Water Journalists Africa and PAMACC Africa
April 19, 2016

Nigeria’s aspiration for the vice presidency of the United Nations Environment Assembly (UNEA) received a major boost as the African Ministerial Conference on the Environment (AMCEN) was officially informed Monday.

Speaking to over 40 Ministers of the environment and heads of country delegations at the 6th special session of the conference in Cairo Monday, Alh. Ibrahim Usman Jibril, Nigeria’s Minister of state for Environment who represented the senior minister, expressed the country’s delight to present Mrs. Amina Mohammed for nomination as one of the two Vice Presidents from Africa on the bureau of the UNEA 2.

Alh. Jibril hinged his senior minister’s nomination on her eminent status as one of the architects of the sustainable development goals (SDGs) and her focal commitment to the African cause in the global effort to achieve sustainable development as well as the environmental dimension of Agenda 2063.

The Minister of State further expressed Nigeria’s support for the AMCEN process aimed at presenting a unified African position at the forthcoming UNEA2, May 2016 year in Nairobi, Kenya.

Alh. Ibrahim Usman Jibril, Nigeria's Minister of state for Environment
Alh. Ibrahim Usman Jibril, Nigeria’s Minister of state for Environment

Nigeria, according to him, believes that the African Renewable Energy Initiative (AREI) and the African Adaptation initiative (AAI) are veritable tools for sustainable development on the continent in the near future.

“Nigeria considers building capacity and retooling the youths of Africa through education and employment as a necessary and urgent requirement for sustainable development in Africa. The continent is well endowed with enormous human resources and is still growing. We should invest in this precious resource for Africa’s renaissance,” he said.

Welcoming the Paris Agreement and encouraging its implementation especially as it relates to African realities taking into account respective nationally determined contributions, Nigeria called for investments in Africa’s green growth as a catalyst to achieving the climate SDGs and the Agenda 2063

On their own part, the African civil society coalition under the aegis of the Pan African Climate Justice Alliance (PACJA) believe that UNEA should be the rallying point for Africa’s environmental consciousness, and called for all stakeholders to continue supporting UNEP-RoA which hosts the AMCEN Secretariat.

UNEA was formed following a call by world leaders at the UN conference on Sustainable Development (Rio+20) in Brazil in June 2012. The aim of the UNEA was to strengthen and upgrade UNEP as the leading global environmental authority that sets the global environmental agenda and by establishing universal membership in its Governing Council – a 58-member governing body of UNEP in place since 1972.

Water Journalists Africa (WJA) is the largest network of journalists reporting on water in the African continent. It brings together some 700 journalists from 50 African countries. It was established in...

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