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Nigeria Loses 400,000 Hectares Of Forest Annually, Experts Raise Alarm

by Nonye Ekwenugo
17 hours ago
in News
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Environmental experts have raised the alarm over Nigeria’s rapidly shrinking forest cover, warning that the country was losing between 350,000 and 400,000 hectares of forest every year, a development they said threatened food security, biodiversity, and human health.

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Speaking at a session on climate change and environmental reporting under the Women Empowerment and Climate Resilience Initiative (WECRI) in Kaduna, environmental data analyst, Jonah Birga, said the situation has reached a critical level, particularly in States like Kaduna, where deforestation continued to rise due to human activities.

“Deforestation is not just about trees being cut down, it involves multiple land-use pressures such as mining, grazing, logging, and charcoal production. Urban areas are major drivers, especially with the high demand for charcoal in residential neighbourhoods like those in Zaria Local Government Area,” Birga stated.

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He added that the effects of deforestation extended beyond environmental degradation to include serious economic and health implications.

“Mining, for instance, affects land quality and causes degradation not just at mining sites but across surrounding communities. It is a complex multiplier of many environmental and health issues,” the expert added.

Birga encouraged journalists to use satellite imagery and local case studies to show “before and after” impacts of deforestation, adding that interviews with community members about changes in forest access or farming yields will help make the crisis more relatable and evidence-based.

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Also speaking at the workshop, the Director General of the Nigerian Conservation Foundation (NCF), Joseph Onoja, described deforestation as one of the biggest contributors to climate change and greenhouse gas emissions in Nigeria.

“Climate change affects every aspect of our lives, and deforestation alone accounts for about 10 per cent of greenhouse gas emissions. When forests are cleared, biodiversity is lost, livelihoods are destroyed, and our ecosystem becomes more fragile,” he noted.

Dr. Onoja urged journalists to play a stronger role in environmental protection by translating complex climate science into simple, compelling stories the public can understand.

“It is the duty of the media to see beyond the ordinary and tell stories that resonate with the people,” he said.

He also called on journalists to hold government agencies accountable for enforcing environmental protection laws.

“If these agencies are not doing their jobs or are not empowered to do so, journalists must call out those responsible. Forests don’t speak, journalists give them a voice.”

According to him, protecting nature remains the most sustainable path to national productivity. “A sick population cannot be productive. We are better off leaving nature as it is — in this case, the forest,” he added.

The session was part of WECRI, a six-month pilot project under the Partnership for Agile Governance and Climate Engagement (PACE) programme, supported by the UK International Development.

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