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Category Archives: News Updates

Creating Enabling Learning Environments for Climate Education: The Climate Champion Experience

Chukwuma Raaluchukwu

Sometimes the most important lesson is not the one you planned to teach, it is the one the experience teaches you; That was my full circle experience with Growing Green Generation Pilot Project, an initiative of the Office of the Special Adviser to the Governor of Enugu State on Climate Policy and Sustainable Development, in partnership with the office of the First lady, Enugu State Ministry of Education, and the Ministry of Environment, with support from UNICEF Enugu Field Office
Before entering the classroom at Annunciation Secondary school, Enugu, I had wondered how the experiences of the students have shaped their perception about climate change – Do they know what climate change is, and would they have seen it as something that affects foreigners and rich people far from here?
This engagementrevealed the immense potential of Nigeria’s young people, the barriers that prevent this potential from being fully realised, and why the conversation about climate action cannot be separated from the conversation about the schools and environment where children learn. Despite decades of negotiating climate action in beautiful conference halls, the classrooms – where lasting environmental leadership can truly be cultivated seems to have been neglected.
Above all, the students’ remained remarkably curious during the interactive session that was engaging and the students became eager to speak and learn.

The project was more than a series of lessons, tt was about transforming knowledge into action. One of the most memorable activities was tree planting. Watching students carefully plant and water young trees reminded me that climate education is not only about teaching facts; it is about nurturing a sense of responsibility. Every tree planted was a living statement: that individuals, no matter how young, can contribute meaningfully to protecting the environment.

Equally impactful was the plastic bottle collection drive for recycling. Rather than treating plastic waste as ordinary litter, students began to see it as an environmental challenge with real, practical solutions. Watching them actively participate and make the connection between everyday habits and environmental consequences was one of the most encouraging moments of the experience.

Classroom session with the students

The Growing Green Generation Pilot Project demonstrates what is possible when students are given opportunities to engage with real-world challenges. But programmes like this should inspire the everyday learning experiences, not compensate for what is missing. If we expect young people to become innovators, problem-solvers and environmental stewards, we must provide learning environments that reflect these expectations

To strengthen programmes like these, several steps are worth considering. Climate education should be formally integrated into the school curriculum, making environmental awareness part of everyday learning rather than a periodic visit. Government agencies, private organisations, and development partners should collaborate to provide smart classrooms, reliable electricity, digital teaching tools and teacher capacity development. Learning should move beyond memorisation to inquiry, collaboration and hands-on problem-solving. The school authorities should model sustainability through solar energy, tree planting, recycling initiatives and greener learning spaces, allowing students to experience the values of what they are being taught.

My time at Annunciation Secondary School reaffirmed something far greater than the importance of climate education. It showed me that Nigeria’s young people are ready to learn, innovate and lead; but only if we create learning environments that allow them to do so. The pure zeal I saw in these students has proven that young people are not indifferent to environmental issues, they simply need to be empowered to play their part. If we are intentional about building a climate resilient Enugu and Nigeria, we must continue to invest in these programmes and infrastructure that empower and teach students to become environmental stewards. The seeds we planted both in the soil and in the minds of these students have the potential to grow into a generation that sees sustainability not only as a mere choice but as a shared responsibility.

Chukwuma Raaluchukwu
Climate Education Champion

Rooted in Climate Action: What a Classroom in Enugu Taught Me About Climate Change

A few weeks ago, I walked into Iheaka Girls Secondary School in Enugu State, expecting to teach and introduce the concept of climate change during the program “Rooted in Action: Growing Green Generation.” On paper, our execution strategy was simple: the focus would be about the environment, what climate change is, why it is happening, and then engage the students in practical ways to actually do something about it. We were to plant trees, build a recycling point, learn to turn trash into wealth, and inaugurated an Eco Club that would outlive our visit.

In practice, it became a revealing experience. From the first engagement I noticed that the students weren’t just listening as I introduced the concept, they were connecting, it felt as though I was telling a story they have heard before.

We often underestimate how much young people already know—they may not always speak in the language of science or policy, but through lived experience, they have already witnessed the changing seasons, rising temperatures that feel different each year, and environmental disruptions exacerbated by climate change, which has been etched into their daily lives. I had come to teach, but in many ways, I left with hard lessons.

While the students did not have a systematic language to describe their experiences, they felt at ease sharing these experiences and were eager to learn how to protect the environment from further damage.

Most memorably, I recalled vividly a student, share her story about how a flood tore through her neighborhood years ago. It wasn’t a minor inconvenience as homes were damaged, properties were lost, and eventually her family had to relocate to another shelter. From her perspective, climate education was no longer an abstract topic from a bulky textbook, but a grief still sitting close to the surface. That moment reframed the entire project for me. We weren’t just introducing these students to climate change; we were giving them the tools to understand something they had already survived.

But the learning did not stop there. While the program was not limited to climate education lessons; students also participated in a “trash-to-treasure” project where they learned not to see discarded materials as waste but as resources that could be transformed into wealth.

The highlight of the project for me was the tree planting exercise where students had opportunities to plant trees themselves. By the end of the project, these students knew more about climate change, its causes, and its local consequences than most adults I know. The whole project was indeed a wholesome experience not just for us but for the students and staff.

Yet, during the engagement with the student, an important gap became visible – it was discovered that Climate education is still not taught as a standalone subject in many schools, as opposed to being treated as an independent subject. And mere embedding climate education in other subjects has resulted in loss of climate information at different levels.  It is therefore recommended that Nigerian education system recognise climate education as a distinct subject and invest in the curriculum, teacher’s training and learning resources. These would equip young people not only to understand the climate crisis but also to become leaders in building a more sustainable future.

Ultimately, if we want a generation that is prepared to navigate a warmer and more uncertain world, our task is not simply to convince young people that climate change matters; many of them already know that through lived experience. The real challenge is to trust them enough to give them the knowledge, platforms, opportunities, and responsibility to act. My experience at Iheaka Girls’ Secondary School showed me what becomes possible when we do.

Obetta Victory Chinaza

Climate Champion & Sustainable Development Advocate

Beyond Investment: Why the Next Decade of EU–Nigeria Relationship Must Deliver Green Industrialisation

Recently, policymakers, investors and business leaders from Nigeria and Europe gathered in Lagos for the 10th Nigeria–EU Business Forum. For decades, the relationship between Nigeria and the European Union has evolved considerably from development cooperation to trade facilitation, institutional reforms, and climate partnerships.

Despite Europe being one of Nigeria’s most important economic partners, one uncomfortable reality remains that Nigeria still exports raw materials and imports higher-value manufactured products in large quantities. Therefore, the central question is no longer whether Nigeria and Europe should deepen economic cooperation; rather, it is whether this age long partnership can finally move from these declarations to implementation.

Across Africa, governments are increasingly embracing green industrialization as a pathway to economic development. Rather than viewing climate action as a constraint, many countries now see it as an opportunity to attract investment, strengthen manufacturing, expand regional trade, and create jobs.

Nigeria is currently advancing its Energy Transition Plan, finalizing a Green Industrial Growth Strategy through combination of policies, expanding renewable energy investments, promoting electric mobility, and positioning itself as a manufacturing hub under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA). However, one can rightfully state that Nigeria’s challenge is not the absence of ambition but implementation gap. This is where the EU-Nigeria partnership must evolve to address longstanding challenge.

The European Union’s recent commitment of more than €560 million announced between the 8th EU- Nigeria Ministerial Meeting in March and the Nigeria -EU Business Forum in June, to support digital infrastructure, green enterprise development, and the Lagos Omi Eko Project underscores Europe’s growing confidence in Nigeria’s development potential and commitment to advancing sustainable, climate-resilient growth. The next decade cannot be defined by discussions about investment opportunities alone, it must focus on building the institutions, market mechanisms, and industrial ecosystems capable of translating capital into productive transformation. Therefore, three strategic priorities deserve urgent attention at this time and remain at the core of the Lagos Business forum outcomes:

First, Nigeria and the European Union should negotiate a Clean Trade and Investment Partnership (CTIP). Following its first Clean Trade and Investment Partnership with South Africa, Nigeria should become the second African country to benefit from such an arrangement through the EU’s strategic Trade and Investment Dialogue (TID) and the Global Gateway. A Nigeria EU CTIP could focus on renewable energy technologies, battery manufacturing, electric mobility, sustainable fuels, transmission infrastructure, agro-processing, circular economy industries, and low-carbon industrial production. More importantly, it would provide a coherent implementation architecture rather than the fragmented approach that often characterizes development cooperation.

Second, Nigeria should establish a Green Industrial Compact. One of the most promising innovations emerging from Africa’s energy transition efforts is the use of National Energy Compacts under Mission 300. These compacts clearly identify investment needs, policy reforms, implementation milestones, and financing responsibilities while creating transparency and accountability for investors and governments alike. It is highly recommended that Nigeria adapts this model to industrialization.

A Green Industrial Compact would publicly identify priority sectors, infrastructure requirements, financing gaps, regulatory reforms, and measurable targets for implementation. Such a framework would significantly improve investor confidence while helping development finance institutions and private investors align behind a common national vision for sustainable development.

Third, both partners must move beyond investment promotion and address market access and partnership through long-term offtake arrangements. One of the least discussed barriers to green industrialization is the absence of predictable demand. Europe can help address this challenge by supporting long-term purchasing arrangements for Nigerian green industrial products, including battery components, green fertilizers, processed agricultural goods, sustainable aviation fuels, renewable energy equipment, and other low-carbon products. Such arrangements would provide the certainty required to unlock private investment at scale.

Another area where cooperation could be transformative is electricity infrastructure. For decades, inadequate transmission and distribution systems have  constrained   Nigeria’s industrial potential. Europe and Nigeria should therefore launch a Green Grid Partnership (GGP) focused on financing, manufacturing, and deploying transmission infrastructure, transformers, storage systems, and grid technologies. This is on the backdrop that without reliable electricity, industrialization will remain an aspiration rather than an outcome.

To conclude, the global race for green industrial competitiveness is accelerating.  Europe is introducing new industrial policies, including the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) and emerging industrial preference frameworks designed to strengthen industrial competitiveness and strategic autonomy. These measures can become fair and transparent drivers of global decarbonization if properly designed. Therefore, this is not a call for exemptions for Nigeria, but for partnerships built on mutual benefit. Nigeria should work with the EU to ensure that CBAM supports industrial decarbonization, local value addition, technology transfer, and competitive market access for Nigerian green industrial products. That is why the next phase of EU-Nigeria cooperation should focus less on negotiating access to markets and more on jointly building the industrial capabilities that allow Nigerian firms to compete successfully in those markets.

Nigeria cannot afford another decade of unrealised potential. The legitimacy of the Nigeria-EU partnership over the next decade will not be measured by investment announcements; it will be measured by factories built, technologies transferred, skills developed, and jobs created – this is the ultimate scorecard that both sides will be measured.

Gboyega Olorunfemi is a Senior Research Associate, Centre for Climate Change and Development. He is co-coordinator of the Africa–Europe Platform for Sustainable Development Thinkers (Ukȧmȧ) and is co-author of Green Industrialization Priorities in Africa and Partnership Opportunities with Europe

Governor Mbah Pitches Enugu to Global Climate Investors in London

London, United Kingdom — Governor Peter Mbah has presented Enugu State as one of Africa’s emerging destinations for climate investment, calling on global investors, development finance institutions, philanthropies, and climate funds to partner with the state in delivering a new generation of green growth and climate-resilient development projects.

Speaking during the Nigeria Climate Investment Showcase held on the sidelines of London Climate Action Week (LCAW), Governor Mbah said Enugu was deliberately positioning itself to become a leading subnational destination for climate finance and sustainable investment in Africa.

Represented at the event by the and other senior officials of the state’s climate leadership team led by Secretary to the State Government Professor Chidiebere Onyia, the governor highlighted the significant institutional reforms already undertaken by the administration to create an enabling environment for climate investment.

“Climate finance increasingly flows to projects that are large enough to matter, politically supported, institutionally credible, and capable of generating measurable economic and social benefits. Enugu is building exactly these conditions,” the governor stated.

London Climate Action Week, one of the world’s largest independent climate events, brings together governments, investors, businesses, cities, and civil society leaders to accelerate climate action and mobilize investment for the transition to low-carbon and climate-resilient development.

Governor Mbah noted that Enugu has moved aggressively in recent years to establish the institutional foundations required to attract international climate finance. These include the enactment of a state climate law, the creation of a dedicated Ministry of Environment and Climate Change, the development of the Enugu State Climate Change Policy and Action Plan, investments in clean transport systems, urban greening initiatives, and the construction of smart green schools powered by rooftop solar systems.

The governor identified five major investment opportunities that the state is currently prioritising.

The first is an integrated waste-to-energy programme designed to tackle urban waste challenges while reducing methane emissions, generating employment, improving public health, and producing energy and compressed natural gas for the state’s growing clean transport sector. The programme is expected to benefit from growing international interest in methane reduction projects and carbon markets.

The second priority is the transition toward clean urban mobility. Building on ongoing investments in electric buses and planned compressed natural gas transportation systems, the state is seeking partnerships to expand CNG bus fleets, charging infrastructure, e-tricycles, integrated transport systems, and sustainable mobility corridors.

Governor Mbah also highlighted opportunities in climate-smart agriculture and rural resilience, noting that such investments simultaneously address food security, climate adaptation, livelihoods, and youth and women’s empowerment.

Other priority areas include green industrial and climate-resilient economic zones featuring solar-powered industrial parks, sustainable manufacturing, green logistics, and climate-resilient infrastructure that align with the administration’s economic transformation agenda. The governor further emphasised the importance of clean cooking initiatives, which offer significant health, environmental, and social benefits, particularly for women and vulnerable households.

To strengthen investor confidence, the state has also developed a Climate Investment Plan that identifies priority projects, financing requirements, implementation responsibilities, and potential sources of funding. In addition, plans are underway to establish a Climate Finance and Carbon Markets Unit to support project preparation, business case development, investor engagement, and climate finance tracking. The state is also strengthening its climate data, monitoring, reporting, and verification systems to meet international standards.

Observers at the London event noted that subnational governments are increasingly becoming important actors in global climate action, with investors showing growing interest in states and cities that can demonstrate political commitment, institutional capacity, and bankable project pipelines.

For Enugu, Governor Mbah said the climate agenda is not simply about environmental protection but about economic transformation, job creation, energy access, improved public health, food security, and building resilience for future generations.

“As we build the future of Enugu, climate action and economic development will go hand in hand. We are inviting global partners to work with us in delivering projects that improve lives, create jobs, and build a prosperous and sustainable future for our people.”

The event was attended by global climate investors, project developers, policy makers, and technology companies who all declared keen interest to partner with Enugu to drive sustainable economic transformation in Enugu.

Other members of the delegation from Enugu State include Professor Chukwumerije Okereke, SPA on Climate Policy and Sustainable Development and Ms Sandra Gerge, SPA on Revenue.

The participation of Enugu State at London Climate Action Week further reinforces the administration’s commitment to positioning the state as a leading destination for climate finance, green investment, and sustainable development in Nigeria and across Africa.