The House of Representatives on Wednesday passed a bill to
provide a legal framework for mainstreaming of climate change responses and
actions into government policy formulations and implementation. The bill also
proposed the establishment of a council to provide for the coordination of
climate change governance as well as support the adaptation and mitigation of
the adverse effects of climate change in the country.
In an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), the
sponsor of the bill, Rep. Sam Onuigbo (Abia-PDP) said the need for a strong
national institution that would address the effects of climate change motivated
him to come up with the bill. He expressed concern that absence of a law on
issues of climate change scared investors from investing in the country. “Today
there is no law on climate change, all we have are policies and that has been a
serious setback for the country as far as climate actions are concerned.
“Climate change is a global issue that cuts across the world
and that is what informed the move of the United Nation’s convention on climate
change. “But back home there is no law both at the national and sub national
level and that has necessitated this bill. “The early coming into force of the
2015 Paris Climate agreement reinforced the necessity of climate legislation. “It
will facilitate the domestication of the agreement and enable Nigeria to
effectively implement its commitments, particularly the emission reductions
target,’’ he said. Onuigbo further said that absence of a law that prescribed
legal obligation for compliance with elements of national climate policy and
all other climate related initiatives and programmes had also not helped in
climate change management in the country.
“But this bill will
provide a framework for a federal budget appropriation process that
institutionalises transparency and accountability of climate related sources,
including international climate finance,’’ he said. The lawmaker added that the bill intended to
balance institutions and approaches responsible in addressing climate
challenges across economic sectors and through public and private
participation. “Setting up of guidelines for prescription of range of economic
instruments and regulatory techniques to reduce Green House Gas emissions. “Pursue
high economic growth rate at a low carbon trajectory at the same time reduce
environmental risks and ecological scarcity in an inclusive manner, and growing
new jobs,’’ he added.
Onuigbo, who
disclosed that the bill would be transmitted to the Senate for concurrence on
Wednesday, expressed confidence that it will also be assented to when
transmitted to the President. “Every
leader determines what happens to its subjects, and the president has given
climate change a go by the signing of the UN treaty on Climate Change and his
subsequent speeches back home,’’ he added. The House of Representatives adopted
the committee report on Climate Change on October, 26, 2017.
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