inaugurates Climate Change Advisory Council
In an effort to tackle climate change, Osun State Governor, Ademola Adeleke on Monday renamed the Ministry of Environment to Ministry of Environment and Climate Change, saying all efforts are to raise the bar and affirm high level state commitment to climate goals.
Also inaugurated Climate Change Advisory Council that will serves as the apex driving platform for the state climate actions and interactions.
Speaking at the inauguration as part of the activities marking this year World Environmental Day, the Spokesperson/Chairman, Governorâs Climate Advisory Council, Mallam Olawale Rasheed, said that the State Governor has approved creation of a State Climate Action Plan, the second in the country after Lagos State.
Rasheed said, the Council will support communities and stakeholders in the form of training, resources and technical assistance, create management plans for natural resources, emergency response, state facilities and agency equipment.
âUpdate facility design and operation that accounts for future climate conditions. Promote research and monitoring that studies the impacts of climate change and methods of adapting.
âEngage in outreach and education on climate change impacts and adaptation. Provide agency support that provides the resources to implement resilience action.â
The objectives of the council among other according to Rasheed are to reduce risk and vulnerability to climate change, strengthen resilience, enhance well-being and the capacity to anticipate, and respond successfully to change.
Earlier, Governor Adeleke who was represented by the Secretary to state Government, Tesilim Igbalaye expressed worry over the state of the world which he said is not cheering one.
âThe state of our world is not a cheering one. We all know we are facing existential threat from relentless despoiling of our environment.
âA particular trending issue is the challenge of plastic pollution. The scale of plastic pollution is growing, relentlessly. The world is producing twice as much plastic waste as two decades ago, reaching 353 million tonnes in 2019, according to OECD figures.
âEight million tonnes of plastic waste leaks into the ocean every year, and urgent action is needed to tackle this problem. Under the âbusiness-as-usualâ scenario, the volume of waste entering the environment will increase by three times by 2040.
âThe threat is now beyond the environment as it poses increasing health risk onto humans as monoplastic with harmful toxins are finding their ways into our water and food.
âThe calculation that recycling can tame the monster is also misplaced. The vast majority of plastics goes into landfills, gets incinerated or is âmismanagedâ, meaning left as litter or not correctly disposed of. Just nine percent of plastic waste is recycled, according to the World Economic Forum.
âAs a state, we support the March 2022 resolution endorsed by 175 countries at the United Nations Environment Assembly (UNEA-5) to start negotiations on an international legally binding agreement to eliminate plastic waste and pollution in the environment. The resolution highlights the importance of sustainable production and consumption of plastics, including resource efficient and circular economy approaches.
âWe are therefore challenged to devise holistic programme to counter this threat. We recommend a combination of waste prevention, alternative materials, waste management, and improved transparency of plastic supply chains.â