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FG Initiates National Emission Framework
Michael Olugbode in Abuja
The federal government has initiated a process aimed at developing a national emissions framework.
The process was initiated on Tuesday in Abuja, by the Minister of Environment, Mohammed Abdullahi, who recalled that Nigeria signed the Paris agreement with the goal to limit global warming to well below two degrees, and preferably to 1.5 degrees Celsius, compared to pre-industrial levels, in addition to reducing global greenhouse gas emissions as soon as possible to achieve a climate-neutral world by mid-century.
Abdullahi said: “Towards collaborative achievement of this global temperature goal, the federal government has shown exemplary initiative in this respect.”
The minister said President Muhammadu Buhari speech at COP 26 in Glasgow, where he had announced Nigeria’s Net Zero target of 2060, which made Nigeria the first major developing country and the first in Africa to undertake such a commitment, marked the beginning of a road map signaling to the international community that while greater responsibility was on the developed world, Nigeria was committed to providing leadership in climate governance both regionally and internationally.
He added: “As you may all be aware, operationalisation of this Act started with the appointment of the pioneer Director General for the Climate Change Council.
“The government is further taking the lead on the establishment of a trading scheme, with legal framework provided in the Climate Change Act of 2021 for the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions through a cap and trade-based emissions trading schemes to meet the Net Zero target from today.
“We should all be reminded that a collective investment in addressing climate change will eventually provide immense dividends for the global economy alongside the economic co-benefits that come with it.
“Nigeria realises that its efforts on carbon management policy stands to gain from aligning our national emissions planning to international mechanisms such as Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS).”
The minister added that: “Nigeria cannot afford to ignore the possibilities of generating upwards of 250 metric tons of CO2E annually amounting to an estimated value in excess of $3 billion.
“The Federal Ministry of Environment is therefore poised to explore all options that are driven by our domestic realities and yet in tune with global benchmarks and best practices to ensure the development of a scheme that adds value to the environment, trigger bankable and commercial transactions which will ultimately generate jobs.”
Also speaking at the occasion, a representative of the United Nations Development Programme, Mohammed Yahaya, who welcomed Nigeria’s commitment toward achieving earlier stated goals, said, “The global carbon trade had in a short space of time grown into a market worth over $175 billion a year.”






