green room

THE GREEN ROOM (Episode 19): Maika Sondarjee and Nathan Andrews on Decolonizing Global Development Theory: What's in a Buzzword?

GREEN ROOM: LIVE WEBINAR TRANSCRIPT


Summary of the Discussion

This month’s episode features two professional experts in the field of international development, Dr. Maïka Sondarjee from University of Ottawa and Dr. Nathan Andrews from McMaster University. The topic of discussion centered on ‘Decolonizing Global Development Theory: What's in a Buzzword?


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ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Maïka Sond-ar-jee is an assistant professor at the School of International Development and Global Studies, University of Ottawa. She obtained her Ph.D. from the University of Toronto and has been a Banting Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Montreal. Her first book, Perdre le Sud. Décoloniser la solidarité internationale (2020), addresses systemic sexism, colonialism and inequalities in North-South relations. Her current projects look at white saviorism, epistemic inequalities in communities of practices, as well as feminist approaches of international relations.

ABOUT THE MODERATOR

Dr. Jason J. McSparren is an educator, researcher, and administrator with a PhD. in Global Governance and Human Security from Massachusetts Boston.He is also a Pre-Doctoral Fellow (2017-18) for the West African Research Association (WARA).

ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Nathan Andrews is an Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at McMaster University. One aspect of Dr. Andrews’ research focuses on the global political economy/ecology of natural resource extraction and development. His peer-reviewed publications on this topic have appeared in journals such as International Affairs, Resources Policy, World Development, Energy Research & Social Science, Africa Today, Business & Society Review, and Journal of International Relations & Development, among others.



Favourite Quote

To decolonize would be to flip the coin so to speak and look at how other people from other parts of the world could be looking at the same world that you’re looking about from a totally different perspective.
— Dr. Nathan Andrews
We have to value all kinds of knowledge .
— Dr. Maïka Sondarjee
we have to deconstruct this idea that the only people with knowledge are Scholars with PhDs from Western universities.
— Dr. Maïka Sondarjee

THE GREEN ROOM (Episode 16): Alberto Saldamando on Indigenous Activism for Better Climate and Global Environmental Justice

GREEN ROOM: LIVE WEBINAR TRANSCRIPT


Summary of the Discussion

This month’s episode focuses on Indigenous People's involvement in the achievement of a greener planet. the topic of discussion was Indigenous Activism for Better Climate and Global Environmental Justice. Our guest, Alberto Saldamando a legal activist for the Indigenous Environmental Network and an internationally acknowledged expert on human rights discusses extensively the marginalization of the indigenous community in decision making that affects their homeland. He further stated his active participation in the negotiations leading to the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous peoples.


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ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Alberto Saldamando (Xicano/Zapoteca) is an internationally acknowledged expert on human rights/Indigenous rights and has represented Indigenous Peoples, organizations and communities from various countries from most regions of the world, before United Nations human rights mechanisms, as well as the International Labor Organization, the Interamerican Commission on Human Rights, and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.

ABOUT THE MODERATOR

Dr. Jason J. McSparren is an educator, researcher, and administrator with a PhD. in Global Governance and Human Security from Massachusetts Boston.He is also a Pre-Doctoral Fellow (2017-18) for the West African Research Association (WARA).



Favourite Quote

Silence does not protect anybody from the state
— Alberto Saldamando

THE GREEN ROOM (Episode 15): Gerod Rody and Sophia Paul on Bridging Queer Identity and Sustainability Values

GREEN ROOM: LIVE WEBINAR


Summary of the Discussion

Gerod Rody is the founder of OUT for Sustainability, gave a brief history organization, its mission and challenges in the last 13 years. Also, during the session, Sophia Paul mentioned the achievements of the organization, post COVID-19 restructuring and the future engagement of the organization in helping the queer communities.


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ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Gerod Rody is the founder of OUT for Sustainability

Gerod Rody is the founder of OUT for Sustainability

ABOUT THE MODERATOR

Dr. Jason J. McSparren is an educator, researcher, and administrator with a PhD. in Global Governance and Human Security from Massachusetts Boston.

Dr. Jason J. McSparren is an educator, researcher, and administrator with a PhD. in Global Governance and Human Security from Massachusetts Boston.


Q&A

Jason: Greetings to our audience, thank you very much for joining us on the green room today.

I'm Jason McSparren, I'm the moderator for the green room here at the green Institute. Today, our discussion is about sustainable inclusion bridging queer identity and sustainability values. And we have two guests with us today which is really nice. We've got Gerod Rody and Sophia Paul. Please give everybody your silent applause and welcome to Gerod and Sophia.

Let me Please introduce them. Gerod Rody is the founder and former president of OUT for sustainability. Gerod has followed his passion for connecting various vision with near in action. He's animated by identity intersectionality, and where he sees fresh opportunities and spaces between established business practices and shifting cultural norms, is where he operates best, he is an innovative strategy consultant, focused on business design. He has worked with some of the largest organizations around the country and around the world, he applies his entrepreneurial creativity to benefit clients across sectors. He's worked in retail, finance, beauty and energy. And when he has a few extra minutes, his hobbies include long walks with his dog and Brooklyn, sharing meals with friends and traveling the world. Thank you very much for being here with us today Jerry. Thank you.

And I'd also like to introduce Sophia Paul. Sophia is the chair of the board at OUT for sustainability. Sophia is passionate about OUT for sustainability mission of environmental justice in climate resilient programs, created for in by LGBTQIA plus communities. Sophia has professional experience and collective processes in promoting diversity, equity and inclusion in the environmental movement. A graduate of Environmental Studies in Oberlin College, Sophia worked as a volunteer coordinator at a social service organization that focused on community engagement and food justice. Following that, they pursued a Masters of Science at the School of environment and sustainability at the University of Michigan. They focus on the studies and environmental justice in collaborative natural resource management. Currently, Sophia coordinates research and Institutional Diversity in equity in the environmental movement and plans conferences for young people, focus on equity in the environmental movement, currently living in Ohio, Sophia is employed at the trust for Public Land. Sophia spends their free time gardening, baking and training for their first marathon. Good luck with that.

Sophia: Thank you.

 

Jason: You're welcome, and everything else you're doing.

Sophia: Thank you.

Jason: So thank you too very much for being here. We can start our conversation by talking about what was the genesis for your program OUT for sustainability. Gerod, can you talk to us about that, please.

Gerod: Yeah, absolutely. I've been involved with the queer community for a while, and then I decided, but I also had this deep passion for sustainability. So I went to business school, the famous Graduate Institute, and I found these amazing progressive people who are actively inclusive, but a completely invisible queer community within that. So it wasn't that there weren't queer people present but there was no connection there was, it felt like I was divorced from this other part of my identity. And so, notoriously I asked around and said, is there any kind of organization that exists, kind of along these lines, so I can give a date. But it really became much more than that very quickly. So we started doing stakeholder meetings and figure out like, does the world actually need this kind of organization or is it just me and maybe a few other people. So we built a board, we started doing some programming. And, you know, the thing I wanted to leave on this one is through all of the things we've done early on this try and learn model, it showed that even if you don't really like camping, like me, you can get involved with the environmental movement and the queer community and really bring these things together and get engaged, wherever you are.

Jason: I admired your entrepreneurial spirit. It really a good quality to have in, especially you know, the world needs leaders and it's really good to see. So tell us a little bit about, were there any challenges at the beginning that you had to overcome.

Gerod: A lot of it was just focus. What is the problem that we're solving. I got a lot of feedback of like this is nice. But, you know, is this do these two things have anything in common. And the, the original example I gave was, you know, there's get running groups there's queer foods contingents out there that are doing amazing work. Sustainability is so intrinsic to who we are as people and so essential to focus on is humanity that it was, it was a logic thing, we need to give everything we've got to surviving as a species and we can't survive if we ignore this incredibly essential and dynamic part of our human race. So in that respect, I think it was ended up being proving itself out that there is a value to this kind of organization. And thankfully there are a few others now, Doing this kind of work as well. Was 15 years later or something but I mean, the point is, it's been amazing to see how many points. Sustainability crosses with the career community like food, like health, like transportation, you know, anything sustainability is everywhere, it's every part of who we are and how we operate. So, Yeah, that would be my two cents.

Jason: I just got one quick question for you until you started to say about 15 years ago. Well, doing this work.

Gerod: Yeah, 2008.

Jason: Okay.

Gerod: Yeah.

Jason: And how large is your group nowadays in terms of membership

Gerod: Yeah so we've never been, you know, I stepped down from the board right before points only right before coven for a job that was going to have me traveling like three weeks, a month. But anyway, the point is, so I'm not totally up on the numbers, Sophia you may be able to step in but it's never been in a membership organization so we don't have, you know, kind of like a roster, but in terms of engagement, before that I think for 10 year and 2018, it was like 5000 people had been touched in some way by the organization like Atlanta, I'm sure it's grown since then, so

Jason: You know that's a significant amount of people because they have friends and contacts so that's really good. Yeah, I know that that's really good spread. Yes. Actually,

Gerod: Yea,

Jason: Thank you so much Gerod. Just give us one second, I'd like to bring Sophia in, but before we do that I just want to highlight one thing and share. After this the origin story. Yes, certainly. Okay. Yes, absolutely. I've got a question about to ask Sophia. I'm curious about how Out for sustainability is emerging. So perhaps you can talk about the mission, but prior to that I just want to again, just highlight our new guests today. We've got Gerod and Sophia from We're talking about bridging queer identity and sustainability, how they work for sustainability, you can find out for sustainability out4s.org. And then one thing I like to go to the green institute website is the website.greeninstituteng.com and you can get the latest book by Adenike Akinsemolu. Adenike is the director and founder of the group. And this is a fantastic book. You can read about the principles of green and sustainability science. The book is focused on the principles of green and sustainability science, using case studies across Africa, in the world. The book contributes to the literature about environmental science by expounding on the natural systems, and the scientific aspects of sustainability. Okay. So if we go back to our screen I don't want to share, and we'll go back to ask the question to Sophia. Sophia please Can you talk to us about how Out for sustainability is emerging


Favourite Quote

...in a world of climate crisis and wherever these natural disasters, queer people have unique vulnerabilities
— Sophia Paul

Top Comments

Don't think us inattentive, I don't have anything to ask, but it's been really interesting and inspiring so far!-Shaun Bryan

Thank you for the knowledge passed across-Olisa Ononye


THE GREEN ROOM (Episode 14): Jo-Anne McArthur on Bringing Visibility to Hidden Animals Worldwide

GREEN ROOM: LIVE WEBINAR


Summary of the Discussion

Jo-Anne McArthur a Photojournalist that focuses on animal rights emphasizes the need for the human race to notice the existence of animals and the cruelty that the animal face. She mentioned that animals are sentient beings and should be treated with respect. She shared some of her work which exposes some conditions that animals have to face which is against their rights.


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ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Jo-Anne McArthur is an award-winning photographer, author, and sought-after speaker.

Jo-Anne McArthur is an award-winning photographer, author, and sought-after speaker.

ABOUT THE MODERATOR

Dr. Jason J. McSparren is an educator, researcher, and administrator with a PhD. in Global Governance and Human Security from Massachusetts Boston.

Dr. Jason J. McSparren is an educator, researcher, and administrator with a PhD. in Global Governance and Human Security from Massachusetts Boston.


Q&A

Jason McSparren: Our friends in the audience please welcome Jo-Anne McArthur to the Green Room today. Hello Joanne

 

Jo-Anne McArthur: Hello thanks so much for inviting me.

 

Jason McSparren: Glad to have you Joanne. Can you see the screen? Okay.  Do you see the photos?

 

Jo-Anne McArthur: I can see your Power point. Yes

 

Jason McSparren: Okay very well, so like we could take a quick look at some of your photos just to give our audience an idea of some of the images that you might seein this latest book hidden animals in the anthropocene and it's an interesting cover.

 

Jo-Anne McArthur: I will say that all of the work you'll see in this Power point is mine, except for those which are captioned otherwise, this book hidden is my first foray into editing for a large photographic book so this isactually the work of 40 photojournalists globally. I knew I wanted to really be all encompassing with the subject matter and that I couldn't cover that alone with the work that I had done, so we see here images from Celine Magnolia, Aitor Garmendia This image is not mine, what we're seeing here are cultural events like this one here unusual and odd and horrific an incredible capture by Aitor Garmendia who's one of the leading animal photojournalists in the world right now. He's quite relentless in his work and you can skip back to the image of the pig in the garbage also a really highly unusual situation for us to see pigs end up in dumps all the time but this is out of sight and out of mind and what I mean by the ‘hidden animals’ which is the topic of the book, is that animals especially those who are farmed for food are raised by the billions and yet we only ever interact with them on our plate or the fur bearing animals we interact with them when we wear them and yet they are kept by the billions every single day and so we wanted to illuminate their lives so that we can make better decisions think a little bit more critically have important discussions because a lot of us care about animals but we care about the animals who are more familiar to us. Wildlife, companion animals and yet there are others who are as equally sentient and yet we fail to see and we mistreat horribly. An example is here, you've landed on this image of a turtle being filleted which is a word you used. I had not thought of that word for this image but that's exactly what's happening.The turtle is alive and these things just you need to be seen by us

 

Jason McSparren: Can I ask you a question please?

 

Jo-Anne McArthur: Please

 

Jason McSparren: Could you expound a little bit on the idea of animals being sentient beings. Just to kind of give us a little bit of context for some people in our audience who may not actually understand what you're talking about or might need a little bit more background on that idea

 

Jo-Anne McArthur: Yeah all animals are feeling animals, they are complex and we aren't taught that they are complex, we are taught that they have complex emotional lives or that they make complex decisions and because they have these qualities, it means that they can experience complex emotions like joy and fear and sorrow and anxiety and jealousy. Some of these emotions I suppose are not complex but they do get complex and any of us who live with a cat or a dog or an animal know that they experience the world in us, all sorts of ways just as we do but so do the animals we eat now the pigs and the chickens and the turkeys and the cows and so because they can experience life as we do in many ways they can experience joy and suffering and fear. I think that needs to be known and it was really exciting is that ethology, the study of animal behavior is really growing and so you don't just have to take my word or the word of a dog owner that animals have feeling. We know this because they've been studied and we see incredible behaviors in fish, in insects, in chickens, and it's pretty exciting and so the more we know about how animals feel and think the more it becomes difficult for us to just or at least in theory should be more difficult for us to just put them away in cages that they can't turn around. In horrific fur farms where they're crammed into cages for our benefit especially when we don't need to do this, we don't need to keep animals in these conditions for our survival.

 

Jason McSparren: Great and that actually prompts another question, again just why is it important to make these animals visible, you mentioned these hidden animals with whom humans have such a close relationship and yet humans fail to see these animals.You mention the animals that we eat, the animals that we wear, we use for research, sometimes we put these animals to work,we view them as entertainment as we can see on the screen right now and also the animals that we sacrifice in the name of tradition and religion and you started to talk about that already, but I'd like if you can just elaborate on that a little bit more why is it important for the general public to see these animals.

 

Jo-Anne McArthur: Well as the old saying goes, I guess seeing is believing and sometimes we have to see something to become aware of it. It's really that simple and that is the job of photojournalists, photographers and not just animal photojournalists like myself but conflict photographers for example, they are going out into the field to document wars, the things that we do to one another,we need to take what's going on in the world and bring that home and literally bring that into our homes where we're sitting right now, so that we can learn something new and as we know that should and often does lead to conversations and caring and change. Photographers create proof and that's what we're doing here with hidden, this is proof of what is, what needs to be seen and in most of these cases probably all of these cases what should not be. These images don't sugarcoat how we treat animals, it's a five-pound tome of a book and it is modeled after other books of war photography, about how we treat others and long ago I was inspired by war photographers to do something similar for animals. I felt that other animals, non-human animals deserved the visibility that we attempt to give to other suffering people, other suffering animals I guess.

 

Jason McSparren: Sure, no I totally agree. It's really one of those things as you say you know they're unseen. right, but we interact with animals constantly. In the real life the whole idea of the unseen, we talk about industrial farming etc, even we're seeing in some of these images it's not necessarily even industrial farming. It's small community farming, it's just subsistence living in some cases but the way that we interact with these animals, the way that we may take their lives prior to eating them, etc, it seems to be a pretty brutal life for these animals and the more that people know it could change people's attitudes toward their diets, it could also possibly even improve the lives of the food animals, etc and also the animals that we see in entertainment and things along those lines. So at this point, I just like to mention that folks you can take a look at the Green Institute website for a lot of features and activities. It's https://greeninstitute.ng/. And one of the things that you might be able to find there is this really interesting book, the Principles of Green and Sustainable Science written by the Director of the Green Institute and Founder Adenike Akinsemolu. This book focuses on the Principles of Green and Sustainable Science using various case studies that it contributes to the literature in science, in the environmental fields by providing information on scientific aspects of sustainability. So the Principles of Green and Sustainability Science can be found at the greeninstitute.ng. And as we move on, Jo-Anne I'd like to ask you, many of our audience members are maybe aspiring photographers or maybe just college age people thinking about how they can contribute to the world or how they might be able to build a career. So I ask you what motivated you to pursue this subject matter for your artistic expression and professional focus

 

Jo-Anne McArthur: Well there certainly wasn't to be lying there. I'm just someone who was really interested in the world and also very interested in suffering and the causes of suffering and when I saw that there were these billions of animals that we just weren't thinking about I became really gripped by this, very curious and started turning my lens away from the other things I was photographing, street photography and humanitarian causes towards animals and sometimes I could just go down the street and photograph the animals coming to the slaughterhouse. Sometimes I traveled farther fields, sometimes I went to a local circus rodeo or zoo and something interesting about using this word hidden. Sometimes it's not just the animals that are literally hidden but their uses and their experiences are hidden to us so what I mean by that is, for example, in circuses and zoos the animals are in plain view they're not hidden at all but we aren't really seeing them. We're there for our enjoyment, our education, sometimes it's just you know a day out for something to do and yet while the animal is right in front of us we aren't really thinking about them, wearen't thinking about their experience, how they might feel about having to perform, how they might have felt about being broken in order to perform and so their lives even though right there in front of us remain hidden as well and that was actually the subject of my second book called captive which is a look atanimals in zoos and aquaria worldwide.

 

Jason McSparren: Yes I hope to have time to focus on that as well

 

Jo-Anne McArthur: Yes


Favourite Quote

Well as the old saying goes, I guess seeing is believing and sometimes we have to see something to become aware of it.
— Jo-Anne McArthur

Top Comments

Thank you for showing us. It is an eye opener to cruety faced by the animals that we refused to be aware of- Anonymous


THE GREEN ROOM (Episode 12): Uzoma Asagwara on How Self-Actualization promotes Sustainable Development

GREEN ROOM: LIVE WEBINAR TRANSCRIPT


Summary of the Discussion

This month’s episode started with a short introduction of our speaker, Uzoma Asagwara, and the introduction of the topic, how self-actualization promotes sustainable development. Uzoma spoke extensively on the journey of identifying their identity and embracing it. They further spoke on the inequalities and inequities in society and the need to address them in order to achieve the sustainable development goal.


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ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Uzoma Asagwara is a Registered Psychiatric Nurse, former member of the Canadian National basketball team and recently made history as the first Black, Queer, Gender Non-Conforming person elected to the Manitoba Legislative Assembly and across Canada.

Uzoma Asagwara is a Registered Psychiatric Nurse, former member of the Canadian National basketball team and recently made history as the first Black, Queer, Gender Non-Conforming person elected to the Manitoba Legislative Assembly and across Canada.

ABOUT THE MODERATOR

Dr. Jason J. McSparren is an educator, researcher, and administrator with a PhD. in Global Governance and Human Security from Massachusetts Boston.He is also a Pre-Doctoral Fellow (2017-18) for the West African Research Association (WARA).



Favourite Quote

When we ensure that there are no barriers in the way of anybody accessing the services that they need, when we take care of those in our communities who are most vulnerable, it benefits, absolutely, everybody.
— Uzoma Asagwara

THE GREEN ROOM (Episode 11): Amelia Clarke on Collaboration not Competition (Building Multi-stakeholder Partnerships for Sustainability)

GREEN ROOM: LIVE WEBINAR


Summary of the Discussion

Dr. Amelia shared her research work which focuses on Implementation of goals through different approach which can be partnership or participation. She further speaks on the importance of localising the Sustainable Development Goals and the deep Decarbonization strategy which is also  crucial in achieving the Global Goals.


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ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Dr. Amelia Clarke is the Associate Dean Research in the Faculty of Environment at the University of Waterloo.

Dr. Amelia Clarke is the Associate Dean Research in the Faculty of Environment at the University of Waterloo.

ABOUT THE MODERATOR

Dr. Jason J. McSparren is an educator, researcher, and administrator with a PhD. in Global Governance and Human Security from Massachusetts Boston.

Dr. Jason J. McSparren is an educator, researcher, and administrator with a PhD. in Global Governance and Human Security from Massachusetts Boston.


Q&A

Dr. McSparren: Fantastic work. Thank you very much. Thank you very, very much. Okay, I'd like to begin now with the question and answer period. Okay, again, ladies and gentlemen in the audience, if you're interested in asking a question, please raise your hand or type your question into the chatbox. And then, we will call on you unmute your screen so that you can ask your question, or if you prefer if it's in the chat box, I can always ask.

But as I was listening to the presentation. One thing came to mind that that jumped out on me. Actually, there are a lot of very interesting details. This is a really fantastic research; it can have a big impact on sustainable development progress and the actualisation of the SDGs going forward. So that's really great work. I want to commend the two of you. But one thing that I thought about really quickly is, you mentioned, Dr. Clarke, that you have some of these multi-stakeholder group projects are either voluntarily put together or they are contract-based. And I was wondering if in your conclusions in your findings. Did you find that one or the other is more successful, or was that something that you weren't necessarily looking at?

Dr. Clarke: So what we're finding is that at the local scale, they're all relevant.And so then it's a question for what.So generally, organisations get involved with a partnership approach because they've, they want to tackle something that's outside their jurisdiction, or they don't have the resources to do it.And so that drives them to want to partner with someone else. So, if the main resource you're missing is capital, don't have the money to do an infrastructure project for example, then a PPP might be the right approach. On the other hand, if you're missing kind of collective action by many actors simultaneously. And you want to move forward on a lot of aspects because these are very complicated problems. Then a multi-stakeholder kind of cross sector partnership will enable you to engage many actors from local universities to local businesses to civil society, to all collectively work towards the same vision. So, each one has a purpose. And what we're seeing in the climate spaces now there's a lot of sector approaches. So they're starting to develop partnerships very specific on transportation, for example. And then another one over here on electricity. So, again, it depends on what you're missing right how much do you control the local utilities or it's another company. How much needs to be done through partnership or how much you can do yourself.

Dr. McSparren: Yes, interesting I asked that question because in some of my research, I've looked at voluntary governance mechanisms in the mining sector, and again in the literature, there's a lot of talk about the effectiveness or sometimes lack thereof. And those so I'll just kind of wondering about your perspective in the sustainability front.

Dr. Clarke: I'm glad you brought up mining. So, this is a perfect example of a participation approach versus a partnership approach. And if you're doing stakeholder engagement, but you completely control their decision, and you're going to completely implement all the decisions that's not collaborative right, where if it's a partnership approach where you let the community have a big say in what's happening here. Then you're starting to get into a more partnership approach.


Favourite Quote

The Sustainable Community plans are a wonderful way of localizing the SDGs and bringing those topics all down to local scale and what can be achieved at the local scale.
— Dr. Amelia Clarke

Top Comments

I am very appreciative by the insightful information shared by both Professor Clarke and by Mr. Bayo at today's Green Room event-Filomena


THE GREEN ROOM (Episode 9): Ami Vitale on SUSTAINABLE PHOTOGRAPHY (When Pictures Tell Stories for Change)

GREEN ROOM: LIVE WEBINAR


Summary of the Discussion

The Moderator kicked off the discussion with the introduction of our guest Ami Vitale, an Award-winning Photojournalist with the National Geographic Magazine. Ami Vitale talked about her early career as a Journalist and the need to be determined in the face of despair.  She shared amazing stories of her project on Northern White Rhinos, a project that was first rejected but today has attracted attention from different parts of the world and the Save Giraffe Now project, both from Kenya.  Ami also advised upcoming creatives on the need to gain different skills that will help them achieve their unique vision. She also expatiates on the importance to be ethical and unbiased in journalism.


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ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Nikon Ambassador and National Geographic Magazine photographer Ami Vitale has traveled to more than 100 countries, bearing witness not only to violence and conflict, but also to surreal beauty and the enduring power of the human spirit.

Nikon Ambassador and National Geographic Magazine photographer Ami Vitale has traveled to more than 100 countries, bearing witness not only to violence and conflict, but also to surreal beauty and the enduring power of the human spirit.

ABOUT THE MODERATOR

Dr. Jason J. McSparren is an educator, researcher, and administrator with a PhD. in Global Governance and Human Security from Massachusetts Boston. He is also a Pre-Doctoral Fellow (2017-18) for the West African Research Association (WARA).

Dr. Jason J. McSparren is an educator, researcher, and administrator with a PhD. in Global Governance and Human Security from Massachusetts Boston. He is also a Pre-Doctoral Fellow (2017-18) for the West African Research Association (WARA).


QUESTIONS AND ANSWER

Jason McSparren: Yes, please ask questions. We know that we've got a really interesting audience on this fantastic topic. Okay. So, let's see. We have a question here. Okay. This is actually a statement right here. We have a question from Paulina Ondarza. And she asks, this is she says this is so powerful and inspiring. Loved that you pointed out that often, the solutions or a second half of the story is left out. How do you interact? How do you turn a tragic story into one of hope doing it justice on both sides? So how would you approach that as a Storyteller as a Photojournalist?

 

Ami Vitale: Thank you. That's such a great question. I mean, I think that the immediate thing is to like feel the sense of despair when you, there are days I mean to be totally honest, there are days it's hard to get out of bed. Truly, you just look at the world like, oh my God, I don't even know, it's like one thing and the next thing and you just think it can't get any worse and then it does right? I literally sometimes just have to channel that despair into and I remember I mean, I have the privilege of meeting the people on the ground and I realized when you actually think about it, there is no other answer than having hope and then looking at the people the real heroes on the ground and I think you know there are answers and we have all the capacity to turn this around. If you think about the amount of money and things that we spend our money on and the things that we put our importance on. I mean if you channelled just a percentage of what we value in today's world and channelled it back into these causes and people in organizations and institutions, we got this and I think people are incredibly smart.

 It's really about what we choose to prioritize and I think as storytellers, it's up to us to not just get overwhelmed by the despair and give up. We have to actively seek out the solution and I see this happening all the time, where journalists and writers will write these beautiful stories, but then we don't give people, we don't point them in the right direction, and I know that there was always this question when I was growing up and studying journalism. It was like don't cross that ethical line like you're not an activist and I'm I agree, you know, my role is not to be the activist. I'm the Storyteller, but I also think that it's not enough to just point out the challenges and leave it there. What next, like you got to point people to the institutions, give the viewpoint from all sides, a multitude of viewpoints is very important, but then you know, definitely it's okay to point out who's doing this work and give you know, give the credit where the credit's due.

I think often journalists kind of insert themselves inside the story and that's okay. But remember to make it about the people that, you're writing about does that kind of answer it

 

Jason McSparren: I would think so and actually just want to say that the way that you approach that answer kind of touched on a question that I was going to ask earlier and I just want to ask the question at respectively and make a comment because on your website, which is a really interesting website to take a look at amivitale.com. In one of the stories toward the end, Ami mentions that she uses her photography to amplify the voices of others and I think you just explain that whole sentiment in that motivation in your previous comment, but I just think that it's really important that because I saw in the comment, somebody's asking what is your motivation? And I think that is an element of your motivation. It's really you as you said early like to be behind the camera out of the spotlight and really amplifying and elevate the actions and the motivations in the voices of other people doing really interesting and important work.

 

Ami Vitale: Yeah, I think you get to a certain point the motivations is I've been really blessed to see all these different things in life and you get to a certain point where you just start to see the connections between all of humanity, all of the natural world and that it isn't just about you know, there's a sense of humility that I think comes after a certain time where you just filled with gratitude and wanting to make the connections, realizing that we're a blip on this planet, we are a blip in time. What we do right now matters not just for us but truly like you just get the sense of the internal nests of this planet, and I know that sounds lofty, but it's really true and I think nature reminds us of that. I mean you get out in nature and it's humbling. It's deeply humbling


Favourite Quote

All stories of humanity are always related to the stories of the natural world, our environment.
— Ami Vitale
The People, the indigenous people living with the wildlife...Honestly, they hold the key to saving what is left, they are the greatest protector of what is left.
— Ami Vitale
Almost every story has been told in a variety of different ways, but only you can bring back your unique vision and your unique way and bring frankly, your unique access.
— Ami Vitale

Top Comment

Thank you Ami for sharing your vision, passion and inspiration- Michelle

Hello from Atlanta and a former Seattleite for 30 years. As another female photographer for 32 years, I have seen you speak at a Nat Geo lectures as well as watched your career grow. I wanted to tell you how much I have admired your perseverance. I really appreciate the conservation angle you have taken along with your statements against social media. Thank you!- Dani Weiss

​Happy to be here and listen to Ami. Thanks Green Institute for this opportunity. Greetings from Ukraine! ❤- MissKKate

Hi, Ami from Munich! I admire your work so much.- Kristina Assenova

Nice content learnt some good things-Thomas James


THE GREEN ROOM (Episode 8): Climate Change and the Voiceless

GREEN ROOM: LIVE WEBINAR

Randall S. Abate is the inaugural Rechnitz Family and Urban Coast Institute Endowed Chair in Marine and Environmental Law and Policy, and a Professor in the ...

Summary of the Discussion

The discussion kicked off with a brief introduction of our guest, Prof Randall S. Abate, Professor in the Department of Political Science and Sociology, at Monmouth University in West Long Branch, New Jersey. by our amiable moderator Dr. Duygu Sever Mehmetoğlu


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ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Randall S. Abate is the inaugural Rechnitz Family and Urban Coast Institute Endowed Chair in Marine and Environmental Law and Policy, and a Professor in the Department of Political Science and Sociology, at Monmouth University.

Randall S. Abate is the inaugural Rechnitz Family and Urban Coast Institute Endowed Chair in Marine and Environmental Law and Policy, and a Professor in the Department of Political Science and Sociology, at Monmouth University.

ABOUT THE MODERATOR

S. Duygu Sever is a passionate researcher who works on the intertwined relationship between energy politics, sustainability and human security. She holds a PhD in Political Science and International Relations at Koç University, Turkey.

S. Duygu Sever is a passionate researcher who works on the intertwined relationship between energy politics, sustainability and human security. She holds a PhD in Political Science and International Relations at Koç University, Turkey.


QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS

Moderator: So Professor, let's start with the basics. You are using a very interesting, striking, and important term The Voiceless while talking about climate change and the efforts to mitigate its impact. What does the term Voiceless stand for?

Prof. Randall: Well, I used this term deliberately in the book to represent those that are not able to represent their own interests under the law. So, the three categories that I've identified in the book share that common vulnerability when we talk about future generations of humans such as youth that are not yet able to vote and the unborn, and wildlife and natural resources. They share a common vulnerability of not being able to represent their interest in the legal system and therefore they need human guardians and advocates to step in to protect their interest, to account for their concerns because they're not able to participate on their own behalf. And so the term of the voiceless does have other meanings outside of this book project and I certainly respect those references as well. For instance, sometimes voiceless can refer to other marginalized communities of humans who aren't adequately protected under the law but for purposes of this book project, it's those three categories only.

Sabika: Thank you for having me on your show. Thank you. My name is Sabika and I'm calling in from Qatar and I suppose I'd like to just briefly tap into your expertise at law. And as we all know that climate change is just not a simple issue, It is not only an environmental issue, It is an issue that is a social issue and economic issue, a racial one, a gender, ableism, a moral issue, just so many layers but when it comes to law, which is a mechanism to kind of figure this all out, in your opinion has the field of law involved enough to allow representation from these, you know vulnerable groups if you will and even in the field of law and law schools and what have you, has environmental law developed enough to be powerful? Do you see a specialist out there?

Prof. Randall: Thank you very much for that question Sabika. I am encouraged by the developments in the US, I can certainly speak too much directly just in the past decade that environmental justice as a field has really become much more recognized and respected as a way of seeking to promote change on these issues and just with the Biden administration some very progressive thinking people on the notion of environmental justice and how that fits into climate change and sustainability have been appointed. So I have some hope there, but more importantly at what I am most encouraged by is that there are a lot of efforts creative efforts in the courts with climate change litigation over the past decade and it wasn't so much about which cases won or lost in the court. But what was encouraging to me about it was that it really transformed climate Justice into a movement into a social movement and I've seen that very much reflected in the youth in American society now that climate justice is very much a rallying cry like black lives matter and like me too. It's a galvanizing of this demand for social justice and how we move forward and so environmental justice is a very important piece of those when used to be different social issues. And now we're seeing those come together in today's youth in the US and that is also informing who that generation is voting for who's ultimately getting into state and federal political offices to be able to reflect the will of the public and set agendas on these issues.

Sabika: Thank you so much and do I have an opportunity to ask one more question then

Moderator: Sure, please do.

Sabika: Okay, perfect. So, I mean I understand that capitalism has been the driving force of economies worldwide and you also touched upon this in your earlier discussion, but I guess the alarming fact is that it's also the driving force behind the developing economies that are almost myopically kind of going on this narrow path of rapid development and it tends to kind of emphasize individual prosperity over the more global kind of thinking. So I suppose the question is that is there a space within capitalism that is being practiced in developing countries to look at actions towards climate change as a win-win situation as opposed to a zero-sum game. Are there any ways to make it, you know, the defects of climate change less conceptually distant because at the moment there seems to be very limited pressure to have these sustainable mechanisms in place, especially in this new kind of economies?

Prof. Randall: That's a great question. So I think that kind of reflects back on this notion of climate in the climate change negotiations, the notion of common but differentiated responsibilities in how we need to move forward as a global community to address climate change, and what that really means is that the developed countries have a higher responsibility to lead these transitions away from our bad habits whether it be capitalism or fossil fuels or factory farming and essentially the developing world is entitled to financial and technical assistance from the developed world to help them make that transition in a slower way because they lack the means and in fact, they're entitled to their engagement of those capitalism mechanisms to advance their economics because the developed world had that opportunity and exploited it and it shouldn't be well now there's no room for the developing world to engage in that more short-term capitalistic frame. But the reality is that we're all more informed about what it means to be sustainable. So even with that slower transition in the developing world away from capitalism, there needs to be more sustainable minded thinking and how those capitalistic efforts can move forward. There's no right to exploit the environment. There is a right to develop in a way that's going to sustain the economies of those developing countries without being unduly burdensome on the environment. And so I think that's where there really is this moral and political and economic responsibility in the developed world to support that transition and that hasn't gone as well as hoped. If there's anything that has come out of the past three decades of climate negotiations, It's that the developed world especially countries like the US have not embraced that moral responsibility and the developing world is just pushing back and saying it shouldn't land in our shoulders and as has been very frustrated by that reality.

Sabika: Thank you. Dr. Randall. Thank you so much.

Prof. Randall: Thank you for the questions.


Favourite Quote

The Voiceless represents those that are not able to represent their own interests under the law.
— Prof. Randall S. Abate
What Sustainability really means is that it really requires us to adopt more of an ecocentric way of looking and moving forward as inhabitants of this planet.
— Prof. Randall S. Abate

Top Comment

Prof. Abate is an inspiration, his work in social equity, climate justice and clarifications on sustainable development is indeed profound, relevant and needed.- Chris Chinapoo


THE GREEN ROOM (Episode 7): Jake Effoduh on Artificial Intelligence, Human Rights and Sustainable Development

GREEN ROOM: LIVE WEBINAR


Summary of the Discussion

The discussion kicked off with a brief introduction of our distinguished speaker, Jake Effoduh, a Vanier Scholar by our amiable moderator Dr. Jason McSparren.


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ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Jake Effoduh is a Human Right Lawyer and a Vanier Scholar at the Osgoode Hall Law School. He is also a Partner at Praxis & Gnosis Law Firm in Nigeria.

Jake Effoduh is a Human Right Lawyer and a Vanier Scholar at the Osgoode Hall Law School. He is also a Partner at Praxis & Gnosis Law Firm in Nigeria.

ABOUT THE MODERATOR

Dr. Jason J. McSparren is an educator, researcher, and administrator with a PhD. in Global Governance and Human Security from Massachusetts Boston.

Dr. Jason J. McSparren is an educator, researcher, and administrator with a PhD. in Global Governance and Human Security from Massachusetts Boston.


Q&A

Dr McSparren: Good Afternoon Ladies and Gentlemen, Students, Practitioners. Welcome to The Green Room Episode 7. We're really pleased to have you with us today. We are going to have a great discussion. Our topic Today, we're going to be talking about 'Artificial Intelligence in Human Rights in Africa. We are looking at the Sustainable Development Impacts, our grant guest speaker Today is Jake Okechukwu Effoduh, and we like to welcome him to the Green Room Episode 7.
Jake is a human rights lawyer, with a demonstrated history of advocacy across domestic and international systems. He has worked within the Justice sector in Nigeria, the West African ECOWAS human rights system, the African Human Rights Commission and the United Nations Human Rights Council. Jake anchor two (2) nationwide radio programs in Nigeria for 12 years, which aired at over 150 stations across the country and earned him several international awards including winning the future Awards Africa for Community Action and the prestigious African broadcaster of the year award in 2016. Jake is a Vanier Scholar at the Osgoode Hall law school. He's conducted research on the legitimisation of artificial intelligence for human rights in Africa. Today Jake is going to present about his work on artificial intelligence and human rights in Africa. So, can we please welcome Jake? We can't hear your applause, but we should do hope that you are clapping. Please welcome Jake Okechukwu Effoduh. Thank you very much, everybody.

Jake Effoduh: Thank you. Thank you very much. Dr Jason McSparren. It is such an honour to be right here in The Green Room. Thank you for the great introduction and for the inspiration that you actually provide personally, professionally and on this platform as well. So I'm really happy to be here in The Green Room and to speak with you about things that I'm very passionate about human rights, artificial intelligence, sustainable development and you know and environmental justice. These are things that really matter to us right now, especially with what we're going through. So it's an honour to share my humble insights and to engage. I hope this would be a collaborative platform where you can ask questions. I can ask questions because you're doing pretty much similar work as I'm doing as well so we can both learn and have a relative discourse on this. So thank you so much.

Dr McSparren: Okay, Jake. If you wouldn't mind audience would like to hear a few of a little summary of your work, if you could give us a little bit of your background on artificial intelligence and how it relates to Human Rights and environmental justice on the African continent, please.


Favourite Quote

I think we cannot talk about human rights or AI without thinking about the environment. I think in this day and age with the kind of effects that we see in terms of climate change adaptation and mitigation, the environmental justice is something that needs to be at the forefront of every single thing that we do.
— Jake Effoduh

Top Comments

Thumbs up- Amadou Kodio

"Great Discussion”- Arijeniwa Foluke


THE GREEN ROOM (Episode 6): Marc Buckley on THE FUTURE OF FOOD: Sustainable Food System

GREEN ROOM: LIVE WEBINAR

Marc Buckley, Founder of ALOHAS Resilience Foundation, speaks on Building a Resilient, Sustainable, and Innovative Food Systems in a World of Climate Uncerta...

Summary of the Discussion

“We must stop and reverse our direction when it comes to human health and climate action and impact on our environment. We have to stop and reverse our direction.” Those were the clarion call of Marc Buckley Founder of ALOHAS Resilient Foundation. a UN advisor in resilient futurist, also a Founder of the organization ‘For Everyone Earth’. Marc highlighted the need to ask ourselves the ‘WTF’ question; “What’s the future”…


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ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Marc Buckley is the Founder ALOHAS  Resilience Foundation. He an Advocate for the SDG’s, UN Advisor and Resilient Futurist, Social Innovation, Climate Change, Agriculture, Food, and Beverage Expert.

Marc Buckley is the Founder ALOHAS Resilience Foundation. He an Advocate for the SDG’s, UN Advisor and Resilient Futurist, Social Innovation, Climate Change, Agriculture, Food, and Beverage Expert.

ABOUT THE MODERATOR

Dr. Jason J. McSparren is an educator, researcher, and administrator with a PhD. in Global Governance and Human Security from Massachusetts Boston.He is also a Pre-Doctoral Fellow (2017-18) for the West African Research Association (WARA).

Dr. Jason J. McSparren is an educator, researcher, and administrator with a PhD. in Global Governance and Human Security from Massachusetts Boston.He is also a Pre-Doctoral Fellow (2017-18) for the West African Research Association (WARA).

VIDEO FROM SESSION


QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS

Jason: Right? Thank you very much. Marc Buckley. That was a really interesting talk and so interesting that I'm actually going to forego getting the conversation started and we going to go right to the audience because there is quite a few people who are knocking on our door and like to ask you a few questions, so I'll ask my questions later on. Can we please begin with some questions, please from our audience? Here we have had Tim. Hi Tim. Would you like to address Mr. Marc Buckley, please?

Tim: Thank you so much, Mr. Marc Buckley for the interesting, informative session. Although l came late, but I had this question in my mind. I want to ask you about how we can strike a balance between food production and biodiversity. 

Marc:  It's really important that we start using regenerative practices in our food production so that we get away from monoculture, we get away from pesticides and harmful fertilizers and chemicals and our products to get that biodiversity back and what I mean by biodiversity is not only in the types of food we grow but in the soil health that it's very biodiverse, that's rich with not only those pollinators around it, but also the worms and microbes in the soil. I want you to know that in farming practices, it doesn't matter what you grow. Those soils have nutrients, minerals, and vitamins that go into the plant, into the product that we're growing and that has been reduced decade after decade has gotten worse because of the way we're treating the soils but also because we're doing a lot of monocultures and that's coming back that we're getting products and food that doesn't have the nutrition in the vitamins and at that is should. The way we can change that is through biodiverse permaculture regenerative, agriculture regenerative ranching regenerative, agroecology, agroforestry. And the way we do that and the other thing is the cycle of farming has been broken. So when I mentioned in my presentation is that farms were the start of communities and cities because we built those cities in those communities around the farm. But today the cities don't have any farms and many more of this farms are way outside and we're shipping the food into the cities and that's broken that nutrient cycle of our soils because the nutrients that go from the soils into the food then we ship it to the cities. And so I say cities are a place that food goes to die because before when we consume the food close to the Farms we can put that waste in the composting in those peelings and those things that are good for the soil health that the microbes and the bugs and the worms in it that go back into the soil which goes back into the food we can put that back. We're not doing that anymore. There's no cities taken for being there, there are some around the world but not at the scale we need that are taking those nutrients of the waste, of that food that we eat, the peelings, whatever, and getting that back to our soils. And so that's why we use chemicals and fertilizer, pesticides and all those things.

Jason: I think our next question is going to be fielded from Buckky Fabunmi. Oh, I'm sorry Miss Buckky Fabunmi. Hello.

Buckky Fabunmi: Hello.

Jason: Good evening.

Buckky Fabunmi: Good evening. Good evening, Jason. Good evening Marc. Thanks for the presentation. Thank you so much. I think I have a question and then a contribution to make. Like for the waste that are generated. For example, you know, they're just disposed into the environment indiscriminately which runs into the waterways into the water bodies causing eutrophication and all that and at times causing flood and disease outbreak. So those who waste can be converted into useful products? Like I've been working on conversion of agricultural waste into useful products such as enzymes, poultry feeds and biogas. So If those are examples of products that you can convert this risk into and in by so doing try to clean our environment now, we already know that the environment is messed up already. So our burning, our burying of these wastes has caused us a lot. And so these are products that can be generated from these things. And again these things cannot be done by just one person there has to be a collaboration between researchers in order to be able to achieve these and by so doing cleaning our environment and being able to achieve one or two of the sustainable development our goals and my question now to you Buckley is that now we know that genetically modified foods kind of helped us to improve food production. Right, but then these genetically modified foods also have their own side effects. So as a food researcher, will you vote for the production of genetically modified food or you vote against it. Telling us the advantage and disadvantage, telling us your viewpoint.

Marc:  I wish I really wish it was that easy because, I personally don't like genetically modified foods that are on a strict lab base, but I want you to know that we farming is a science. It's not natural. It's never been a natural process. So the minute we began 12,000 years ago or 10,000 or began farming. What we did is we started cutting down trees, moving rocks and tilling the soil which began putting emissions into our atmosphere and having effect on our soils and our planet and those apples from ten thousand or five thousand or two hundred years ago or not the apples that we eat today, but they're not that way because of genetic modification and in the true sense of what we think about it in a laboratory setting this genetic modification that has evolved naturally over time through grafting, spicing, mixing different types of apples together. If you look at the original banana or some of the original banana species, they're very small. They had big huge black seeds in them. They didn't taste very sweet. If you know, they were different and there is there's hundreds of different species of bananas. But the ones that we in the grocery store today or the ones that we use to cook, cook with plantains or whatever they are. They're much different than that original but that they weren't done in a lab. They weren't done by some mad scientist doing it in the laboratory. They were just done in a different type of evolution of crossbreeding, splicing grafting different trees and different things and using the seeds in a different way that have evolved that way. Now, there's genetic modification that is done in a lab by a Barbaric, Monsanto other chemical companies that you certain prize. I think those are definitely very harmful for our world and so we need to make that distinction. A lot of people think that agriculture is a natural process. I come like Jason mention I come from six generations of Germany's largest organic farmers. And in my opinion, I think organic farming is great. It's what we should have worldwide. But I also think that European Union or standard for organic farming has set the bar about as low as they can possibly set it. It's the minimum and I think the bar needs to be raised globally not only on organics but on agriculture in general, how that we look at it as a closed system with circular economy principles, regenerative practices, for the much longer game in so in that respect organics are never genetically modified their never in those respect when you look at the laboratory way. But we have to make that clear. I think genetically modified foods and some respect our seeds are good or one are one tool for the toolbox to help us, but they're not the answer. They're not the long-term solution to get to regenerative or to a healthy planet. So  I don't know if that answered I could probably talk a little bit more and explain like for example, if you were to fly over Spain over I think it's called Alamia this one of the biggest organic farm areas in Spain if you were to fly over there in a helicopter or a plane or drone. If you hadn't been there before people would say oh my goodness. What are all these refugees doing up in Spain? Well, how did they get here how and local would say those aren't refugee camps. That's the European Union standard for organic farming. That is the worst and poorest conditions. Not fair wages Not Fair Labor not fair housing not sanitary conditions, and they're producing food as cheaply and as quickly as possible and abhorrent conditions matter of fact, if you look at the United Nations refugee camp or World Food Program Camp. They have a much better standards than the organic farms in Spain because it's there's no clean water, there's no sanitation, those people who are working are those a working in a poor conditions and in my opinion that's criminal because like I said if you cheap and food you cheap a life. If we produce it cheaper, we producer with chemicals in the long run, it comes back to really hurt us. It's a bad model because like I said, the FAO said we have 45 matters left in food and the reason why is because of the soils aren't getting time to regenerate and recover and there's no nutrients and minerals in there. And so when we do no-till practices and regenerative practices, we can heal that soil and get a backup so that we can produce the types of crops. And things that we want the other thing is a seat banking. So if you don't want genetically modified crops, I want you I want to encourage you to start your own seed bank to gather organic seeds as much as possible and we keep them alive because we're losing species all over the world of plants and fruits and vegetables all the time because they're just being died out. Nobody's taking care of it.

Jason: Would you like to talk about how your work connects to this topic? 

Buckky Fabunmi: Yes, please. Thank you very much. My work connects to this topic in the part of the waste generation from food production. So I've been working on kola nut husk is a waste Nigeria is known for the production of kola nuts. And so like 7% of Kola nut is being produced in Nigeria. So we generate a lot of this waste and this waste is known to be very nutritious when his post on the farm site, you know the nutrient in it attract microorganisms and also the nutrients when it's been washed into the water. It causes Eutrophication and blocking the water reducing the lives of microorganisms and other creatures in the water bodies. So I looked at how this waste, agriculture waste can be converted into useful products. And so I worked on converting it into using it as a substrate for enzyme production. So I used it and then I used it to produce biogas used it. In different ratio with cattle porch waste. I also used it in composition with Maize and other products other components to make poultry feed. For the poultry feed at a ratio of 30% it was too high, it does not enhance the growth of the poultry birds but then at 10% with maize and other component required for poultry feed it enhance their growth. Another thing is that, it is advantageous in having it in poultry feed because, it has fiber and so it reduces the quantity of feed the birds eat. And so it reduces your cost so you gain more by so doing. So although I recommend that 10% is the maximum that can be used in poultry feed but I think in lesser quantity will be more beneficial in having a good quality meat poultry meats. And then for the biogas also it was able to produce methane over about 50 percent, but then it wasn't combustible and that was because I did not have the necessary gadget or equipment to carry out the other analysis that I needed to do. So I had to stop at a level. But then from the experiment it's good because it was concluded that the kola nut husk when blended or mixed in a ratio of 1 to 3 or 3 to 1 with cattle porch waste, it can generate biogas that can be used. And then for the enzyme production also, I worked on five different enzymes xylanase, protease, pectinase, amylase, cellulase. So those five enzymes, I used this waste, the kola nut husk, the grinded one, I used it as substrate and then checked their productivity Okay, what the microorganisms that grow on it whether it will to produce this enzymes of interest and they were able to produce xylanase and pectinase at least sufficient. But then further work is still required, you know, I was able to just do the work to the level where I had the funding up to and so I stopped it but some  other people are carrying on the work.

Jason: That's beautiful.

Buckky Fabunmi: At least. Yeah. So for now at least that's the way I am, you know contributing to my environment by trying to gather the waste from the environment clean the environment of some of these waste, at least agricultural waste, definitely you can clean up all the waste. Then, another project I want to embark on now is, conversion of plastic waste into useful products such as interlocking tiles, roof tiles and so and those ones are, alternative measures or means by which this waste can be converted to useful product and then clean environment.

Marc: That is amazing because, I really like what you said because, It's really hard to talk about agriculture on a blanket global generalized way and what you're doing and what you just mentioned and you're talking about indigenous microorganisms for your place where you're at, that are local and that's so important because we need to heal that microbiome of our soil but we need those Imo's (those indigenous microorganisms) that are indigenous to your area, that will work best for their like micro rise is a big thing in agriculture and in growth and the mycelium and the growth of our soils as well as well as Plants, but they're indigenous to each and every different plant species and area of the world. And so that's what I heard out of what you just said. You're going local, you're going very indigenous of what works there and what has been proven and how can you use those tools the most successful innovations that I've ever seen around the world and that I present to the World Economic Forum are always from people who come up with where they're at, what they're dealing with and how they've solved the problem locally as a crew member on spaceship earth. And so I thank you for doing that. That's fabulous

Jason: And fantastic. Thank you very much. Yes. Thank you Dr. Fabunmi. Excuse me. I apologize great to meet you and I think we have another question coming in. Did we lose our guest here we are. Yes. Hello. How are you doing today?


Favourite Quote

Food is a global citizen, It does not recognize borders, nations and walls.
— Marc Buckley
“We must stop and reverse our direction when it comes to human health, climate and our environment”
— Marc Buckley

Top Comments

I want to truly appreciate and commend your presentation. It was it seemed as if I had semester hack under 30 minutes you a very succinct and straight to the point.- Chibuike


THE GREEN ROOM (Episode 5): Clean Coal and Sustainable Development: Harnessing Clean Coal Technology to Mitigate Harmful Emission

GREEN ROOM: LIVE WEBINAR TRANSCRIPT

Tune in to the Green Room with your questions as we host Professor Byron E. Price. He currently works at Medgar Evers College of the City University of New Y...

Summary of the Discussion

The discussion kicked off with a brief introduction of our distinguished speaker, Professor Price by our amiable moderator Dr. Jason McSparren.


LISTEN TO PODCAST

ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Professor Byron Price works at Medgar Evers College of the City University of New York as a Professor of public policy and administration. He was the Director of the Barbara Jordan Institute of Policy Research. Prof. Price has visited over 40 countr…

Professor Byron Price works at Medgar Evers College of the City University of New York as a Professor of public policy and administration. He was the Director of the Barbara Jordan Institute of Policy Research. Prof. Price has visited over 40 countries.

ABOUT THE MODERATOR

Dr. Jason J. McSparren is an educator, researcher, and administrator with a PhD. in Global Governance and Human Security from Massachusetts Boston.He is also a Pre-Doctoral Fellow (2017-18) for the West African Research Association (WARA).

Dr. Jason J. McSparren is an educator, researcher, and administrator with a PhD. in Global Governance and Human Security from Massachusetts Boston.He is also a Pre-Doctoral Fellow (2017-18) for the West African Research Association (WARA).

POWER POINT PRESENTATION


Q&A

Dr. McSparren: Public Policy and Administration program. Dr. Price focuses Research on Social Public Policy. His research interest and some of the themes that he's covered, he is an extensive empirical work regarding the United States justice system with an important contributions to Public Policy issues such as prison privatization, Social justice issues school-to-prison pipelines, additionally his work covers a governance and International Development as well. And that's one of the topics that we're going to be talking about here today. Dr. Price is also known for his student mentorship and also as a philanthropist recently, Dr. Price led a group of 14 Suny College of the City University of New York students to a trip to South Africa where they covered six cities as part of a global public administrations course. Professor Price, called that the study the study abroad trip for the office of International Education and not only did he lead the students, but he also spearheaded a fundraising and donate a portion of his own salary raising more than $12,000 for the students to join him on this fantastic experience trip abroad.

Today, Dr. Price is here to talk with us about Clean Coal Technology in a presentation he titles Clean Coal and Sustainable Development: Harnessing Clean Coal technology to mitigate harmful emissions. As you all know coals are hydrocarbon fuel therefore, emit greenhouse gases as a result there have been efforts to create Clean Coal Technologies through a number of different processes. Coal is widely used around the world, especially in terms of the developing world. It is going to take time to phase out coal-fired electric plants and there a different research projects out there looking for ways Carbon Dioxide Removal which is termed CDR strategies in some of these strategies are called ‘Carbon Capture and Storage’ very often CCS strategies and these are emerging and that's we're going to hear a little bit about today. Some of these CDR methods are direct air caption enhanced weathering in carbon sinks where the carbon is extracted from the air and then relocated to the ground. Dr. Price is here to tell us about a process that removes the toxins from coal, toxins such as Arsenic and sulfur and Mercury so that the coal Burns cleaner and is an interim strategy in the pursuit of negative greenhouse gas emissions, which is one of the sustainable development goals and goals of countries around the world. So ladies and gentlemen in the audience. Can we please warmly welcome Dr. Byron Price to the green room today? Dr. Price hello.

Prof. Price: Hello Dr. MacSparren. Thanks for having me and thanks for the kind introduction and I have to correct just real quick. I raise $20,000 on behalf of the students to South Africa.

Dr. McSparren: That's wonderful. Okay, it's okay.

Prof. Price: Thanks for this great opportunity.

Dr. McSparren: Certainly.


Favourite Quote

Hydrogen provides a huge opportunity to reach deep down in terms of some of the most carbon intensive Industries
— Professor Byron Price

Top Comments

Enjoyed the Program. Great job Dr. Byron Price!- J.D Rolle

"Glad to be here”-Emmanuel Majidadi


THE GREEN ROOM (Episode 4): Niyi Osundare on "What the Earth Said"

GREEN ROOM: LIVE WEBINAR TRANSCRIPT


Summary of the Discussion

There were peculiar beliefs trailing our African heritage that forbids certain human interference with nature. We were told stories of forbidden forests, trees that must not be cut down, animals exempted from poaching, and rivers esteemed as sacred. Our ancestors' farmlands would compulsorily be left fallow at some particular time of the year as tradition demands. Due to the dearth of scientific reasoning, we never asked why but followed these instructions to the letter. So far, so good, our adherence paid off as we barely recorded cataclysmic natural disasters.

For satisfactory answers and an in-depth analysis into this mysterious fact, find out more by downloading the audio, video or transcript of the webinar.


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ABOUT THE SPEAKER

 Professor Niyi Osundare is a prolific poet, dramatist and literary critic. He gained degrees at the University of Ibadan (BA), the University of Leeds (MA) and York University, Canada (PhD, 1979)

Professor Niyi Osundare is a prolific poet, dramatist and literary critic. He gained degrees at the University of Ibadan (BA), the University of Leeds (MA) and York University, Canada (PhD, 1979)

ABOUT THE MODERATOR

Dr. Jason J. McSparren is an educator, researcher, and administrator with a PhD. in Global Governance and Human Security from Massachusetts Boston.He is also a Pre-Doctoral Fellow (2017-18) for the West African Research Association (WARA).

Tosin Gbogi is an assistant professor of English at Marquette University, specializing in popular cultures, Africana literatures, and critical race and ethnic studies.


Q & A

Tosin Gbogi: I think we will start the conversation now and I would like to open the conversation with a question on place and childhood and by this. I mean that you know you of course grew up in Ikere Ekiti, and we find this in your poetry. I remember that I traveled through that place. I think 2016 sometimes down 16, I was looking for the for the Rocks which one is Olosunta

Prof. Osundare: They saw you (laughs)

 Tosin Gbogi: very good one. In the eyes of the earth for example one finds references to Oke Ubo, Abusoro, to Oke Eniju to Oke to Ogbese Odo and to Oke Roku. We also see like just said I will hear Olosunta we see and hear Oranle and we hear Eshidale.  Now my question then is this how did the Ikere of your childhood or the Nigeria of your childhood shape the way we think about the earth and the writing that you do, they are eco- poetic activism.

Prof Osundare: I also say that the happiest years of my life where the years I was born 1947 and 1966 when Nigeria experienced her first coup d’état. Particularly 1960- 1966 Understood conveniently on our necks at this time. There were problems but we know better somehow there was most sanity and then after that things began to really fall apart. I have seen a little bit of the world and I can compare coaches and I will say that an African culture is extremely strong and Yoruba is part of it. There is a depth to Yoruba culture and language and relationships between other cultures and other languages in the country and on the continent and now our planet. For example every citizen had its own organization through all of the different activities. The kind of songs that went with dancing. My father was a farmer I grew up on the farm another. We'll call it Ara oko. I just want to put it that way a very proud Ara oko indeed and then the region was respecting indigenous religion one of the problems. One of the causes of a crisis in Africa today I think is the Takeover of our indigenous selves by Islam and Christianity Yoruba Culture, Yoruba cosmology are really rooted in the this plus That kind of plastic that has access to it happened that when this religion came. Oh, no. Oh, it's a weak now that has caused a lot of problem.  All the artworks because in Africa culture and religion. The artists have to do is leave him each of the Orisa were thrown out because they were called Idols as our Idols a Catholic practice. Those idols were civilized. Respect for the forest disappeared as I saw him one of the invitations to this program. There were secret forests in those days the imbrue God intends for the furnace has its own some time researching now the forest what actually made the trees had its own identity. So I grew up with all the songs Egungun Festival, Osanyin Festival, and Osun of course. All this things contributed to the way I saw the world. I have never encountered anything more poetic than those. So when you talk about poetry you'd only go out is surrounded by it naming ceremony, Marriage ceremony, Ekun Iyawo there were all there Okay? Yeah. Yeah. Take another look at Wole Soyinka’s Works another look at Chinua Achebe’s works. A lot of what we do without the culture and of course without diminishing the impact of what has come from abroad in doing this and that not this instead of that.  “Me loluwa wi” as the Yoruba say the sky is wide enough for a thousand birds to fly without clashing unless some are unnecessarily greedy.  I think I'm stronger because I have added Western ways of doing things and so on to my own Yoruba ways of doing them.  Now I have to substitute what’s coming from our side they reached the Poetry of it. It is in our backyard which is bedroom. It's in the kitchen. It's in the song we sing to welcome the new moon, is the song when we see a beautiful flower.

Tosin Gbogi: Thank you very much for that response, In your recent work you moved towards a new kind of the color value called differential Aesthetics and I was thinking because in that paper you were talking about art and politics and how Western understanding of Aesthetics would you know mean that you know, you don't combine both, you know, I kind of think that you also find It is selected poems in 2002 selected poems. So I was so this kind of material that you put in your poetry, some critics consider this essentialism. How do you balance the how do you respond to that?

Prof. Osundare: Thank you Very much, yes differential Aesthetics Yeah This is an idea, It's not just theory it is a principle that rules my Enterprise even my creative Consciousness, differential. A Chinese poet writes differently from an American poet, An Indian poet writes differently from an Australian we are all writing poetry but from different cultural and social and political background. Yes German Harwich (name), also said let the thousand flowers bloom, but what I say with many of the so-called critics and theories especially in the western part of the world is let my flower bloom and takes over the whole earth. You should concur one little Village in France, some little village in America. I would say well now I have a little that covers all literature written everywhere every time in the world. That is ignorance it is first cousin of stupidity no critics African writers are always had for this problem with the critics especially Western critics.  Socrates Aristotle, Plato those of course a great writers, those are a Great Fairy. Those are great thinkers. I'm happy that I know them. I know their Works. There are correspondences. I mean look at the ancient Hebrew culture and ancient Yoruba cultural, there are similarities because we are just human beings so problems arise when you compose your own theoretical and aesthetic judgment or what coming from other places.

Just one example, And I stand to be corrected Yoruba doesn't have and doesn't rely on any rhyming pattern which must come terminally in the poem a ABAB CD then it is not poem. Who told you that. What about what I called system rhythm mechanism. Yoruba is music, Igbo is music, Edo, Urhobo. Music is Africa. Go to the Congo they are doing music and poetry which birth appreciated those forms of music different types of different aesthetically and emotionally from this so I'm saying that yes let a thousand flowers bloom. Write enough poetry but have enough intelligence, have enough humility to know that not everybody in the world should create a poem or so do this sculpture or should do the painting that will match your own expectations and your own prejudices. Yes, differential aesthetics. In Yoruba you don’t say “Mo fe ka ewi but you say Mo fe kewi” I want to chant poetry, I want to sing poetry, I want to perform poetry. This is very important aspect call system rhythmicality.  The music in it, how do we rarely handle it?

Tosin Gbogi: Thank you very much for that wonderful. I would like to bring in Dr. Chigbo Anyaduba who is an assistant professor in the University of Winnipeg.

Dr. Anyaduba: Thank you very much Tosin and thank you Professor.

Prof. Osundare: You're welcome.

Dr. Anyaduba: I particularly want to thank you for the incredible work you have been doing especially for the art.  Some of your poems that I have been privileged to read have inspired me a lot so quickly regarding the subject of poetry and environment. I thought that one of the things your poems have done for me is to connect me much more to the world that I live in especially to the so-called natural environment or natural world. And even when some of these poems maybe morning humans that Devastation of the environment or cautioning against urination of the Earth or prophesying Doom against violence to the natural world. I see you manage to feel that sense of being included with awareness. So I need to go Consciousness, you know about environment.  And I found it very fascinating the way yourself classified your work today into four movements, you know from paying homage to the Earth to morning the violence. Don't read the Earth and then to kind of the S retaliation or the consequences as you put it of human violence on the earth and then to admonition, you know, I'm still expecting the last poem. The first question concerns the General matter about writing and And we know that the people responsible especially for the destruction of the earth are not  usually the ones who suffer the consequences at least the immediate consequences at the moment, right the Niger Delta in Nigeria to distill it has specifically the victims of the despoliation going on. They are the ones who have suffered from Earth's retaliation, right? So my question is Why does Earth not discriminates in its retaliation why do victims of the kinds of capitalist destruction of the environment still by represented as victims when he retaliates, you know your Katrina poems as an example in this regard, right? And my second question is a more General one, in all the years that you've been writing I think over 40-50 years. Now you'd be in writing all these cautionary walks, you know cautioning against environmental pollution in Nigeria. And in other parts of the world at the same time, the more you seem to write the more intensified the human violence against the world has Been I remember the you know, the roots have become worse and we harvest more corpses from Nigerian Roots more trees have been murdered and Iroko trees of my childhood that were the wonder of my childhood before it disappeared now, I grew up in Anambra states, right? So in all these years you still continue to write and lament these outcomes. How could your lines your poems still carry, beautiful Melodies and metaphors that Inspire fancy and some form of musical pleasure in the face of this continuous destruction than witness right? What kept you going in all these years? What did you think changed or give you an inkling of a difference, To make you unwavering in your continued advocacy for and environmental justice.

Prof. Osundare: Thank you very much doctor Anyaduba.  I really appreciate it. It is a pity we are pressed for time the questions you have asked and also your comments could inspire a whole book and I really appreciate this. Why does Earth not to discriminate in its wrought?  Yes. Because nature is ruled by its own logic is like the question I ask all the  time when I see the wickedness that is being visited on people all over the world and the kind of really astonishing sufferings that we go through occasionally you ask how can God allow this to happen to his/her children.

That question we ask all the time but at the same time People say “Orun n yabo kii se wahala enikan” that is when the sky Is going to fall that is not the responsibility of only one person. In fact haven't finished the irony terrible irony about this is those who desolate the Earth those who plunder the Earth are In the position because of the wealth they have acquired, the loot they have scooped. They are in a position to protect themselves against the ravages and the consequences. So this are the illogicalities are facing. It is usually the homeless and the poor people who suffer, I must tell you that I have no answer to that because Katrina nearly killed my wife and me here everything we had on, you know was destroyed and also created two most terrible sinners in the world, you know, so what we should be doing is asking questions. Why should a few people do this and put the rest of us in Jeopardy? It is important for us to talk. It is important for us to work. That's what that 16 years old Swedish girl is asking us to do, no, we're not going to allow you to do this to us. Finally. Remember one or two statement is about we are just been doing this for so long and remember and one of my discussions with Chinua Achebe about three years before he died. We talked about this too. You know, I was teaching the novelist as teacher in our hopes and impediment and I asked Prof. and he laughed and he said we have been doing this for so long. What are we going to do? We cannot stop and there it “Ti ina o ba tan laso eje ki n tan leekanna” that is as long as there are lice in the hems of your garment there must be blood stains on your fingernails with the we have those fingernails, So we have to keep at it. Resilience this is it, In fact, one of the poems I was going to read this because I was pressed for time is titled stubborn hope and I have stolen that phrase from Dennis Brutus the great anti apartheid South African poet. I think one of his collections stubborn hope yes, our hope has to be stubborn. There is no giving up because we didn't inherit to this Earth from our ancestors; we borrow it from our children.

Dr. Anyaduba: Thank you very much.


Favourite Quote

Tomorrow bids us tread softly, wisely, justly, lest we trample the eye of the Earth
— Professor Niyi Osundare
When the sky says I am going to fall, that is not the responsibility of only one person
— Professor Niyi Osundare

Top Comments

"Always enlightening to hear Prof. Osundare ". - Ipadeola Tdae

Glad to join from Niyi Osundare International Poetry Festival @NOIPOFEST Team— NOIPOFEST

"Epic session tonight. An honour to put a live-face to the legend Niyi Osundare and also happy to see again the Icon Tosin Gbogi (Happy Birthday Sir).”- Olufunke Olabode


FURTHER READING

Niyi Osundare. The Eye of the Earth (1986, winner of a Commonwealth Poetry Prize and the poetry prize of the Association of Nigerian Authors).

Niyi Osundare. 2011. City Without People: The Katrina Poems. 

THE GREEN ROOM (Episode 3): Omoyele Sowore on Environmental Activism and Sustainable Development

GREEN ROOM: LIVE WEBINAR TRANSCRIPT

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Summary of the Discussion

“I am a firm believer of direct action” These were the words of human and environmental rights activist, Omoyele Sowore featured in the latest episode of The Green Room. This month’s episode centered on Environmental Activism and Its Role towards Achieving Sustainable Development: LESSONS FROM KEN SARO-WIWA. With striking quotations and real-time analysis made by the former and future aspiring Nigerian presidential candidate, Sowore gave a descriptive account of activism in Nigeria. He narrated historical antecedents as he acknowledged the efforts of late Nigerian activist Ken Saro-Wiwa and his (Sowore’s) 30-year struggle with the Nigerian government.


LISTEN TO PODCAST


ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Omoyele Sowore is a Nigerian human rights activist, pro-democracy campaigner, writer, blogger, lecturer, as well as the founder of Sahara Reporters – an online news agency. Sowore was also a Presidential candidate in the just concluded 2019 Nig…

Omoyele Sowore is a Nigerian human rights activist, pro-democracy campaigner, writer, blogger, lecturer, as well as the founder of Sahara Reporters – an online news agency. Sowore was also a Presidential candidate in the just concluded 2019 Nigeria Presidential election, under the African Action Congress (AAC).

ABOUT THE MODERATOR

Olukoya Obafemi is an architect with many years of professional practice in architecture and construction. He obtained his PhD in architectural heritage conservation from Brandenburg Technical University, Germany. He is the Founder of Olukoya Obafem…

Olukoya Obafemi is an architect with many years of professional practice in architecture and construction. He obtained his PhD in architectural heritage conservation from Brandenburg Technical University, Germany. He is the Founder of Olukoya Obafemi & Associates and Vernacular Solutions Network (VAN).


Q & A

Obafemi Olukoya: Environmental activism has had a very great success worldwide (I think we both agree on this). It has influenced government policies and is even happening in the process. On the other hand if we look at our country Nigeria, environmental activist have not received the type of attention that their colleagues in international communities are receiving. What the situation in Nigeria is all sort of participating, harassment, confiscation of properties and all that. So what, where do you think we got it from and how do you think we can move forward.

Omoyele Sowore: You know when Ken Saro-Wiwa was speaking to environmental issues in the country, the military did not allow that to percolate, he was seen more as some trouble maker who wanted to stop Nigeria for making profit from so-called God giving crude deposits. That was how Ken Saro-Wiwa was presented to the public and also Ken Saro-Wiwa's situation was complicated by The Biafran War because he wasn't on the side of Biafrans when the Biafran war was happening. He had a lot of opposition. I remember this heartbreaking situation that the day he was killed, there was a rally in Port Harcourt and I know it was sponsored but to even find out that it could be anybody in Nigeria, a thousand people or more who celebrated his killing and it was heartbreaking for me. (I was in NYSC then). So he was never forgiven for allegedly his role in opposing the creation of the Biafran nation, and because it was on the side of Nigerian troops or forces and he became one of the youngest Commissioners, Commissioner of education in Rivers State at the age of 28. So he's a prolific writer, a publisher and he created a show known as Basi and company that so far in the history of the Nigeria television Authority had the highest number of viewers, he was a business man too, he was doing business, he was into produce business. He had a big grocery store in Port Harcourt. All his kids were living abroad and going to school abroad. But what I'm trying to say to you here, If you haven't lost me and I haven't lost you is that ten was only the beginning, but he was in recent time the most prolific Fighter for environmental rights, and he opened the eyes of both the enlightened and unenlightened people in Niger Delta Region to the fact that resources belong to them and came out with facts and figures and internationalize the campaign for what the profit these companies were making and what members of the environment was asking from the onset Is that they should pay back to Nigeria's Niger Delta region where they had lost to oil exploration. And he was able to prove, it he had videos and shell participated as it was later revoked in aiding Nigerian government to kill Ken Saro-Wiwa and the Ogoni's who we're involved in the struggle for environmental salvation in Niger Delta region, lt is something that I think someday we will have a chance to review, bring to vocal those who were responsible for the atrocious killing of Ken Saro-Wiwa. Yes.

Obafemi Olukoya: Yes, thank you very much for offering this very important insight. Given the circumstances and peculiarity of Ken Saro-Wiwa, for example there we're divers allegations under the names which are castigated (for example his role in civil war and all of that).

Let's assume this was the peculiar circumstances of Ken Saro-Wiwa, but from 1995-2020, in Nigeria nothing has changed. So even environmental activist without such role, peculiarity or such circumstances still get similarly treated maybe not to the point of being owned but still get this kind of harassment and do not get this kind of attention and accolades their international colleagues do get. Where did we get it wrong? How do we change this status scope? So to encourage prosperity, have role because at the moment I don't think any young Nigerian want to be an environmental activist, given what is happening. You get the point?

Omoyele Sowore: There is no young Nigerian that would want to be an activism in this period because Environmental rights, Local Education activist, anything student activism. Nobody wants to be because this is very dangerous Venture. The system is very vicious when it comes to the way they react to activists, so we don't have to blame anybody when they say that. What has happened is that when you want to fight an environmental rights fight, if you have a person who is siding with your enemies then it’s dangerous. In other countries, even in the US, we have the EPA, they are very Independence, they issue policies, fine companies, sue companies who violates environmental rights. In Nigeria, the Environmental Protection Agencies are working for the violators of the environment. So the Nigerian Army, Police could easily be brought or hired to go and to enter an helicopter hired by Shell to go and shoot the villagers.  Infact, Shell has its own police at a point and they call them Shell Police and they don't even hide it, they pay them special salaries, they are the ones who buy weapons for them and arm them, so when you have that, is like double tragedy for you, because now you don't have any independent agency of government that is evenly willing to corrobate and fight on the side of people who are fighting for the dignity of the environment. They are fighting against you and that's what they did to Ken Saro-Wiwa and that's what they always did. So that's the reason why you saw that in Niger Delta Region people lost trust in peaceful agitation and started armed interacting against the government, but unfortunately the armed militants who fought for the environment they themselves ended up becoming very oppressive, they are out of the system. They're billionaires now and they of course at some point are engaging in environmental degradation through legal pipeline activities in their own illegal refineries because they breaking up this pipelines, they are doing more damage to the environment than you can ever imagine. So but that is their only way of getting a part of what you think they are entitled to. So, every other agency that has been created since 1995 or even before then were not created to deal with the environment but were created to make more money from the Niger Delta Region. And that means that you lose the environment. You see how because of acid rain in Niger Delta region, the Atlantic Ocean is destroying Villages because the more of these exploration you carry out, the more you tamper with the environment and then lack of power as someone was commenting, which I was gonna say you have people breathing in sooths, you sleep at night and the whole of your nostril is blocked over night and the level of cancerous diseases in Niger Delta region is way higher and resolving in any other sickness.

Obafemi Olukoya: Okay, thank you very much again for your insight to that specific question. So we would be moving now to question two which is that Ken Saro-Wiwa (which is our subject of discussion of course)  stood in opposition to the massive pollution emitted at the Royal-dutch Oil Company in Ogoni land (which you have explained to us very comprehensively). At this specific moment can you say that government have continued his legacy? But let me stop right here, does the government infact accept that Ken Saro-Wiwa has a legacy? That is question number 1

Omoyele Sowore: No, they do not, that's the interesting part.

Obafemi Olukoya: So if they do accept that he has a legacy, what have they done to ensure that his legacy is occasionalised through the regulation of oil companies to reduce the continued pollution and all of that? So we are told now that his legacy is not being accepted, what are the obstacles, reasons that you can give us.

Omoyele Sowore: To accept the legacy of Ken Saro-Wiwa, first the country owes history a duty to investigate who and who were responsible for killing Ken Saro-Wiwa and what were the conspiracies behind the Oil Company site or the multinationals. You know, there are paper trails, who were the persons who carried out the handling? To let you know that they're not interested, the judge, Ibrahim Auta who sentenced him to death unjustly eventually became the Chief Judge of the federal high court of Nigeria, the prosecutor who helped prosecute Ken Saro-Wiwa eventually became the President of the Nigeria Bar Association. These are recent history, one of the judge Advocates who was on the panel that killed him is currently the director general of customs in Nigeria, Hameed Ibrahim Ali.  So all of them had social promotions, they are still in the system. So if this happens in any sane country, those guys are supposed to be in jail or answering to some kind of sanction for what they did or be made to at least explain how they all ended up in the scheme or someone driving all of that process. But what did we do in Nigeria? Everybody who participated in the crime, they're doing very well except Ken Saro-Wiwa and his family. And you probably heard that his body has never been really found because they said they poured acid on him (I can't confirm that) after he was gone. Three of his kids have died since this thing started, you know his son who came to work with the Nigerian government at that time died I think two years ago. One of his son died of COVID this year. His 13 year old boy died when he started the activism and so Ken Saro-Wiwa lost pretty much everything but the Nigeria State didn't lose anything, the people who killed him didn't lose anything, they are doing well in the system. So that's what is wrong. His legacy is also declinable for Ogoni land even though the United Nation has come and said the Ogoni land needs total clean up. Till today, they have not. In fact, they are saying that three days ago that they re-awarded the contract again for the cleanup of Ogoni Land. You know, the Army, the police, the press system is still going after the little activism that is left in Ogoni Land. They are still there actively hunting down activists in the area. So, what Legacy are we talking about? The only legacy he left is in the minds of people around the world who appreciate what he did not the Nigerian government that I know of. There's still no Ken Saro-Wiwa University or Ken Saro-Wiwa highway or Ken Saro-Wiwa streets in Abuja, all the street in Abuja are named after the criminals who looted Nigeria, Babaginda, Obasanjo, Buhari, Dongoyaro, all these criminals they are the ones who have barracks, theaters and all kinds of public buildings named after them as we speak. So Nigeria must reached that point as well that the Black Lives Matter has ignited all over the world, the slave masters and their status are being toppled. The status of the oppressors and the destroyers and the robbers who put Nigeria in the condition it is today, but nothing like that is happening yet. So it feels like we have to start the fight all over again.

Obafemi Olukoya: I think I absolutely agree with your point especially if everybody that was involved got all sort of promotion, are still in power and they're still perpetuating all sort of evils through their diverse rounds, such is a very sad situation. As a matter of fact, the sort of situation Ken Saro-Wiwa actually stood against has actually multiplied today. I totally agree with you that there's no legacy in the situation right here. Before we proceed to the next question on my list, I will like to take one question from the Green Institute and one of the question says that Environmental activism and the SDGs, what is the way forward?

Omoyele Sowore: For those of us who know about this SDGs, international Policies for Local Development or International Development, we just laugh when we hear that there is an office of the SDG in Nigeria. Any SDG office or any office that is created in Nigeria to further this International policies are just another way of wasting money.  If you hear about SDG now, next time you'll hear about the UN they will be in New York annual jamboree and they would bring some 500 people with computers. So I don't really pay too much attention to when I hear this high ferreting buzzword, SDGs, Millennium Development, all kinds of buzz words that are used to confuse people here because we don't pay attention to them, we don't believe in them and we just create offices so that we tick all the boxes at the UN and oh, yeah, we have an SDG office, that's our SDG officer and they repeat the same thing everywhere they go to. But on the ground here, we have nothing to show that we're meeting any of the conditionality for the SDGs that the UN had to put in place. So because they come with performance indices and measures, so we just can't find that we are meeting any of those here. So but when it comes to the flamboyance of presence at the SDGs conferences, I'll tell you that Nigerians are doing a very good job for they wear the nicest suit, headgear and probably talk the longest, but on the ground here, there's nothing to show for it.

Obafemi Olukoya: Oh yeah, thank you very much for the logistic and very interesting summary of the situation. But coming from the point of view that I'm an optimist and I follow the SDGs programs in Nigeria, I can say that Nigeria is not exactly doing so bad. For example, Kaduna was able to submit the progress report on how it has been able to domesticated it so far and we have quite a lot of civil society in Nigeria that are trying their best to ensure this is making progress.

Omoyele Sowore: Let me just say this here, so Sustainable Development goals are not things for Twitter, it’s not glittering things. Yesterday I was reading on Sahara Reporters which is a paper I founded (I haven't been active there for a while), one of the worst school in Nigeria is in Kaduna State (which Kaduna are we talking about?). It's easy for Erufai as he likes to do, to grandstand by paving in a few rules for metropolis and to magnify it, you get some very good photography, get a lot of influencers to treat it but what about the schools we're talking about that have no rules, are they not part of the Sustainable Development Goals? They are. So the problem with our NGO is that they don't go beyond cities, they are all covering the cities, attending conferences and some of those conferences are guided. When we talk about the SDGs, it's not about air conditioned conference calls, it’s about everywhere. If I'm giving you an example (which I can send to you if you want) of a Secondary school in Kaduna State that has no roof and not enough teachers. Why are we using Erufai as an example of someone who's meeting SDGs, NLT goals. You said that you're an optimist, but it’s very difficult to live in Nigeria and be optimistic. Most of us are still hoping for the best but we keep getting worse.

Obafemi Olukoya: All right, I absolutely agree with your stance. Again I will talk from the point of view of an optimist, maybe we are not where we are not meant to be but at least there is awareness and a few steps are already take. So, we have now, Ryan in the room. Ryan Thompson, welcome and he also has some question for you.

Omoyele Sowore: I can see some of the questions at the right side of the screen. Welcome Ryan.

Obafemi Olukoya: Okay, very good. So Ryan please feel free to direct your questions now to Mr Sowore.

Ryan Thompson: Sure, I am familiar with a lot of activities in Nigeria, just wanted to hear from you what kind of areas have you seen progress in achieving some of the Environmental and Social goals? And what are the kinds of efforts that do prove to be successful?

Omoyele Sowore: I have seen a lot of things on paper, all kinds of things in paper, I just haven't seen them implemented, because when we're talking about these issues we can't divorce them from the issues that as they are before that they became prominent and became internationalized. So yes, I know that’s Nigeria has on paper a lot of things about why they don't want to address environmental issues. But I'm still telling you that they have not done anything that I know of that can meet the conditions that will make me announce to you gladly here that Oh, yes, we are doing so well, we've just been able to reduce carbon emission, we have reduced number of tax flaring in Niger Delta region to this cubic feeds or that we are capturing gas that do flair but what we hear from the Nigerians side of things or government side of things are, Yes we could be doing better but we are sorry the United Delta Militants are bursting open our pipelines. Right?  just excuses, but in terms of strategic agenda to end or start addressing so many of these issues, I haven't seen them but we still have soldiers patrolling Niger Delta Region, we have helicopters shooting at people who engage in this protest, assault women and the oil is exceedingly doing a great job of exporting crude to the world and also the Nigerian governments in the military are really doing a great job of stealing crude as well and selling to to international waters for their own benefit. So that's what I see here and If anyone has something different to tell me I'll be glad to look at that because it's just a question of tests, It's a question of accuracy of what they claim when they submit papers to the UN and all those conferences that they go to. Because I have met a lot of journalists who come to this country with the believe that they are going to find a cleaned up Ogoni land and they find out that they're not even allowed to go past Portharcourt, so that they don't get to see what's going on. So i have assisted some of those journalist to go around. I personally participated in the documentary that's documented how Chevron was assisting the Nigeria military in the kill and go police to shoot villagers. That documentary won an award in the U.S, led to a lawsuits in California. Chevron with very fantastic big lawyers won the case, but a lot of things were exposed in the process of dealing with that lawsuit.

Obafemi Olukoya: Okay, thank you very much Mr Sowore for doing justice to the question that was asked by Mr Thompson. So now, we bring on Ope. Ope also have another question for you regarding our topic of discussion today.  Ope, if you can hear me, please the floor is yours and feel free to introduce yourself and ask your question.

Opeyemi Awe: I'm sorry, I'm having a difficult time hearing. I can hear you now, thank you. Hi, Good afternoon, my name is Opeyemi Awe, I'm calling from Washington DC. So, my question for you is two for one and thank you for taking your time to join us. Number one, I'm curious about what you think the relationship between journalism and activism is?

Number two, I'm curious about what your vision of what a Nigeria would look like that did focus and emphasizing on prioritizing Black lives matter and what before you does that Vision look like and sort of pick and choose what an industry Nigerian youth should focus on, be it Environmentalism or journalism or really any of the things. Thank you for your time and engagement.

Omoyele Sowore: I think that I would never ever present myself as a journalist, I have presented myself mostly as an activists who usually use media, which is different from the others and I think there's a difference between journalism and media practice. And if you happen to be alive at this time that we are all alive now, media has changed the face of Journalism that is to say that you can have a lot of contents that can interact and can give bigger meaning to what context you want to present about social economic and political conditions of many areas. In the case of Nigeria, the reason why I found media very attractive is that there is a whole lot of stories needed to be told and sometimes actually to tell just one side of the story which is just something fascinating about Nigeria Africa because we're tired of hearing news of destruction and death. Media let you tell the story through photos interacting with videos and tags and all other forms of media and that's where I come in but also there is nothing wrong with journalism becoming activists because in very serious conditions that we find ourselves, everything we can deploy to tell our stories as aggressively as we can so that we can slow down the process of repression is needed. And I think that was what the Ken Saro-Wiwa's of this world didn't have during their own time, they didn't have Twitter, Facebook, maybe we could have saved him, if we could trend even a hastag that says release Ken Saro-Wiwa. So everything about Ken Saro-Wiwa, even when he died we didn't hear from Nigeria. We heard from CNN, VOA, nobody who was sufficiently aware of this but landscape has changed and it’s important for everybody who is a journalist to have an activist side to it. When we get to an equilibrium where senses of our leaders are restored maybe an activism can become a little bit less deliberant. But right now it is needed and the second question was asking, What is it we need to put in place in Nigeria.

Opeyemi Awe: What is your vision for Nigeria?  And I think we can have a long conversation.

Omoyele Sowore: My Vision for Nigeria is that I want Nigeria that works for everybody, and I know that this is broad, but we have broken it down to the basic things that we need to make them able to participate in the world that is just, fair and a little bit tolerant and i think we would probably have broken it down to about 10 things, which security is number one. In some cases, I consider security not as important as power, energy, this electricity that we don't have and solid infrastructure that like social and physical infrastructure schools, roads that can promote the industry that we have on ground, and of course, there's no way we can run away from the fact that we need a society that is not so corrupt that people steal more they need. There are people in Nigeria who are stealing for the future of the children and the children's children and you know, generational corruption, generational robbers, that's what you can call it and of course, an economy that is all-inclusive and economy that provides jobs for people, an economy that is not about papers, not about percentages but to put food in people's stomach, provides jobs for the Youth. Education is a big deal to me as well and of course people talk about reconstruction I have always believe that instead of reconstruction that we need a revolution first and then after that we can restructure. My activism came from the Advent of Technology and I'm a tech junkie in that regards. And I believe that Nigeria improvised the magnet for Tech companies of Africa, but first and foremost, you need electricity, you need to be able to charge your devices at the minimum. So those are the basic things that I think would make Nigeria a lovely place and I've always felt that if Nigeria we're to meet some of this basic conditions and I'll probably be right to say that we would be one of the happiest people in the world.

Opeyemi Awe: Good. Well, thank you so much for your time.

Jigo Chibuike: Good evening Mr. Sowore from the Green Institute. I've been following your activism you in Nigeria and I can say you are doing good work. When you talked about the SDGs does be just being a buzzword and the MDGs, as aspiring youth we've come to claim ownership of the SDGs goals as part of the agenda. How can we young people be encouraged to advocate for these goals even as we follow the footsteps of Ken Saro Wiwa?

Omoyele Sowore:  I just brought your attention to the United States of America and I'm saying this information. They are also aware of SDGs and MDGs but there are some people that at some time they don’t go along with the buzzwords and what did they do just step out and fight. Black live matter is probably not one of the 17 continues of SDG. It's imitable threatened and we have policemen.

Maybe SDGs and MDGs don't even anticipate that will be a problem. Look at what people did you, new people in that country stepped out, you know for several days to start a global movement. You can have all this very flowery beautifully written as SDGs and MDGs, but if you don't have the kind of leadership that time permits if you don't have the social-political conditions then you are deceiving yourself.

It's just like in those days where we're growing up, we love to sing the national anthem and pledge but these days you don't find anybody who wants to play to Nigeria my country because nobody sees Nigeria as their country anymore. It’s the country of the cabal, it’s the country, it’s the country of the incompetent, and it’s the country of the oppressor. So young people must understand that for us to even start talking of SDGs then we need to have an objective condition that puts our dignity and our persons as a priority to those in Government. We need to elect our own leaders, not their own leader who doesn’t care about us. This might sound a little bit pessimistic again, but I think it's a reality that young people must face, there is a fight that needs to be fought before we go on to enter the SDGs and MDGs. The SDGs and MDGs have been around for a long time and they don’t sound as if they have been around here.

Jigo Chibuike: Okay. Thank you very much. Thank you very much for the detailed response and secondly I would like to ask in terms of the revolution now movement what really inspired it.

Omoyele Sowore:  Revolution has always been part of my DNA since I started to work for all, democracy respect for human rights, social, jobs, healthcare, and it never really happened. In 2018 I ran for the office of the president and the people did not believe in democracy and elections. And one thing is very clear when you look at a spectrum of reforms and they don't have complete cannot carry you to your next destination. You start thinking about revolts and that's the revolution now came from the revolt against the system that the system for it to take us to the next level, real next level not the fraudulent next level for the governmental power. We articulated where we wanted and they resisted us, they arrested me for five months but the good news is that everybody is coming to the realization of democracy and people are talking along this line and people are starting to revolt on their own. Yesterday I saw the video of the wives of the police officers in Abuja saying their husbands are suffering.

Sowore Omoyele: Releasing videos, we haven't gotten there yet. It has to be this organic outreach that is coming from everywhere for us to achieve that but it requires a lot of work mobilization, and we are all doing that now, so I see a lot of that. I just hope it's sustained until it’s what we want.

Jigo Chibuike: Thank you for your words I appreciate it.

Obafemi Olukoya: Yes, can you hear me sir? I had some technical issues with the volume of my laptop so I had to change it quickly. Okay, so still on the revolution now moment. So I have a question just to continue from where Chibuike stopped. Look at history, right? For example. Let's look at the global South. We have the French Revolution, we have the likes of learning in Russia, and we have quite a lot of Marcus Garvey and revolution needs in the global South and also in Africa. We have the likes of Thomas Sankara. We have the likes of military man from Ghana and to even domesticate to our case in Nigeria in the 60s We had Uzegwu who did a kind of Revolution and when we look at all of this, it's all born out of the innate assumption that the status quo is not working and there should be something we should Implement and which is supposed to be better. However, the only tools for operationalizing these assumptions defers, in the military era they use coo, in the Democracy era we use protest. So why did you actually choose this specific period in our history given that this is not the worst of it, right? This specific dispensation is actually not the worse of them. So why did you choose this specific time in our history to start the RevolutionNow movement?

Sowore Omoyele: You know, I don't know what you mean by this is not the worst of it. Maybe you have not spoken to people who seek God's go to bed hungry. There are a lot of revolutions that happened in the world for specific reasons. I think there are revolution has happened because of a shortage of bread before so, Revolutions has happened for a variety of reasons there are Revolutions that happened even when people feel slightly comfortable but they don't want to lose comfort into the Future. So there's no better time in my view than now when you have some of the most divisive leadership, some of the most incompetent leadership, hunger starvation is rising in the Country. There are those jobs; we don't have an economic system that will take care of us the gap between rich and poor has expanded. We have a consonant that's not cool.  If anything is going to be worse than this then it will be a pandemics. Wiped out half of Nigerians and then with us it was done. But look people are dying as we speak, you know dying of Corona or dying of inability to feed, are dying of malaria, are dying of some of the most unbelievable aliment because their system cannot survive the harsh things. When you look at it on the other side of things, you have people who are building mansions. I've lived in Abuja for six-seven months now close to seven months and I went around Abuja a lot and I see mansions with nobody living in there and I go to the outskirt of Abuja in iyaya area and all those places where people are camping in one room.  So what's causing revolt is when you have a serious percentage of inequality and oppression and suppression of people. All those objective conditions have made Revolution happen in other places. Maybe what you should be asking is when are people going to rise and Revolt? That should be an easy question that's what I asked sometimes, is it police brutality you want to talk about policemen collecting 20 Naira and a driver that refuses to give they'll shoot or kill you. What caused a revolution is in Tunisia? The guy who was selling fruits and the police came and took his things and the next day he set himself on fire. Next moment that's what we're for the leaders in the country.

So I don't think people here will agree with you that this is not the worst and at any rate must we always go through the worse? Mostly we don't have to.

Obafemi Olukoya: I think that is a very important question. I hope the younger generation has been able to of course learn some lessons from your courage, you know for standing up despite how much persecution you had to face? So I am aware we are supposed to bring in now Paul Omorogbe from Tribune and I think he has a question for you.

So, is Paul Omorogbe available right now? Okay, so he posted his question so I think we can take it.

Paul Omorogbe: Real activism in itself is a dangerous venture in Nigeria. Environmental issues in this country are at the back burner. What support is available for individuals who want to take up Environmental Activism?

Sowore Omoyele: What Paul said is key, of course, very important because you know when they said an African adage that says that when trees fall on top of themselves after a tsunami or you know, any kind of wind, tornado you start by taking the first out which is the one on top, you know, that's the first record.

I was an average Nigerian and the kind of problems we have that stack on themselves environmental issue and quality of air is not your worry is not simply to eat your least worry is whether there's an oil spill in your area or the gas is loosening in the atmosphere. You just want to eat right. Ultimately when you get to the river where you've been fishing, where your grandparents fish you discovered that all the fishes have died. It means home to you that it's of environmental problems. Right? So and that is where it is important. We are still also living in a country Nigeria where people don't care, they have been made to believe that Niger Delta people are troublesome and they are preventing the export of food and it's affecting prices for goods and services. That's how they do it but regardless people must take on causes, you know, and I think environmental causes are very important because there are link to our ability to survive for a long time. After all, it was pollution in Niger Delta. Because some of the pollutions are airborne and it would pour rain on your house ijebu Ode one day, you know, it would affect your breathing in Lagos one day.

I will agree and accept that it is more difficult for people who are in the Environmental Activism sector to convince the generality of people that this is important and even world leaders educated people around the world so-called first world country.  If Donald Trump says to you that he doesn't believe in global warming to people how do you expect a woman in Arogbo or other places in Rivers State to understand the implication of Environmental Activism? So it's still its people like Ken Saro-Wiwa that made it easy for people to understand because he really did a fantastic job of carrying even the ordinary people whether educated or uneducated by tying their Survivor and well-being to the fact that these oil companies are shortchanging them and the Nigerian government kind of held them to Ransom over the years. But since he left I don't think the rest of us have done a good job of telling a story in that direction.

Obafemi Olukoya: Absolutely, I agree with you and thank you very much again for this your Insight. Especially I agree particularly with this huge gap between science and now the community and how we deal with these academic concept of climate change, global warming, ozone layer how do you explain that to a local my body system this is where the Civil Society is supposed to play a role. And this is where the Civil Society in Nigeria has been lucky because the Civil Society is supposed to domesticate some of this core academic Concepts and bring them down into everyday things you know for the local man to be able to understand that your crop is no longer yielding because the temperature has risen, because of global warming, because there's XYZ, right? So this is where I think Nigeria as a country can actually also look into to give more role now for the Civil Society to be able to domesticate some of these what are called International understanding of a lot of these Environmental issues. So we also have another person who has a question right now from the backstage, unfortunately, I cannot see who he is. I think it's somebody from the Green Institute.

Okay, in the absence of that, I would like to take one more question from the audience. The person is Oluwaseun Kuti Olukoya. In my research, the Nigerian people don't have adequate education and information about environmental impacts or even the SDGs. How can we get involved when we have no clue?

Sowore Omoyele: Well, I agree with the Seun, but it's not true that people don't have a clue. The problem is that people are so much weighed down by other problems and we are also distracted by how we provide solutions to some of our problems in which case, you know, you look at Nigeria and how people interpret Environmental problems. Some people think that when is global warming or there is disease or pandemic they think it is some Devil Inside the forest and they have the attention of a majority of our people including educated people. So when people in 2020 still think that where you cut the forest in your area and you know, and you have confronted with some environmental problem, that's the work of witches and wizards, you know, you have a problem getting that those categories of people to understand and look your well-being is directly proportional to the health of your environment. A lot of people don’t know that. So everybody's doing their just consuming in an unsustainable way. They're also taking in the destruction of the environment and when they are visited when environment or mother earth visits are anger on his constituents, they go run into, you know, religious places and worshipping me. I remember we growing up I grew up in Niger Delta Region 2 There was a forest that you don't go to it was later in life that I understood that our parents knew the value of our environment that’s why they don’t cut those trees because it was an equilibrium. They had to let the environment be so that the environments support them. But today it just takes one Chinese man with a license to cut all the trees in one place, all of these shipped to China and then fear you have no cover and now you are wondering why you always sick while you know since that is supposed to keep you healthy in your environment is no longer there. People who used to eat catfish that they get naturally from freshwater now how to buy frozen fish that they don't know where it comes from they eat it they poison their system. Half of our people are sick but sadly they have no hospitals to go to. And in those days when our environment is healthy our parents live longer they live 105 - 120 years old but these days we have 50 in Nigeria and you die people will say that you have tried the man really live long 50 years old. If you look at obituary is 50, 49, 65 Maximum. 65 is like the Hundred Years of those days and we have no natural cover that's ultimate that we should have and is everywhere and I'm not making this up. This is a situation right now, and it's sad.

Obafemi Olukoya:  Yeah, that's very true. Thank you very much once again for the response. So we have now Tosin Gbogi. Tosin Gbogi is an assistant professor from a university in the United States and he has a question of his own. So Tosin Gbogi please the floor is yours.

Tosin Gbogi: Thank you very much. Thank you very much Mr. Sowore. I think it's very important that the session began with issues around Ken Saro Wiwa that a lot of people forget today, you know, and that is really something that goes back to historical memory and how we forget people who have done different kinds of things for us in the country.

That is particularly important because on Ken Saro Wiwa’s name a lot of things have been doing. There are people cashing out, you know in different ways the weather in government today or in different ways. Ken Saro Wiwa was a great item in Nigeria and people are winning awards today, you know, and people are not thinking about it.

Today we are taking money from people who pollute the environment and nobody's asking questions and they're very important people that people need to ask people to stand up for. So I'm very glad that you know, this is coming up and you know are raising this question and beading around Ken Saro Wiwa as an activist who lived and was killed by the Nigerian government. I also want to jump on the thing that you said know our people make sense of the environment which earned the environment for globalization food Improvement of them. So they were to meet right cut the whole country that was the rationale to make people cut trees.

But my question of course a little bit different from what we've been talking about and this is the first and this is a question for me is to be up over and over again. How is it that was National companies in Nigeria for prospecting or able to destroy our environment with a reckless abandon, right? Whether from the military regime, so what is happening what in the Buhari regime right now, but they are not able to do that the same thing in Europe and the US kind of thing that Fela was talking about right, so you have democracy in your own country and the military cannot take all right. You do business with the military regime in the post-colonial country, right? So if this job because we have local collaborators for politicians who collaborate, it's always been difficult The problem of Africa is we have a problem of local collaborators whether from Slavery to colonialism or to the present government who collaborate with the western part of the world to destroy the environment or that there is, of course, the racist regime right? That racist idea that is full of black lives matter, you know protect all of that over that very, you know, so I am thinking about that racist control right of prospecting all in Nigeria. So when the oil spill happened the environment was cleaned up within that period right. I’m from Ondo State by the way and you know the environment has been despoiled from 1957 to now. So my question for you now is, for example, is an easy job that we have a local collaboration of the western multinational companies believe that these are dealing with animals, right the very idea that you racializing black body and the environment you got really think you go to the black body and nothing will happen. So it is a racist undertone that propelled what the multinational companies in Nigeria to believe that he can talk to anything to the environmental happen, or is it just that we are dealing with cases of a couple of great software testimony from or otherwise. I don't see any reason why all of these companies in Nigeria cannot do the same thing where everybody came running from them locally or otherwise to clean up the environment to do the same thing that they do in other Western countries in the world. Thank you.

Sowore Omoyele: Thank you very much. Great question you asked and universe apart of it. But I will be specific. It is rooted in racism and that racism took the African continent to the kind of leaders that Africans were saddled with even after colonialism. You see the easiest what to understand what we are going through is slavery. If people can bring ships from their country it’s not today that the ships can arrive through this some of the ships will be on the high seas for six months seven months a year. To physically and violently remove other human beings like them and go use them as slaves on plantations, you know as sex slaves, whatever the useless for any take the best out of them. There is no reason for you to doubt the fact that it is corporations have that mentality as their own official policy and relating with Africa also, so many of these corporations are carrying out these actions now have a relationship with corporations that were dealing in slavery and by produce from Africa and also is important historical to understand that Africa was designed for that purpose that you know, and part of it is that they have God knows to the point where we have accepted our inferiority, you know somewhere are simple as even the English teams we support today. We have Liverpool. You know what Liverpool represents in slavery it was Liverpool Port receiving slaves strolling good resources in the UK. But today we support the soccer team and most of our people don’t even know the history of Liverpool and people who set up the Liverpool soccer team did not even look back and think what this is offensive to these Africans who also play for the Liverpool soccer team. These are deeper issues, but I'm trying to answer your question contextually in a manner that you can understand that just don't happen from the blues if you trace the history of Anglo Goshel the people who started the complete you discover that their great grandfathers were slave masters. They just transformed the company into something that there was by produce and they now turned into what we now know as oil exploration, gold exploration. So racism is at the heart of it. There's no question about that and in they have weakened us so much but we have also weakened ourselves to the point that we are so mean to us as racist superstructure is the continent of Africa the environment of Africa the people of Africa the resources of Africa

As I have often described it, Africa is like a hotel to racist corporations and the people are going to Africa. They came one day and stayed in a hotel and the next time they stole the towel, you know, the next time they came they stole the bed sheets next and next time they came they stole all the soap. so I want you to look at it and said, you know why are we stealing small let's go and steal the hotel and now we the owner of the hotel have now become the workers that work as the cook and the cleaners and the bellman and woman in this hotel. So my analogy of how we have come this way. But if you look at it also, we look at even the continent of Africa and support particularly West Africa how they treated the West African section which was largely divided between the French and the British and the Portuguese having a little part of it. This African country today and in that resources that were found in them, you know Ghana used to be gold coast, Nigeria that we are in now and Togo used to be known as Slave Coast they didn’t even hide it before they came to rename it to Niger area. Some even call it Negro area we have the largest concentration of niggers. So that's how they treated us and till tomorrow they still treated us like until that situation is resolved by Africans themselves. We will continue to have people who are taking Africa for granted they don't want leaders of Africa to know what they're doing. That's what it did to bump off a lot of leaders during Independence. You know, anybody who is was too knowledgeable for them they killed or blackmailed or they strip off and they did it before then, you know, against the British explorers who first came and wanted to take over the family business, they finished all of them off so they have weakened the African leadership, hopefully, so we are left with dread and you start tonight.  If the president of France calls the meeting of African leaders today even if it is 6 pm by tomorrow morning you see all of them will on the plane running to France. And the guy is like thirty-something years old and you don't know ask why should we come to you. What is the basis? Are we like senior prefects? Yes, then some of these guys in their seventies will jump on the plan including the one here and jump on the plane and will run to France to go and meet the French president, Small boy, you know. French president used to work here as a bank teller France. In fact, the last now he is President and he invites everybody, African leaders as well as know this need for a total overhaul of the African mines you know awareness that give that gives the real African leaders the real African leadership of the continent and until then I'm sorry I don't think there is much hope.

Obafemi Olukoya: Okay, so I hope Dr. Tosin Gbogi is convinced because I am highly convinced of your response to the question which was posed by Dr. Tosin Gbogi. And I would just like to just add one more thing before we take the next the next question, which is that, you know, the relationship of this International companies in my view which our with our country with Nigeria and how there is a very large difference between what they do out there and what we do in Nigeria? Of course, we can narrow it down to slavery, to colonialism, but it has a very vast range of other factors which can also be considered which you and explain very succinctly which is the fact that there for political will and the reason why there is poor political will is that where is the power you have in the world. Because the way your country itself was designed, it has been designed in such a way that you would eventually not enough such a power to be able to contest a lot of things. For example, I researched gas flaring in the Niger Delta some years ago. I think it was in 2014 and I realized there are finds for gases flaring for every amount of gas explain to the anthroposphere or whatever. I cannot remember precisely how this was done, but they are fines and its companies at the end of each year and they go to the government to ask so how much is are fine for the year? Okay you're fine is 1 million Euros and they say it's okay. So here you go. And they continue right and this fine that is paid to Nigerian Government what is it used for? You know, it's no use for any sort of development. For example, we were currently we're in the middle of the NDCC Scam right now, right which is a body that is supposed to be responsible for the development of the Niger Delta people. Anyway, what I'm just trying to point out is that there's a complex of factors which one can also consider alongside the slavery mentality and all that.

So I would like to take the next question from our audience, which is from Temitayo Bankole who says what are the possibilities of solving environmental some of environmental issues here in Nigeria, perhaps if we Channel the same energy pumped into human activities and towards environmental activism.

Sowore Omoyele: I agree with Temitayo Bankole completely. I think we need to be holistic about how we fight you know environmental rights not to separate it from you know human rights because environmental rights are also human rights. So and I see that in other countries. Environmental activism is no longer maybe overtime is no longer an esoteric department of rights. Where only a few people special people scientists fight for environmental rights. No, it should be packaged of rights, you know that we fight for so that you know the way I'm fighting police brutality is the same way we find environmental rights because your Survivor in any environment depends largely on the health of the environment as it depends on the mentality of the police, you know police might kill one person at the time but the toxic environment can kill people over time a short time. But how do we get people to understand what impact this has on people well to such an extent that people can take it seriously? We should fight for our environment as bad as we fight for our humans. Yes, so I agree completely with Bankole on that one.

Obafemi Olukoya: Yes. I agree very completely. So I would just like to take the last question now because now we should be rounding up very soon because the question just keeps coming and coming and coming, unfortunately, our time will not permit us to take all of your questions. I think if you cover the next a few minutes so we can round up our today's session. So for my last question here is that the role of environmental activism towards achieving sustainable development is inevitable rights. I mean, we have talked on this severally. However, environmental activism in Nigeria can be seen as the confrontation of the power that is right as soon as you assume this responsibility of an environmental activist, you already are seen as an antagonist. Your philosophy is aphoristic with their own concept of progress, right? So what national measure can Civil Society take to pushing against the operation of these people in power to take this so-called power that is, how do we put pressure. What can be the role of this civil society?

Sowore Omoyele:  I'm a very strong proponent of direct action. So, you know, so we have indirect and direct action, I’m for direct action. Indirect action will work for people who are open Nigeria have leaders who are reasonable enough. If you write a letter to your Congressman or your Senator in Nigeria he doesn't open it.

If you send him a text message he will not respond to it. They don't care about you so you want the same channels that you can communicate with your Reps even in the democracy as would in other places. So when we have this, I think people should just engage in direct action. I’m in favor of big protest and that's why I love when women man and the kids take action against the oil companies occupies the margins, occupies the petrol stations to draw their attention to take care of the environment because look as we started this conversation if you go to San Ramon in the US, which is the help shape what color it concern about those environments they measure air valid. The air they breathe must meet a standard, if it drops, they will panic but the same doesn't apply to the Niger Delta. If you go to the Niger Delta today you will see a Chevron Brad just like Christmas trees the village next to it don't even have even light, if there is light in the village is most likely coming from the gas flare from Chevron or shell or to Total. So what they are doing to the Niger Delta not only Niger Delta to the environment of poorer countries the global south is what can be described as a crime against humanity. But they also control International institutions likely that regulate these places because is double standards. The standard for oil exploration in Texas is different from the standard of oil exploration in Nigeria. There is a practice I don’t know what they call it exactly in Texas if they explore oil from the place if there is gas flare they must inject the gas back to the ground but here they just put a light on it maybe its cigarette and it's welcome. Gas flare has been burning for 20 years and they send our own brother's policeman to wash it off the press so I met with the must get to the point where we declare environmental emergency just like every other emergency in the country and who fights for it and codified in our own law books and our constitution the condition under which water environment should be operated and it's of which there are no exceptions to multinational corporations. They live Above the Law of our country but you cannot run away from the fact that leadership is a major reason why you know, everything seems are falling apart according to Chinua Achebe.

Obafemi Olukoya: Absolutely, thank you once again for this year's very comprehensive response to the question that was asked. So I think now we are approaching the end now we have this very very interesting question for you from the audience, you know since it is a bit we digressed from our context? But I think now that we have the opportunity to ask you this now and a lot of people are watching I would like to take this as the last question of the day which was asked by Tobi Awolowo and the question goes thus: Would Mr. Sowore be contesting for president in 2023 and if yes the response of the first question is linked to the second question if yes would you invest in renewable energy if you become the president and if you will what type of renewable energies would you like to exploit.

Sowore Omoyele: In 2023, I have answered it several times but in a more direct way I am running from now I'm not waiting for 2023. If there has been a tsunami now in 2021 why do we have to wait for 2023? With regards to investments in renewable energy. If anybody follows that campaign during the last election 2018-2019 already very clear one of the pillars upon which our campaign promises stand on the sustainability of the Nigerian economy and society and I was one who talked mostly about bringing solar energy into the energy mix in Nigeria and using other in with who means of generating power employment and driving the Nigerian economy, right? So because I know that the oil economy as it is now that we will have on is a lazy economy of and that we expire with time I happen to also have discussed actually classless education when I was running for office and Pandemic now we're having classless education, but Nigeria has not been able to catch up we were caught napping, we're not prepared. We are never prepared for it. So, of course, renewable energy Is one of the sectors that will form the fulcrum of the administration that will be run by me and it's included in every sector in the educational sector, in the energy sector, in the health sector, and infrastructure sector that everything that is available in this country today is able to sustain us if we manage them very well because I describe some of these things to you and I know we don't have all the time to discuss it so that does this look like a campaign rally as opposed to a conversation with the environment. how we intend to sustain Nigerian economy renewable sources of energy and make sure that everything is sustainable so that we don't consume everything we and have nothing left in the nearest future because as that is the trajectory we are on now. There's no policy as we speak now about Renewables in this country, which is you know, up till today a country of 200 million people we don't have a gas pipe to houses. We still have to roll your gas cylinder to go and buy gas. Sometimes it explodes kills people. The whole place is littered with generators. But imagine that you're able to take charge of the country with all these policies that some of which I have explained today it is obvious that we will have a sustainable environment.

Obafemi Olukoya: Yes. Yes, so thank you very much for joining us Mr. Sowore. We are really glad to have you to have given us almost two hours of your time. And so our audience I would like to apologize if your question was not taken. This program was scheduled to actually hold for one hour and now we are 35 minutes above one hour, but I'll just like to quickly take a quick look at some of the questions. For example, Oluwatoyin Christiana talked about “the role of Situation in the Niger Delta and the impact they can have towards environmental activism in moving forward SDGs in this area” that is definitely something that can also be still be openly discussed with the green Institute even after this specific session. Sagacious Seunfunmi Swot also said how does the government age hinder the role of environmental activism? I’m sure Mr. Sowore has been able to do justice to this in the course of explaining some of the other questions that have been asked.

Yes. Dr. James Akanmu I think it is more of a contribution environment activism should be for all irrespective of our geographical location, tribe, and position there is an urgent need for the importance of a good environment.

Absolutely yes Mr. Sowore also talked on this and even made a very good example of life expectancy right where people now die at the age of 50- 57 and this looks normal and as a matter of fact, one odd factor is that life expectancy in the Niger Delta seems to be the lowest.  I think I read about this sometimes ago due to the enormous impacts of degradation that is going on in that area, Nigeria is a as a whole Is 47 then I think Niger Delta is 43, I'm not sure we have to check this out by ten years relatively. Anyway, the Life expectancy in Niger Delta is lower. So yes Dr. James Akanmu just to confirm of course your position. So very lastly Mr. Sowore how will Sahara Reporters be able to support now environmental activism in Nigeria. I know Sahara reporters have done a lot in the past right, a lot of voiceless voices as a matter of fact I personally was a beneficiary of Sahara Reporters.  I wrote an article in Sahara Reporters in 2015 and I think it was the role of poverty and voting behavior in Nigeria. I think I remember sometime in 2015 and I just sent that as an email just to the editor and it was published in Sahara Reporter so I would like to encourage anybody that has such articles I'm sure you can have your way in Sahara reporter.

I don't know if maybe as a closing remark you have something to say about how Sahara Reporters can help us provide and promote environmental activism in Nigeria going forward.

Sowore Omoyele: I think you know I maybe I should not assume the role of Sahara Reporters because it's an institution has grown beyond my person even though I found it and he runs on its own now. There are times that some of our stories became part of debates in parliament in Europe when we were following on Exxon Mobil and the pollution of the environment that was happening in Akwa Ibom in those days. So we still do and people should understand Sahara Reporters is a citizen reporting platform. We actually generate stories from Ordinary People. So if you see something say something to us, I mean to Sahara Reporters.

Obafemi Olukoya: Okay, so thank you very much. Mr. Sowore. I really appreciate that. You took out your almost two hours of time to be with us today and to everyone who participated also, we are very grateful for everyone that joined for making the discussion to be very interactive for us all and for the people in the opposition party now you heard it is from Mr. Sowore that in 2023 you should get ready he is coming for you again in 2023. I wish you the best of luck this time.

Yes, I don't know if you have any final remark if there's no final remark. Okay, so in the absence of no final remark, thank you very much for coming, and thank you very much everybody, and bye for now. 

Sowore Omoyele: Thank you.


Favourite Quote

I have seen a lot of things on paper, all kinds of things in paper, I just haven’t seen them implemented...
— Omoyele Sowore

Top Comments

Ọgbẹni Àjàkáyé: Thank God I voted for this man.

Oluwatoyin Christiana Onabola: There should be a ‘the common man matters’ activism in Nigeria in place of black lives matters.

Nnamdi Frank: Hi Sowore…… #RevolutionNow is the way forward.


THE GREEN ROOM (Episode 2): Jeffrey Sachs on Building Resilient Health Structure to Combat Novel Diseases: A Case of COVID-19


Summary of the Event

Various factors determine a country's infectious diseases' death rate: the quality of leadership, the consistency in government's response, the availability of a responsive health care system, the extent of international travel, and the population's age structure. Following the COVID-19 pandemic, Prof. Jeffrey Sachs shares insights on how to judiciously manage and respond to future infectious disease threats through an integrated and resilient process.


LISTEN TO PODCAST


ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Jeffrey D. Sachs is a University Professor and Director of the Center for Sustainable Development at Columbia University .He is also the Director of the UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network and a commissioner of the UN Broadband Commission f…

Jeffrey D. Sachs is a University Professor and Director of the Center for Sustainable Development at Columbia University .He is also the Director of the UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network and a commissioner of the UN Broadband Commission for Development.

ABOUT THE MODERATOR

Dr. Jason J. McSparren is an educator, researcher, and administrator with a PhD. in Global Governance and Human Security from Massachusetts Boston.He is also a Pre-Doctoral Fellow (2017-18) for the West African Research Association (WARA).

Dr. Jason J. McSparren is an educator, researcher, and administrator with a PhD. in Global Governance and Human Security from Massachusetts Boston.He is also a Pre-Doctoral Fellow (2017-18) for the West African Research Association (WARA).


Q & A (SELECTED)

Jason Mcsparren: Dr. Akinsemolu, mentions in her new book, The Principles of Green and Sustainability Science that the ONE HEALTH INITIATIVE is practicing and promoting sustainable public health as it works to prevent infectious disease outbreaks. Can you offer the audience some insight into how the One Health Initiative has minimized the outbreak and spread of diseases in developing countries?

Jeffrey Sachs: The idea of the ONE HEALTH INITIATIVE which is an excellent idea is that we face the ever present risk of new diseases spreading from animal reservoirs to humans and we are in the middle of that pandemic right now with COVID-19. This is a disease where the virus has its host especially in bats, and spread to humans either directly through interaction between bats and humans or from bats to some kind of intermediates mammal species available to humans. We should be taking care of this kind of risk because we keep experiencing this kind of zoonotic transmission from animals to humans. The ONE HEALTH INITIATIVE is trying to draw awareness and preparedness, clearly we haven’t succeeded. COVID pandemic is worldwide and it is killing vast number of people. When politicians ignore science like Trump does, people suffer and die.

Jason Mcsparren: Your latest book, Ages of Globalization: Geography, Technology, and Institutions (Columbia University Press, 2020) Takes readers through a series of seven distinct waves of technological and institutional change throughout human history, starting with the original settling of the planet by early modern humans through long-distance migration then progressing to your reflections on our globally networked modern society. What reflections would you like to share with us about our global-human society and the challenges of environmental sustainability?

Jeffrey Sachs: We have been interconnected as a species from the start over vast human distancing. In other words, from the first dispersal out of Africa until now we have been communicating, moving, and trading goods over huge distances. The whole has been for the benefits of humanity but also carries great risks too like the spread of infectious diseases or war and violence when the trade is not in goods and services but in movement of armies and trade of the killing. This is another side of Globalization, so the book is really a reflection on this interconnectedness, how they get the best of Globalization and how to avoid the worst. We have tried even in modern times at various points to stop Globalization, that has been a disaster but we have to learn how to cooperate too and how to cooperate at a global scale. That’s why I’m a big believer in the United Nations (UN) as vital force and that’s why extreme nationalist who are very arrogant and chauvinistic like Trump don’t like the UN because it would have the United State obey international rules not simply the President whims. This is  all the more reason why we need the UN, when we see such an unstable person in power we need rules not just the discretion of individual with their armies under their command.

Jason Mcsparren: Great point, great point, yes, I would have to agree with you, I also support the idea of multilateralism in the United Nations and all of the other transnational organizations that, you know, the states around the world have put together, you know, the World Health Organization, et cetera, to protect citizens. And we are seeing a little bit of a fracture in that cooperation. So we are at some sort of an inflection point in not only our current society at home in the US, but also globally.

Jeffrey Sachs: I would say it's more than a fracture. It is an attempt by Trump and others to destroy these institutions, to pull the United States out of the Paris climate agreement, to pull the United States out of the World Health Organization, to pull the United States out of the Human Rights Council. They want to break these institutions because they think that the world belongs to the powerful. They also think they're powerful. I'm not so sure, but they are destructive. And that's what they're trying to do, is to destroy these multilateral institutions.

Jason Mcsparren: OK, yes. Yes, that is an interesting observation. I really do hope and I think that our institutions are strong. They are under stress, and we'll see, you know, what the future holds for them. However, there are a lot of people watching us today that feel similarly to to you along those lines and really do support the UN in other transnational organizations.

Jason Mcsparren: Dr. Sachs, I have another question for you. This one relates to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. The UN Sustainable Development Goals were inaugurated in 2015 about five years ago. Can you remind us of some notable achievements in the healthcare system across sub-Saharan Africa, and what are the challenges of health coverage in the high-income countries since the declaration of the SDGs? And, what are some remaining challenges?

Jeffrey Sachs: The idea of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) is that everybody should be able to enjoy the benefits of modern technologies and economic progress and to live in an environmentally safe planet. We are obviously far from this. The SDGs are goals. They are aspirations and are not our current reality but they are also an inspiration for action. The SDG 3 calls for Universal access to health care and even in difficult circumstances in Africa, there has been an expansion of access to basic health care often through very creative means such as deploying Community Health Workers (CHWs) backed up by good information technology because CHWs can play a huge role in monitoring the health of the community and helping to connect people in need, suffering from illness, for example pregnant women with the health systems to get antenatal, safe delivery in child birth or to fight the battle of malaria. This is a very positive side and it’s these CHWs that are now in the front line of the fight against COVID-19 in Africa. This epidemic spreads easily, very dangerous, creates lots of deaths, it needs to be fought and the Africa’s health systems needs to be guided urgently so that this epidemic is contained.


Quotes

Jeffrey-quote-post.fw.png
Development aid and tax reform are the two most important ways to help poor countries to close their budget deficit
— Jeffrey Sachs
We face an ever present risk of new diseases spreading from animal
reservoirs to humans.
— Jeffrey Sachs

Top Comments

Such an amazing conversation with Prof Jeffrey Sachs- Deborah


FURTHER READING

Jeffrey D. Sachs (2020) The Ages of Globalization Geography, Technology, and Institutions. Columbia University Press.

Jeffrey D. Sachs (2015) The Age of Sustainable Development. Columbia University Press.

Peter J Hotez, David H Molyneux, Alan Fenwick, Jacob Kumaresan, Sonia Ehrlich Sachs, Jeffrey D Sachs, Lorenzo Savioli (2007) Control of neglected tropical diseases. New England journal of medicine. Massachusetts Medical Society.

THE GREEN ROOM (Episode 1): Damilola Olawuyi on Extractive Industries and Sustainable Development

GREEN ROOM: LIVE WEBINAR TRANSCRIPT


Summary of the Discussion

The discussion kicked off with a brief introduction of our distinguished speaker, Professor Damilola Olawuyi, and our amiable moderator Dr. Jason McSparren. The topic was one that is long overdue, only to be validated by the COVID-19 pandemic. Nigeria as a nation and Africa as a continent has not lived up to its abundance of natural resources. The extractive industries have been bedeviled by corrupt practices and environmental insensitivity. In the age of sustainable development where the environment is unassailable, economic development is non-negotiable and equality is indisputable; what role would the extractive industry play in expediting sustainable development in Nigeria and Africa? Oil is one of the products of the extractive industry, has been the mainstay of our economy, and has enriched public coffers conveniently. How do we transition from this monoculture economic system to a rich multicultural economic system without hemorrhaging the economy?

For satisfactory answers and an in-depth analysis into this mysterious industry, find out more by downloading the audio, video or transcript of the webinar.


LISTEN TO PODCAST


ABOUT THE SPEAKER ABOUT THE MODERATOR

Professor Damilola S. Olawuyi is an international jurist, professor of law, arbitrator, author and policy consultant, with expertise in petroleum, energy and environmental law. He is the Deputy Vice Chancellor of Afe Babalola University, Ado Ekiti, …

Professor Damilola S. Olawuyi is an international jurist, professor of law, arbitrator, author and policy consultant, with expertise in petroleum, energy and environmental law. He is the Deputy Vice Chancellor of Afe Babalola University, Ado Ekiti, Nigeria.

Dr. Jason J. McSparren is an educator, researcher, and administrator with a PhD. in Global Governance and Human Security from Massachusetts Boston.He is also a Pre-Doctoral Fellow (2017-18) for the West African Research Association (WARA).

Dr. Jason J. McSparren is an educator, researcher, and administrator with a PhD. in Global Governance and Human Security from Massachusetts Boston.He is also a Pre-Doctoral Fellow (2017-18) for the West African Research Association (WARA).


Q & A

Chibuike Jigo: What efforts are the extractive industries putting towards letting the government know that this is where we are, this is where we stand, that natural resources will soon be over by 2048 or 2050. So what policies had been geared towards making the government realized that this is where we stand?

Prof. Damilola Olawuyi: Well, thank you very much Chibuike. That's a fantastic question. I know that even when we talk about agriculture in Nigeria, no one is interested, well at Afe Babalola how many people are studying agriculture, you know, even though I know very well that the founder provided a lot of incentives and said if you study agriculture, you know, it is cheaper, just study agriculture, but you know, the truth is that the agriculture sector has just remained less attractive to a lot of people and I think it all starts with this whole idea of you know, the emphasizing oil and gas, you know, everyone wants to work in the oil and gas industry. No matter what you do in the oil and gas industry, you are well respected. I think that has to change, you know, there is a need to make the other sectors equally, you know important and equally attractive to everyone so that to change that narrative and extreme focus on oil and gas, that's number one. Number two is that I agree with what Afe Babalola University is doing in terms of spearheading this whole poll education approach, you know, which you know empowering students to think about agriculture, to think about sustainability as a whole and I think every institution every University in Nigeria should learn from Afe Babalola University and see how they can also promote that sort of, you know, for example, I know that ABUAD students can learn about farming and can try and become entrepreneurs on their own. We have seen a number of people leave the University to become entrepreneurs and start Innovative ventures and I think those are some of the ways in which you can view the new generation that is less dependent on this whole oil and gas promoting sustainability education, promoting whole education, promoting agriculture, you know, promoting Innovation and an Enterprise development is exactly the way to go and I think if we can do more of that we will make progress.

Alex: Why are some solid minerals left largely untapped in Nigeria, bearing in mind that can help to address energy deficiency issues and also diversify the economy, research Uranium, Gold, and some other solid minerals up North Nigeria. Why are they left untapped?

Prof. Damilola Olawuyi: Yes, thank you, Alex, that is a very fantastic question from a place of knowledge and I think the truth is that we've had as I mentioned we've had and you know an onyx, someone something like an inexplicable dependence on oil, you know, like, you know, almost like an addiction to oil and gas for many years and it was only recently that people started talking about the mineral sector, you know, the solid mineral sector. As a matter of fact, I think this does is one of the positive achievement of this current government because was the current governor of Ekiti state governor Fayemi, when he was Minister for solid minerals just recently, you know in the last, you know in the first term of the current government was when they began to accentuate this need for solid mineral diversification, and you see that the progress they've made just by talking about it so much over the last four years, now everyone is aware that we have so much you mentioned Gold, You mentioned Copper, you know, we have Uranium and we have all of that. So I think the awareness had already been created by the Fayemi led ministry of solid minerals and the next step is to build on that awareness and ensure that we continue along that path.  Why is it that you know, they didn't do this in the past. Like I said because oil and gas was providing a lot of money and everyone just thought what else do we need? Now everyone knows that the oil and gas money is about to end, so this is the right atmosphere. I think COVID has also played the right stump because it has created the perfect crisis because no one cares about oil and gas right now. I joked with someone that a barrel of oil is so cheap that you know, it's cheaper than table water you know, so again, which means if you have another commodity like Gold another, you better start looking at them because you know oil is no longer the golden child that it used to be. So I think, so those are some of the reasons why historically we've not focused on them. Again, because we've not focused on them we've not been able to appreciate the full issues. People have raised concerns when we talked about Uranium in the past, that oh you want to kill the whole country with Uranium which is environmental, which can lead to death and the likes. Yeah, but a lot of countries are producing Uranium because they have spent time studying it perfecting it. So I think if we begin to study it as well who will be ready to produce it and will be ready to use it. Lithium, you know is another one you know, which the Lithium is like a very expensive commodity because there is a huge demand for Lithium. Everyone that has a laptop uses a Lithium battery every form relies on and you know, so Nigeria can produce its Lithium and raise a lot of money from all of these things. So I think we are about to see a transformation and already I am beginning to say, I'm not an oil and gas lawyer, I'm an energy lawyer so that I can be part of the opportunities coming in the mining sector.


Favourite Quote

The face mask is an analogy that shows you the real need for local content, we cannot continue to rely on imported solutions.
— Professor Damilola Olawuyi

Top Comments

"I have a new crush. Prof Olawuyi: Simple, Brilliant, Succinct, Elaborate. He knows his stuff." - Anonymous

Prof. Olawuyi knows his stuff. He didn't just speak defensively, he took an offensive approach towards his expertise and ended up making converts. Now I want to be a Sustainable Extractive Industry Expert.

Thumbs up Prof. Olawuyi. Thumbs up the Green Institute

Chibuike J.

"My Warmest and kindest regards to Prof Olawuyi. I hope I will see him someday by Grace of God. Again, Brilliant Initiative and discussion." - Professor Adebayo Shittu

"The face mask analogy is brilliant Prof. Homegrown local content is the way to go. There is no one cap fits all solution in the extractive industry." - Oludayo Olorunfemi 

"The foresight possessed by the speakers in this discussion is very, very admirable and commendable." - Emmanuel Best Ali 

"The level of knowledge and foresight every speaker in this discussion is exuding is remarkable!" - Oluwayimika Akinsipe


FURTHER READING

Damilola S. Olawuyi. 2018. Extractives Industry Law in Africa. Springer International Publishing. DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-97664-8

Damilola S. Olawuyi. June 2016. The Human Right Based Approach to Carbon Finance. Cambridge University Press. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781316226285

Jason J.  McSparren. May  2020. The Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) and Africa Mining Vision (AMV): Policy Tools for Natural Resource-based Development. DOI: https://jasonmcsparren.com/2020/05/14/the-extractive-industries-transparency-initiative-eiti-and-africa-mining-vision-amv-policy-tools-for-natural-resource-based-development/

Jason J.  McSparren. December 2019.The Africa Mining Vision: Beyond Official Development Aid and Partnerships. DOI: https://jasonmcsparren.com/2019/12/17/the-africa-mining-vision-beyond-official-development-aid-and-partnerships/