* Local Content, National Transport Commission Bills scale second reading

The Senate on Tuesday passed for second reading a Bill that will address erosion issues across the country, especially in the Southeast.

The Bill, which seeks to establish an Erosion Control and Prevention Commission in the country, was sponsored by Ifeanyi Ubah (Anambra South).

In his lead debate, the senator said the establishment of the agency had become imperative due to the catastrophic impact of erosion in several parts of the country.

“Almost every part of this country is characterised by one environmental problem or the other. However, the menace of erosion is unarguably the severest in terms of devastation and destruction.

“For instance, there was the 2012 flooding in Ibadan, Oyo State; the coastal erosion in Lagos, Bayelsa, Rivers states and almost all parts of Anambra State. It is also very important to note that gully erosion is almost taking over the entire landmass of the Southeast and Southsouth.

“The problem of erosion is not catastrophic in the Southern while desertification is in the North. But with the enactment of the Green Wall Act by the National Assembly, the issue of desertification was laid to rest.

“In the South, erosion is responsible for the widespread destruction of transportation and communication systems, degradation of arable land, contamination of water supply, isolation of settlements and migration of communities.

“From available statistics, more than 3,500 gullies occurred in Southeastern states alone. These gullies are formed by surface runoff from localised rainfall of high intensity in the fine to coarse-grained sand and sandstones,” he said.

Citing a World Bank survey carried out on Nigeria in 1990, the lawmaker stressed that “erosion is one of the three main environmental problems facing Nigeria”.

According to him, the study noted that “gully erosion causes damage with an annual cost …estimated at N800 billion”.

But Deputy Senate Leader Ajayi Boroffice (Ondo North) opposed the establishment of a commission for erosion control in the Southeast.

He instead proposed an amendment to the Ecological Fund to accommodate erosion problems in the Southeast to address ecological challenges the region is currently facing.

Rochas Okorocha (Imo West) supported the Bill.

He noted that the agency, when established, would not only address the erosion challenges the Southeast is facing but would also be useful to every other part of the country affected by the menace.

Ibrahim Gobir (Sokoto East) insisted that “creating a commission will be a burden on government”, particularly at a time it is trying to cut down costs.

He called for the adoption of preventive measures through legislation by the National Assembly.

Senate President Ahmad Lawan said: “The debate tended to sway: whether we need a commission or not. But the fact is we have to address the ecological challenges we have in the country.

“If we have gully erosion that is destroying the land in various parts of the country, especially in the Southeast, then we have to do something, whether it is a commission or not. I believe that there are other ecological challenges in other parts of the country too.

“Coastal erosion is also a strong challenge in the Nigerian coastal environment, just as desertification is a big problem in the northern part of the country.

“I want to say that the Green Wall project, actually, is not desertification control. It is simply afforestation. Desertification control should be much more comprehensive than that.

“Similarly, when we have gully erosion, it is just not about stopping the erosion; there are other things that need to be done beyond stopping it because communities’ livelihoods are affected. So, you need to have something comprehensive.

“As representatives of the people, we should be looking at how we could really deal with these issues. The Ecological Fund Office is there. Do we transform, through legislation, the Ecological Fund Office, instead of just leaving money there? Sometimes we know where the money goes, which is to non-ecological issues.

“Can we make the Ecological Fund Office to be responsible for all ecological issues and then take it as one institution that will address desertification and other ecological problems, like gully erosion and so on? Can we do that in the light of the arguments of our colleagues, or do we need separate agencies to address the various issues?

“We must ensure that government attends to these ecological problems because people are affected. Like Senator Rochas Okorocha said, people lose their land, property and villages and this is not something that we should be arguing about as to whether we need a mission or not. How do we address the problems as quickly as possible to safeguard our communities?” Lawan asked.

The Bill was referred to the Senate Committee on Environment for further legislative work.

Also on Tuesday, the Nigerian Local Content Development Enforcement Bill, a Bill for an Act to provide for the establishment of the National Transport Commission as an Independent Multi-Modal Economic Regulator for the Transport Industry and a Bill for an Act to amend the Petroleum Product Pricing Regulatory Agency (PPPRA) Act, scaled the second reading.

The Bills, which were sponsored by Senators Teslim Folarin (APC Oyo Central); Abdulfatai Buhari and Gershom Bassey, were referred to the Senate Committees on Local Content, Land Transport and Petroleum (Downstream) for further legislative work.