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Lagos promotes gas usage for sustainable environment

Gas cylinder and burner

The Lagos State Government on Saturday promoted the “Sanwo Switch To Gas (SS2G)” initiative among residents on Lagos Island, urging the usage of gas for sustainable environment.

Speaking at the event organised by the Lagos State Environmental Protection Agency (LASEPA), the wife of the governor, Mrs Ibijoke Sanwo-Olu, stressed the need to shift from wood and kerosene stoves.

Sanwo-Olu urged residents to shift to cleaner and more sustainable energy for improved air quality in the state, thereby making a measurable impact on climate change.

She said the SS2G project, an offshoot of the Eko Clean Air Initiative, was unveiled in 2022, to encourage an attitudinal change that would ensure a sustainable environment.

Quoting a study carried out by the World Bank in 2021, the governor’s wife said air pollution is empirically adjudged to be responsible for 30,000 premature deaths annually, with children below the age of five as the most demographically affected.

She said Lagos State has witnessed in one way or another immediate and often long-term impacts of environmental degradation on the quality of air, land and water resources.

According to her, Lagos as a coastal city is especially impacted by various human-based activities and a growing population estimated to hit 40 million residents by 2050.

“The growing and often fluid challenges in ensuring the fair and judicious use of the environment for all, amidst multi-level bottlenecks are of critical concern to the state government and a recurring global theme in cities, similar in demographics and socio-economic profile to Lagos State.

“It is, therefore, gratifying that the “Sanwo Switch To Gas“ project is specifically targeted at ensuring emissions from various cooking and other solid and fossil fuels dependent processes are reduced and phased out where reasonably practicable.

Sanwo-Olu commended LASEPA and other partners for the initiative and other various pilot projects carried out, in line with the noble objective of protecting the environment.

The projects include waste for Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG) cylinders, waste for cash, waste for free health insurance, waste for free public transport and waste for food schemes, and others.

“These initiatives, according to statistics from LASEPA, have positively impacted the environment and contributed towards improving the quality of lives of residents.

“In view of the foregoing, I urge all Lagosians to support the ‘Sanwo Switch To Gas’ project and heed the call to join the fight to safeguard the environment of our beautiful state of aquatic splendour. It is a collective duty and a responsibility owed to future generations.

We are advocating that you get reusable plastics. Stay away from single-use plastics and if you must use single-use plastics, bring them to us and we will recycle them into chairs, tables, among other things.

Cooking and environment

In her welcome address, the General Manager, LASEPA, Dr Dolapo Fasawe, said the Gas Initiative became necessary because cooking with fossil fuels, kerosene and firewood was bad for the environment.

Fasawe said cooking with firewood and kerosene caused global warming and was bad for people’s health, as they caused chest infections, pneumonia and actually killed people.

“A study done in 2021 revealed that 32,000 Lagosians died from preventable deaths due to air pollution and so this is a fight against air pollution and taking the messages to the grassroots.

“The other thing we’re doing is advocating for recycling. In LASEPA, we say everybody’s waste is somebody’s raw material. We see plastic bottles on the roads that litter the road, because the recycling value is not so much

“What the governor has magnanimously done is that he has put a premium on a bag that will normally be bought for N40. Today, we are buying it for N800 and that is why we see such a large outcome of people,” she said.

Fasawe noted that collecting and recycling plastics would ensure that the dumpsites and drainages were free of plastics that block drainages, which lead to infections, diarrhoea, malaria and others because they are non-degradable.

“We are advocating that you get reusable plastics. Stay away from single-use plastics and if you must use single-use plastics, bring them to us and we will recycle them into chairs, tables, among other things,” she said.

The programme featured residents of Lagos Island bringing in plastics in bags which were exchanged for health insurance, cowry cards to board the train, among other items. (NAN)

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