degradation, including deforestation, loss of aquatic life, water and air pollution, and social disruption. Health issues arise due to the release of toxic materials like lead, cyanide, and mercury, endangering miners, their families, and communities. Such mining also alters land cover, crucial for natural resource management and spatial planning.

Findings further revealed that artisanal gold mining is a threat to vegetal covers and green environment within the basin which endangers biodiversity and has the capacity to cause ecological dislocation. In spite of the danger the nefarious activities of these economic saboteurs constitutes to the lives of the people, they run their illegal business as a routine unabated.

According to mining experts, the need to urgently address artisanal mining is essential for achieving Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) set by the United Nations. These goals, according to them, targets alleviating poverty, improvement of lifestyles, combat climate change, and reduce environmental degradation.

Although there are certain complexities surrounding illegal mining in Nigeria, experts identified high poverty, hunger and unemployment as major factors contributing to illegal mining as the menace had successfully fueled the growth of illicit mining, highlighting basic social, institutional, and structural issues in Nigeria’s governance structure.

Recently, a British Newspaper “The Times” reported that some Chinese mining firms had funded Nigerian militant groups to get access to the country’s mineral reserves. This development raises the consciousness of the people to the prospect of China indirectly funding terror in the country, causing societal disruption for its own gain.

According to “The Times,” Chinese firms working in certain regions of Nigeria where crime incidents are common have been “striking security deals with insurgents.”

“It was reported that the law enforcement agencies’ low capability and resources limit their ability to tackle illegal mining activities effectively. Collaboration among multiple stakeholders, including government agencies, local communities, and civil society organisations, is required to address this issue,” the newspaper advised.

Recently, a Non-Governmental Organisation, Eco Defenders Network warned Osun residents of inherent dangers posed by harmful mining activities in the state. The Coordinator of the group, Shehu Akowe called on governments at all levels to urgently curb the activities of the artisanal miners and insist on standard global best practices in mining activities.

Akowe who spoke at the seminar organised to sensitise residents drawn from within Ijesa and Ife axis of the state on the consequences of harmful mining activities in the areas, lamented the environmental pollution and degradation caused by the miners just as he charged residents not to arbitrarily release their lands to miners without going into proper agreement that would prevent hazards involved in mining activities

He noted that activities of the miners have contaminated the Osun River which has direct link to other rivers in the country, adding that the chemical used in extracting minerals makes the water unsafe for usage.

”Cyanide toxicity affects human health and the environmental impact cannot be over-emphasised. Spills from hazardous chemicals have resulted in major fish kills, contaminated drinking water supplies and harm to agricultural lands.

“It is crucial to mention that both our underground and surface waters are unsafe in an environment where highly hazardous chemicals like cyanide are used in gold extraction. The polluted rivers including the Osun River are unsafe.

“It is our belief in ECODEN that this meeting will equip participants with rightful and helpful knowledge regarding adverse effects of negative gold extraction in short and long-term exposures. And that the knowledge gained will assist communities to review the environmental situation in our communities and identify areas that require action to preserve and safeguard our territory.

“I want to appeal to the governments to caution those destroying people’s lands for their selfish gains. We are not saying they shouldn’t mine but when mineral resources are valued at the expense of people’s lives and their livelihoods that should not be left unquestioned,” Akowe posited.

Today, illegal mining has emerged as a serious issue with significant implications for economic growth and development in the country as it hampers economic growth by undermining formal mining activities, reducing investor confidence, and limiting government revenue.

The sorry-state of many communities at the moment in Ife and Ijesaland where illegal mining is being carried out has become a source of concern not only to the victims but the entire residents of the state who are in one way or the other being affected by the polluted river Osun that serves as source of drinking water in the state.

The activities of illegal mining had in no measure contributed significantly to the environmental degradation, air and water pollution turning the popular river Osun to brown, the river which had hitherto served as source of drinking water for rural dwellers in the state as well as for irrigation farmers.

There are rural communities in the state whose major source of livelihood is attached to the polluted Osun river. One of these communities is Oora in Ijesaland, a town that is predominantly populated by peasant farmers but with their water now turned coloured, they are unable to irrigate their farms nor do they drink any longer from the river.

The leadership of the community, while venting their displeasure on the continued perpetration of illegal mining, noted that before the arrival of the miners and contamination of the Osun river, they usually relied on the water for consumption and other uses.

The question agitating the minds of the people remains the fact that in spite of the assurances given by successive governments to tackle the illegalities around the mining sector, the situation remains the same.

It would be recalled that the immediate past Osun Governor, Adegboyega Oyetola had in 2019 begun the incorporation of the artisanal miners through compulsory registration, an exercise conceived to avert incessant insecurity threat in the gold-rich communities and their environs.

The governor also said steps were being taken to prevent security lapses linked to some of the criminals operating as illegal miners in the state. Oyetola gave the hints during the Ife-Ijesa zonal security sensitisation meeting in Ilesa.

Oyetola said, “The activities of illegal mining vendors, if not checked, will shatter the safety, security and peace of our people as they are capable of engaging in untoward behaviour. We have recently been battling with kidnapping, harassment of our people and indiscriminate shootings on the highway, all traceable to the nefarious activities of some of these illegal miners.

“Should these high-level crimes continue, the government will be forced to take a drastic action, which will include but not limited to, a total ban on mining activities in this state. So, all miners operating in this state must be registered to enable the government to keep a record.

“Community leaders (the serikis) must play a key role in ensuring that this directive on registration is faithfully carried out. Thereafter, the serikis will be held accountable for acts of crime committed by miners in their area of operation,” he added.

The meeting which was attended by dignitaries including traditional rulers led by the Ooni of Ife, Oba Adeyeye Ogunwusi and Owa Obokun of Ijesaland, Oba Adekunle Aromolaran; and heads of security agencies in the state reached a compromise to tackle the menace headlong.

It is quite unfortunate that till today the situation remains unabated as the activities of the illegal miners have increased considerably, thereby compounding the attendant hazards on the livelihood of the residents of the state.

In the same vein, the incumbent Governor, Senator Ademola Adeleke, in the buildup to the 2022 governorship election promised to end illegal mining in the state if elected. The gubernatorial candidate of the People’s Democratic Party (PDP) then vowed to reposition the mineral resources sector for the greatest benefits of the state and her citizens if given the chance to govern the state.

It is quite unfortunate that 15 months after, the residents of the state are still battling with the cancerous tumor that has eaten deep into the fabric of their economic and environmental lives without any solution in sight.

Despite the fact that both federal and state governments allude to the humongous amount of revenue being lost to illegal mining on a daily basis, yet nothing meaningful is being done to address the ugly situation.

In a report recently published by TheCable, an online newspaper, a sample of river Osun water was subjected to a test by UNILAG Consult, where it was found to contain 0.034 milligrams per litre (mg/L) of arsenic, 5.663 mg/L of aluminium, and 0.090 mg/L of lead.

Other heavy metals found, according to the test result, include Barium (2.326), Lithium (0.004), Nickel (2.006), and Iron (3.197). These heavy metals were found to be significantly above the limit prescribed by the World Health Organization (WHO).

According to the test result, the presence of these metals makes the water unsafe for consumption, bathing, and farming activities.

It is the considered opinion of experts that a short to medium-term exposure to very high levels of arsenic in drinking water can lead to arsenic poisoning. And this is capable of causing stomach pain, vomiting, diarrhoea and impaired nerve function. Long-term exposure to even relatively low amounts of arsenic in drinking water, over years or decades, is said to increase the risk of developing certain cancers, including skin, lung, kidney, bladder and liver.

Analysing the results of the test, medical experts submitted that lithium on the other hand may cause diseases of the stomach, intestinal tract, central nervous system, and kidneys.

“With the presence of lead, young children and infants consuming the water are more vulnerable than adults. A dose of lead that may have an insignificant effect on adults can be more deadly for children.

“In children, low levels of exposure have been linked to damage to the central and peripheral nervous system, learning disabilities, shorter stature, impaired hearing, and impaired formation and function of blood cells.

“In adults, over-exposure may cause high blood pressure and damage to the reproductive organs. Additional symptoms may include fever, headaches, fatigue, sluggishness (lethargy), vomiting, loss of appetite (anorexia), abdominal pain, constipation, joint pain, loss of recently acquired skills, incoordination, restlessness, difficulty sleeping (insomnia), irritability, altered consciousness, hallucinations, and/or seizures,” the experts affirmed.

A socio-economic and political group – The Save Osun River Advocacy recently embarked on a safety campaign to end incessant illegal mining and ensure safety on the river banks. The team sought the service of a Geographic Information Science (GIS) expert and was able to determine that gold mining was the cause of pollution.

“We brought the issue of the colour change of the Osun River to the public space in March 2021 through the hashtag #OsunRiverPollution on Twitter. The Osun state government reacted by constituting the mineral resources and environmental management committee (MIREMCO) to address the Osun river pollution and all other issues resulting from mining activities in Osun state. Unfortunately, nothing significant was seen to have been done concerning the pollution by the committee.

“The team also conducted physicochemical and microbial tests on samples collected from four different points on the water. In collaboration with senior researchers from Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, the analysis shows that the water has been heavily contaminated with mercury, lead and cyanide,” the group lead, Anthony Adejuwon affirmed.

One would have expected a federal government agency in charge of environmental protection- National Environmental Standards and Regulations Enforcement Agency, NASREA to have nipped in the bud the protracted environmental pollution in the state.

It is discouraging that the assurance given by the Agency to unravel the situation hasn’t yielded any positive result as the contaminated water continues to stream in and out the state.

Recently, the state coordinator, NASREA, Mohammad Maike noted that the agency has been mandating the mining companies to comply with the proper waste water recycling process.

“When the alert was raised, we mobilised to the site to evaluate the level of damage. We swung into action and traced the source to Iponda. And we are monitoring the situation,” Maike said.

He said miners have been advised not to discharge their waste water without it being treated saying, “we are trying our best. We have been on them and trying to make sure they are doing the necessary things. This includes the non-discharge of wastewater without treating it. Some of them are complying, and some of them are beginning to engage consultants who will help them. That’s what we have been doing.”

But a non-governmental agency, Global Rights Nigeria recently advised the federal government to declare a state of emergency on water bodies in the country.

The Co-ordinator of the group, Abiodun Baiyewu, in a communique issued, said Nigeria needs to improve its access to water policy and carry out an audit of the water bodies to ascertain the level of pollution.

“The government needs to think of this as a national security issue,” she said. In Nigeria, 80 percent of mining is artisanal in nature and more than 90 percent of the law addressed large-scale mining, which means that we are not dealing with the environmental consequences of artisanal mining,” she noted

A concerned environmentalist in Osogbo, Babajide Israel expressed serious concern over the adverse effects of ‘unchecked illegal mining’ in the state.

Israel, who challenged the government for condoning and shielding illegal miners, said it is time to end the menace if truly the government was ready to champion the cause in the interest of national growth and development.

Meanwhile, it is high time for government agencies, mining commission and other relevant Environmental Protection Agency reinforced the need to regulate land concession and monitor artisanal mining activities within the state and beyond while reclamation and restoration projects should be intensified in order to manage degraded environments around the mining sites particularly in Ijesaland and Ife communities.

Going by the devastating impact of the menace in the affected regions, it is also imperative for the state government to intensify effort as to the need to raise people’s consciousness through different enlightenment and sensitization programmes on the impact and consequences of unregulated artisanal mining activities on the environment.

Unequivocally, the state government should as a matter of urgency set up a local monitoring team to monitor and report irregular activities of licensed miners for immediate and appropriate sanctions while the mining should be done within the confinement of the regulatory policy framework.

However, as part of effort to encourage genuine and responsible mining in the state, the state government should incorporate the artisanal miners into comparative through which they can pull funds together for modern tools and mining equipment and also to enable them leverage on improved and latest mining technologies with less harmful impact on the environment as being done in the civilised world.

Opinion

Tinubu, the opposition and the Nigerian honey pot

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By Professor Kayode Soremekun

As the Tinubu administration approaches the one year mark, it is important to effect a review of what has transpired in the last twelve months.

At the level of sheer policy postures and pronouncements, much has been done and so much is also  being done, such that it is almost impossible to keep  pace .

In this narrative however, I have decided  to dwell on an unusual aspect of the last twelve months.

On this note, the thrust of my argument is this:Nigeria is a lucrative honeypot for external actors and their local collaborators. It is a situation in which every achievement of  this administration translates into a loss for external actors and their interests. These indeed are the various indices of the opposition which will continue to stalk this administration.

At the instinctual level, and unfortunately, the average reader is likely to view the opposition in terms of predictable variables like the: PDP, LP and possibly the various indices of civil society.

But this piece is not preoccupied with these.

Rather our attention is focused on the implications of the evolving dynamics of Air Peace (AP)and the competition in the aviation industry.

It is instructive to recall here that, as soon as  AP ticked off  on the Lagos-London route, the other  airlines came into some form of self-serving  epiphany. They changed tack through the  process of fare reductions.

The implications of this on-going process are deeper than one may think. As long as Nigeria was absent on the Lagos-London route, the route was something of a honey pot for the other airlines. It  was a sybaritic  situation in which all the other  airlines were busy enjoying themselves at the expense of Nigerians and Nigeria.

In my innocence I  thought  that the only airline that  was benefitting from this bazaar of the Lagos- London route was British Airways (BA) whose ancestors were  the original predators of what  passes for the Nigerian state. Little did I know that other Airlines like Air Maroc and Egyptair were also partakers of this largesse.

On this note, the mind remembers the goggled General, Sani Abacha. In the light of the inclement interplay between his regime and Britain, British Airways was banned from Nigeria. But as soon as he died, BA resumed its lucrative foray into Nigeria. One can imagine how much BA must have lost in the light of that move by the General.

The implication is that for every omission or commission on the part of Nigeria, someone out there is smiling home with huge profits. Such forces and individuals constitute at one level the opposition that anyone who  occupies Aso Rock, has to contend with. Needless to say, our Nigeria is  a huge honeypot since we are  talking here of a huge  market  of 200 million Nigerians.

The situation also partly explains why the Naira will continue to go south since for most of our basic needs, we depend heavily on the external realm. It also explains why anybody who occupies Aso Rock is not just up against the  usual opposition  at the domestic level, he is  also up against  the various indices of opposition beyond Nigeria.

And here we are talking about hard-headed interests and zero-sum games in which what one entity loses, is gained by another  one.

This brings to mind another major area in which over time, Nigeria continues to be a spectator in the scheme  of things.

Our specific reference here is the Nigerian oil industry. Nigeria continues to be passive in this industry. So passive that as an oil producing country there are  no backward linkages like refineries and petrochemicals. Even as I write, there are rumblings to the effect that there are jitters out there. This is because, should Nigeria succeed in bringing on stream her own  refineries, very many jobs will be lost by refiners in places like Rotterdam and South Korea. These are some of the entities who export refined oil to an oil producing Nigeria. Again as regards petrochemicals, should Nigeria come into her own in this vital  area, then our imports of raw materials will reduce drastically. In the light of what is  happening to Air Peace, we should expect a fight-back from relevant interests out there.

Very much the same thing can be said for our steel industry.Till date, it remains comatose. No thanks to international conspiracy ably aided by a wayward ruling class.This is invariably a  sad feature which stretches far back  to the dawn of our political independence. Again, Nigeria’s attempts to come into her own in this vital  area will be resisted, and vigorously too, by  the relevant external forces out there in collaboration with their internal allies. So as PBAT Tinubu settles into his second year in office, he will do well to remember and appreciate that he will be contending with various indices of the opposition at the external   various ways these have their tongues and fingers in the Nigerian honey-pot.They will not give up easily.Which is why, the Tinubu presidency should give these self-serving domestic and external forces a good run for their greed and avarice.

There is some hope however. This cautious optimism lies in the fact that, in the course of  that historic outing in Abeokuta where Tinubu openly staked his claim to the Presidency he also pronounced with equal gravity  on his place  in history. Specifically he opined that he would not want to be a footnote to the Nigerian narrative. So all said and done, it is possible to contend  here that in the light of what can be regarded  as his self-conscious place in history; PBAT has his work cut out for him in critical and vital  areas of our national life like: the steel industry, our oil industry and of  course the Aviation  sector.

Success  in these various  areas can only mean that the Great Black Hope is ready to come into her own.

Soremekun, a professor of political science was the second vice chancellor of Federal University Oye Ekiti, Ekiti State.

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Opinion

Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries’ (OPEC) pride in its African roots

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By Haitham Al-Ghais, OPEC Secretary General

Since assuming the office of OPEC Secretary General almost two years ago, I have had the privilege of visiting every African OPEC Member Country, as well as several other African countries. Every visit has reaffirmed my firm conviction that the future is bright for Africa and that the oil industry can play a constructive role in that future. Our Organisation stands ready to offer any support it can to help this great continent realise its awesome potential.

OPEC takes great pride in its strong and enduring African connections, heritage and identity. Half of our Member Countries are African and this includes the continent’s most populous country, Nigeria, and the geographically largest by area, Algeria. We are also privileged to count Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon and Libya as Member Countries. Additionally, two African countries are part of the historic ‘Declaration of Cooperation,’ between OPEC and non-OPEC producing countries, namely Sudan and South Sudan.

Our Organisation’s past is imbued with African character. Looking throughout our 63-year history, many significant meetings took place in African cities. From the Ninth Meeting of the OPEC Conference in Tripoli in 1965, critical meetings and conferences have been held in Algiers (including our first ever Summit), Oran, Lagos, Abuja, Luanda, and Libreville.

Indeed, the idea for our Organisation was conceived in Africa, specifically Egypt. It was at the Cairo Yacht Club in 1959, that the Gentleman’s Agreement was forged that paved the way for the establishment of OPEC in Baghdad in September 1960.

Having played a pivotal role in shaping our past, we have no doubt Africa will be instrumental in the Organization’s future and the future of the oil industry. This is a dominant theme in OPEC’s World Oil Outlook 2045 (WOO).

Africa has a young and vibrant population. By 2045, the Middle East and Africa are forecast to be the leading regions by overall population, adding 723 million people in the period 2022-2045.

We anticipate a bright future for Africa’s oil industry with substantial opportunities for growth. The continent is home to five of the top 30 oil-producing countries and its proven oil reserves amounted to around 120 billion barrels at the end of 2022. This will be crucial to meet the growing global demand for oil, which is expected to rise to 116 million barrels per day (mb/d) by 2045.

These resources will be crucial in enabling African countries to deliver for their peoples. For many oil-producing developing nations, oil production is a way to generate revenue streams that help address pressing and legitimate needs, such as development, employment, education, reducing poverty and investing in public services.

One of the great challenges facing governments here and, indeed, in many other parts of the world is energy poverty. There are 675 million people worldwide who lack access to electricity, four out of five of whom live in sub-Saharan Africa. Furthermore, 2.3 billion people are without clean fuels and technologies for cooking, which can lead to a host of related health and environmental problems.

Of course, OPEC supports efforts that lead to a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions, but we look for this to be achieved in a manner that strikes a fine balance between energy security and sustainable development; ensuring that nobody is left behind. We are also strong advocates for the principle of common but differentiated responsibilities and respective capabilities.

The continent of Africa is home to 17 percent of the world’s population, but is responsible for under 4 percent of global CO2 emissions, with many African countries contributing virtually nothing to global emissions.

When we consider historic cumulative CO2 emissions, the G7 has contributed over 43% of the total alone since 1850, while OPEC Member Countries account for only 4 percent.

These statistics reflect the fact that there is no ‘one size fits all’ solution to addressing climate change and national circumstances need to be taken into account. We need an all-peoples, all technologies and all-energies approach. Technological innovation is a key focus for our Organisation.

It is why our Member Countries are investing heavily in hydrogen projects, Carbon Capture and Utilisation and Direct Air Capture facilities, and the circular carbon economy.

Looking at recent developments across the energy scene in Africa, we see opportunities for the oil industry in places like Namibia, Senegal, Mozambique and Mauritania, to name but a few. OPEC is attentive to these developments and stands ready to support all countries on the African continent in the next chapter in developing their industries. In this regard, we look forward to enhanced cooperation with the African Energy Chamber in the years and decades to come.

The African Energy Chamber, as the voice of the African energy sector, commends OPEC’s commitment to the growth of the African oil and gas industry.

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Opinion

President Tinubu: A year of healing and unifying Nigeria

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By Fredrick Nwabufo

The intangibles of leadership are as potent and profound as the corporeal manifestations of governance. A people must not only see the brick-and-mortar elements of leadership; they must also feel and sense leadership in its quantum of compassion, healing, solace, and capacity to inspire unity, as well as foster peace and progress.

In fact, the incorporeal constituents of leadership are so important that citizens may not see utility in improved economic well-being and massive industrial transformation, if the leadership does not manage the delicate confluences of social and psychological needs.

In some of my treatises as a columnist years ago, I had written that beyond other rudimentary ingredients and supplements of leadership, Nigeria needs a leader who is a healer-in-chief and a unifier by example. A leader who has the proclivity and deliberateness to bring the nation together.

I am most delighted and proud to say Nigeria has found its healer-in-chief; its unifier by example, and consoler-in-chief in President Bola Tinubu. He is the President for all Nigerians.

It has been President Tinubu’s one year of healing and unifying Nigeria. In his inaugural speech on May 29, 2023, the President made a declaration that has become a defining motif of his administration.

He said: “Our administration shall govern on your behalf but never rule over you. We shall consult and dialogue but never dictate. We shall reach out to all but never put down a single person for holding views contrary to our own. We are here to further mend and heal this nation, not tear, and injure it.”

And true to his promise, President Tinubu has been listening and reaching out to Nigerians of diverse complexions and artificial partitions, as well as mending and healing the nation.

Healing and unifying the nation, how, you might ask? By personal example; in words and in deeds. There is no greater purpose and value to leadership than personal example. The place of leadership in forging bonds of communality is the place of purpose and deliberateness. Leadership must be deliberate in managing diversity and in fostering kinship among variegated people. Nation building cannot be left to chance or to a whim. There must be purposive plans and actions towards uniting the people. And these plans and actions, President Tinubu has been successful at carrying through in the past one year.

The President has maintained an accustomed patriotic, graceful, and expansive mien. In his public statements, mostly done extempore, he has always faithfully affirmed his commitment to Nigeria’s unity.

In one of his many noble articulations, he said, “I am irrevocably committed to the unity of Nigeria and constitutional democracy. Constitutional democracy has been reflected greatly here since we assumed office.”

Also to consider are the broad and far-reaching projects and programmes which are in themselves totems of unity – with all Nigerians, irrespective of class or creed, as beneficiaries and potential beneficiaries.

The approval of the Renewed Hope Infrastructure Development Fund to facilitate effective infrastructure development across the pivotal areas of agriculture, transportation, ports, aviation, energy, healthcare, and education, with salient projects across the country is a further affirmation of statesmanship and leadership.

The ongoing epochal Lagos-Calabar Coastal Road, with its attendant immense economic and social benefits to many states within and outside that corridor; the Sokoto-Badagry Road project, and the completed Port Harcourt to Aba stretch of the Port Harcourt to Maiduguri narrow-gauge rail, among other key developments across the nation, assert the all-encompassing and genuine intentionality to nation building. No Nigerian is left behind.

Within the first year, the President also approved the upgrade of key health infrastructure and equipment across all six geo-political zones in line with his administration’s vision of overhauling the health and social welfare sector for enhanced service delivery to all Nigerians.

The following teaching hospitals across the geo-political zones were marked for the establishment of oncology and nuclear medicine centres as part of the President’s bid to ensure that top-tier cancer diagnosis and care is accessible across the country: (1) University of Benin Teaching Hospital, (2) Ahmadu Bello University Teaching Hospital, (3) University of Nigeria (Nsukka) Teaching Hospital, (4) Federal Teaching Hospital, Katsina, (5) University of Jos Teaching Hospital, and (6) Lagos University Teaching Hospital.

Ten other hospitals across all the geo-political zones were also pencilled for critical healthcare-service expansion projects across the fields of radiology, clinical pathology, medical and radiation oncology, and cardiac catheterisation.

The take-off of the first phase of the Consumer Credit Scheme, which is essentially a mitochondrion enabling citizens to improve their quality of life by accessing goods and services upfront, paying responsibly over time, and by the same token bolstering local industry and stimulating job creation is another social cohesion sealant – with all classes of working Nigerians as beneficiaries.  In summary, the establishment of the Nigerian Education Loan Fund (NELFUND) with the pre-eminent vision of safeguarding Nigeria’s future by ensuring that all Nigerian students and youths, regardless of their social, ethnic, or religious backgrounds, have access to sustainable higher education and functional skills, further accents the President’s fidelity to building a stable, strong, united, peaceful, and progressive nation.

One thing is certain: Citizens agree that they have a President for all Nigerians.

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