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How youth unemployment drives deforestation in Rivers community

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Livelihood pressures, intensified by climate change and ineffective government policies, have driven communities such as Okolomade in Abua/Odual Local Government Area of Rivers State to abandon conservation rules and engage in widespread deforestation.

For 22-year-old Enaanasebhaami Mark, cutting and sawing trees is now the only viable means to maintain a livelihood. He once dreamed of studying welding and fabrication at the university, but poverty ended those hopes.

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“I have been doing this work for one year and three months now,” he said. “My parents are poor farmers. I’ve written WAEC and passed, but there’s no money to continue school. This is the only work I have for now.”

Mr Mark and his friend, 23-year-old Bright Joseph, from the Okolomade community, are among dozens of young men now living off the forest. Mr Joseph, who lost his father early, is learning the ‘trade’ under Mr Mark. “I see this work as the only source of income in this part of the country,” he said. “I’ve written and passed my WAEC for over four years now. This is how we make income here.”

Odual community, a predominantly farming and fishing community in Rivers State near the border with Bayelsa, has faced years of neglect and recurrent flooding that destroys crops and disrupts livelihoods. With few employment opportunities and limited government support, many young people are now turning to tree felling and logging as a means of survival, despite earlier community-led efforts to protect the forests.

That shift, from conservation to exploitation, is devastating the community’s natural capital. Vast areas once rich in diverse flora and fauna are now stripped bare, threatening species found nowhere else. When a tree falls, smaller plants are destroyed along with it, worsening the forest depletion.

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An edible tree with unripe fruits recently harvested. Photo by Obiabin Onukwugha
An edible tree with unripe fruits recently harvested. Photo by Obiabin Onukwugha

Some of these trees are medicinal, used for the treatment of malaria, typhoid, catarrh, and cough, while others produce edible fruits. Locals say many trees being cut are still immature.

Community rules

The Okolomade community has locally developed rules that guide forest use, including the size of wood that can be harvested.

According to local rules, a tree is considered mature enough to be cut when an adult can wrap their arms around its trunk and their hands cannot meet, or only reach halfway. Mature trees can yield three to four timber logs, with planks typically measuring eight by twelve inches or larger, and cubic sizes of twelve by sixteen inches or sixteen by thirty-two inches or more. This contrasts sharply with the much smaller sizes now being produced from immature trees.

Originally, trees were felled only for timber. But in recent years, commercial sawing has become common, leading to the abandonment of local regulations. As a result, the planks now being produced are much smaller, typically measuring two by eight inches in thickness and width, and cut to lengths of ten, twelve, thirteen, or fourteen feet, a reflection of the absence of mature trees.

Cubics waiting to be sold off. Photo by Obiabin Onukwugha
Cubics waiting to be sold off. Photo by Obiabin Onukwugha

The community, however, prohibits the cutting of ogbono (Irvingia gabonensis) and African oil bean, popularly known as “Ugba” in Nigeria, because of their economic value.

Chainsaws and survival

When Dataphyte visited the Okolomade community recently, the forest floor was strewn with felled and sawn trees cut down by young people. Many of these trees once provided shelter for various animal species, but with ongoing deforestation, those animals are now disappearing.

The sound of saws and machinery echoed from morning till evening in Odual and Okolomade communities, where stacks of wooden planks lined the forest edges and village outskirts, ready to be transported to nearby cities.

The tree species affected include the cotton tree, mahogany, iroko, abura, white afara, black afara, and “a thousand legs” (a name given by locals due to its many branches), as well as African breadfruit and several other species whose names are unknown to the locals in English. Additionally, it was observed that this trade represents a cycle for young men, encompassing the processes of felling, sawing, carrying, and loading the wood into waiting vans.

Local leaders losing grip

Despite widespread disregard for conservation rules, community leaders say they feel powerless, insisting that logging and tree felling remain the only source of livelihood for many young people.

“The community is helpless because stopping young men from cutting down trees may lead to crime and criminality,” Osebhenaan Micah, a former youth leader in Okolomade community, said. “In this community, there is no other means of livelihood. The only means of living here is timber,” Mr Micah said.

For Mr Micah, the situation is fuelled by worsening flooding incidents and the limited availability of alternative jobs for young graduates.

“Most of us are graduates, but no employment,” Mr Micah said. “In politics, nobody cares about us. This community does not have up to five persons who the local government employs, maybe one or two persons.”

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‘’If the government wants to stop the unsustainable felling of trees,’’ Mr Micah said, “let them look into our situation. We have so many youths, let them bring programmes that will empower us in the area of vocational training and support people to do businesses.”

The Chairman of the Community Development Committee (CDC), Patrick David, said that the Community leadership’s efforts to preserve the forest trees have not been successful due to the livelihood pressures faced by young people. “The boys are hustling for money,” he said.

Mr David explained that flooding has indirectly increased deforestation in the community. “Flood cannot destroy trees, but flood can destroy farming, which increases pressure to maintain livelihood by cutting trees,’’ the CDC chairman stated.

Nigeria’s forest depletion crisis

Deforestation is a global problem, driving dangerous warming and biodiversity loss. In Nigeria, a Global Forest Watch report revealed that 96% of the tree cover loss from 2001 to 2024 is attributed to humans, with the remaining 4% attributed to other causes, like natural disturbances and fires.

Rivers State has faced a substantial loss of forest cover. According to Global Forest Watch, in 2020, Rivers State had 485,000 hectares of natural forest, accounting for 57% of its total land area. However, by 2024, the state lost 2,020 hectares of natural forest, resulting in emissions of approximately 1.40 million tonnes of CO₂.

Planks in the community awaiting transportation. Photo by Obiabin Onukwugha
Planks in the community awaiting transportation. Photo by Obiabin Onukwugha

A senior official in the Ministry of Agriculture in Rivers State, who requested anonymity due to a lack of authorisation to discuss this issue, blamed the government for the failure to manage forests sustainably.

The official, a director, pointed out that although there are laws, policies, and guidelines at the national level, Rivers State has its own forest law, which remains unimplemented.

The director mentioned that there are currently no forest guards due to a staff shortage in the ministry. “In the past, we had forest guards who monitored our forests,” the director said.

“Reserved forests were established to preserve both flora and fauna and to regulate how people utilised these areas. Because the government has neglected the forests, communities have taken control of them.”

The director clarified that, according to the law, logs should not be sawn directly at the cutting site. Instead, they should be transported to approved mills.

“There is a specified girth for timbers, but what is currently being sold in the markets is undersized,” the director stated.

This story was produced as part of Dataphyte Foundation’s Biodiversity Media Initiative project, with support from Internews’ Earth Journalism Network. We have permission to publish.




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Agriculture

The Hormuz chokepoint is threatening Africa’s food supply

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Africa’s next food crisis may not begin on the farm, but in a distant shipping lane. With the Iran war, international attention has focused on oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz and related shortages or price spikes in energy and fuel. Less visible is another vulnerability moving through the same corridor: the fertilisers underpinning global food production.

Fertiliser supply disruptions feed directly into food prices and agricultural output, and most African countries have high import volumes and are ill-positioned to absorb the shock. Domestic production in Africa is insufficient to meet the growing demand.

Production capacity exists in parts of North and West Africa, driven by massive phosphate deposits and natural gas reserves. Morocco leads in phosphates, accounting for over 50 per cent of Africa’s supply and ranks among the top five global phosphate fertiliser exporters, while Nigeria, Egypt and Algeria dominate in nitrogenous (urea) fertiliser production.

A significant share of global fertiliser output is tied to energy-rich regions, particularly in the Gulf. The Middle East is a major hub for nitrogen-based fertilisers, reflecting the local availability of natural gas, which underpins ammonia and urea production.

The Strait of Hormuz connects these production hubs to global markets through a single, highly exposed shipping route. Almost 50 per cent of the globally traded sulphur used in phosphate fertilisers moves through it, making it a critical corridor for global agricultural inputs.

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In parts of the Gulf, fertiliser plants have reduced output or paused operations. Even major producers like Morocco’s OCP Group are affected.

Fertiliser production relies on critical inputs like sulphur, much of which is sourced from the Persian Gulf, particularly the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, regions entangled in these disrupted trade routes. As sulphur supply tightens, production cannot be scaled up, even where phosphate reserves are abundant, and domestic logistics remain intact.

Constrained production will also erode export revenues for Africa’s major fertiliser exporters. Morocco and Egypt, together accounting for roughly 70 per cent of the continent’s fertiliser exports, could be disproportionately affected. At the same time, net importers, like Ethiopia, Côte d’Ivoire, Zambia, Kenya and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, face heightened risks of food inflation and declining crop yields.

The combined effect is a dual shock: export earnings weaken for producers, while import-dependent economies absorb rising costs and agricultural stress, amplifying macroeconomic and food security pressures.

Urea prices have surged from just under $500 per tonne before the conflict to above $700 per tonne in recent weeks. In South Africa, where roughly 80 per cent of crop production inputs are imported, and fertiliser constitutes a major share, grain farmers face input cost increases of up to 35 per cent. As Africa’s largest supplier of packaged foods, these pressures will likely transmit through the food system, worsening inflation.

Disruptions place disproportionate pressure on Africa’s low-industrialised farming systems. Fertiliser use remains far below global levels, averaging just 17 kg to 23 kg per hectare compared with a global average of 135 kg per hectare, reflecting persistent constraints on affordability and access. Reduced access to fertiliser is likely to lower application rates, with direct knock-on effects on crop yields and overall production across the growing season.

The stakes are particularly high given the central role of agriculture in African economies. The sector employs between 60 per cent and 70 per cent of the workforce, with rates exceeding 80 per cent in countries like Burundi, Malawi and Madagascar. However, it is dominated by smallholder farmers with limited capacity to absorb rising input costs or supply disruptions, making them acutely vulnerable to fertiliser shocks.

The lesson is not only about exposure tied to price volatility risks. It is also one of the structural vulnerabilities and untapped capacities. Africa holds many of the inputs required to reduce this dependency: natural gas reserves in Nigeria, Mozambique, Tanzania and Senegal; significant phosphate resources in Morocco and Tunisia; and rapidly growing demand driven by the need to boost agricultural productivity and contain food crises.

Converting this resource base into production and supply capacity is achievable, but requires focusing on three priorities.

First, production must be scaled strategically. Not every country needs to produce fertiliser, but a core group with comparative advantages could anchor regional supply. Second, markets must be integrated. Without efficient cross-border trade, lower transport costs and reliable distribution, increased production won’t translate into access. The African Continental Free Trade Area agreement provides a ready framework, but it must be operationalised.

Third, fertiliser policy must extend beyond production. Supply depends on functioning ecosystems: storage, blending, transport, finance and last-mile delivery. Without these, fertiliser will not reach farmers at scale. These segments create space for local entrepreneurship. The growth of agri-tech platforms such as Hello Tractor and Apollo Agriculture shows what’s possible, but these remain the exception, not the norm.

Self-sufficiency is neither feasible nor necessary. However, the current disruption exposes the cost of leaving a strategic input to external markets. Greater regional capacity would not eliminate global exposure, but would reduce the extent to which distant crises dictate African food systems.

The Hormuz shock is a warning about the fragility of supply chains. It exposes a persistent blind spot in agricultural policy debates. While financing gaps and farm-level productivity dominate the agenda, less attention is given to upstream supply chains that shape access to critical inputs such as fertiliser.

It’s a reminder that agricultural stability and food security depend not just on seeds, rainfall and land, but on whether Africa can build the industrial foundations that address the fertiliser system deficit and make food production less vulnerable to external dependencies.

A previous version of this article was published in Africa Tomorrow, the blog of the ISS African Futures and Innovation Programme.

Julia Baum, Website Consultant and Marvellous Ngundu, Research Consultant, Institute for Security Studies (ISS).

(This article was first published by ISS Today, a Premium Times syndication partner. We have their permission to republish).




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Agriculture

NBMA orders suspension of new GM cotton varieties in Nigeria

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The National Biosafety Management Agency (NBMA) says it has ordered the suspension of four new transgenic cotton hybrid varieties in Nigeria.

The varieties are MIC 561 BGII, MIC 563 BGII, BIOSEED-FIYAH CH1001, and BIOSEED-FIYAH CH1002. They were allegedly registered by the National Committee on Naming, Registration and Release of Crop Varieties, Livestock Breeds and Fisheries on 26 March 2026 without the requisite approval of NBMA.

In a statement issued Tuesday and signed by NBMA’s Head of Information and Public Relations, Gloria Ogbaki, the agency said its regulatory surveillance and compliance-monitoring mechanisms identified “serious compliance abnormalities” in the varieties.

“The National Biosafety Management Agency (NBMA) wishes to inform the public of recent developments concerning the registration of four new transgenic cotton hybrid varieties in Nigeria – MIC 561 BGII, MIC 563 BGII, BIOSEED-FIYAH CH1001, BIOSEED-FIYAH CH1002,” the statement said.

Background

Genetically modified (GM) crops are plants whose DNA has been altered using genetic engineering to introduce desirable traits such as resistance to pests, diseases, or environmental conditions, as well as improved nutritional value.

In Nigeria, the adoption of GM crops has remained contentious. While proponents argue that the technology can boost food production and enhance food security, critics have raised concerns about environmental and health risks, weak regulatory enforcement, and inadequate labelling.

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According to the International Service for the Acquisition of Agri-biotech Applications (ISAAA), more than 30 major food crops have been genetically modified globally. Nigeria has approved four crops—maize, cowpea, cotton, and soybean—for commercialisation and is among six African countries leading in biotech crop adoption.

In 2024, the government approved four varieties of Tela maize, further intensifying debates over GM crop safety and transparency.

Concerns also persist over farmers’ limited knowledge of GM seed characteristics, potential dependence on seed companies, and the broader impact on traditional farming systems.

An investigation by PREMIUM TIMES and international partners in 2024 revealed how the U.S. government, through the now-defunct USAID, funded pesticide and GM-related advocacy campaigns in Nigeria, including efforts that profiled critics of GMOs.

As debates continue, the suspension of the new cotton varieties underscores ongoing challenges around biosafety compliance and regulatory oversight in Nigeria’s biotechnology sector.

Findings

The agency said its findings confirmed that confined field trials and related activities involving the varieties were conducted without prior authorisation, inspection, or regulatory oversight.

“At no time did the National Biosafety Management Agency grant any approval for the confined field trials, multi-locational trials, or commercial release of the new GM cotton varieties,” the statement said.

Under the NBMA Act, the agency said, no person or institution is permitted to conduct confined field trials, multi-locational trials, or the commercial release of genetically modified organisms without its explicit approval.

It added that any action outside this framework constitutes a violation of national biosafety regulations.

NBMA said it has directed the National Committee on Naming, Registration and Release of Crop Varieties, Livestock Breeds and Fisheries to suspend further action on the varieties pending the outcome of ongoing investigations.

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“The Agency will apply all appropriate regulatory measures and sanctions as provided under the law,” the statement added.

The agency assured Nigerians that it is handling the matter with seriousness.

“There is no evidence at this time of any immediate risk to public health or the environment and all necessary steps are being taken to ensure continued safety and regulatory integrity,” the statement said.

NBMA reiterated its commitment to ensuring that biotechnology activities in Nigeria comply with national laws and international best practices, adding that the public will be kept informed as investigations progress.



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Agriculture

NBMA orders suspension of new GM cotton varieties in Nigeria

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on

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The National Biosafety Management Agency (NBMA) says it has ordered the suspension of four new transgenic cotton hybrid varieties in Nigeria.

The varieties are MIC 561 BGII, MIC 563 BGII, BIOSEED-FIYAH CH1001, and BIOSEED-FIYAH CH1002. They were allegedly registered by the National Committee on Naming, Registration and Release of Crop Varieties, Livestock Breeds and Fisheries on 26 March 2026 without the requisite approval of NBMA.

In a statement issued Tuesday and signed by NBMA’s Head of Information and Public Relations, Gloria Ogbaki, the agency said its regulatory surveillance and compliance-monitoring mechanisms identified “serious compliance abnormalities” in the varieties.

“The National Biosafety Management Agency (NBMA) wishes to inform the public of recent developments concerning the registration of four new transgenic cotton hybrid varieties in Nigeria – MIC 561 BGII, MIC 563 BGII, BIOSEED-FIYAH CH1001, BIOSEED-FIYAH CH1002,” the statement said.

Background

Genetically modified (GM) crops are plants whose DNA has been altered using genetic engineering to introduce desirable traits such as resistance to pests, diseases, or environmental conditions, as well as improved nutritional value.

In Nigeria, the adoption of GM crops has remained contentious. While proponents argue that the technology can boost food production and enhance food security, critics have raised concerns about environmental and health risks, weak regulatory enforcement, and inadequate labelling.

PT WHATSAPP CHANNEL

According to the International Service for the Acquisition of Agri-biotech Applications (ISAAA), more than 30 major food crops have been genetically modified globally. Nigeria has approved four crops—maize, cowpea, cotton, and soybean—for commercialisation and is among six African countries leading in biotech crop adoption.

In 2024, the government approved four varieties of Tela maize, further intensifying debates over GM crop safety and transparency.

Concerns also persist over farmers’ limited knowledge of GM seed characteristics, potential dependence on seed companies, and the broader impact on traditional farming systems.

An investigation by PREMIUM TIMES and international partners in 2024 revealed how the U.S. government, through the now-defunct USAID, funded pesticide and GM-related advocacy campaigns in Nigeria, including efforts that profiled critics of GMOs.

As debates continue, the suspension of the new cotton varieties underscores ongoing challenges around biosafety compliance and regulatory oversight in Nigeria’s biotechnology sector.

Findings

The agency said its findings confirmed that confined field trials and related activities involving the varieties were conducted without prior authorisation, inspection, or regulatory oversight.

“At no time did the National Biosafety Management Agency grant any approval for the confined field trials, multi-locational trials, or commercial release of the new GM cotton varieties,” the statement said.

Under the NBMA Act, the agency said, no person or institution is permitted to conduct confined field trials, multi-locational trials, or the commercial release of genetically modified organisms without its explicit approval.

It added that any action outside this framework constitutes a violation of national biosafety regulations.

NBMA said it has directed the National Committee on Naming, Registration and Release of Crop Varieties, Livestock Breeds and Fisheries to suspend further action on the varieties pending the outcome of ongoing investigations.

READ ALSO:  BUA Foods Posts N1.77 Trillion Revenue, announces N28 Dividend

“The Agency will apply all appropriate regulatory measures and sanctions as provided under the law,” the statement added.

The agency assured Nigerians that it is handling the matter with seriousness.

“There is no evidence at this time of any immediate risk to public health or the environment and all necessary steps are being taken to ensure continued safety and regulatory integrity,” the statement said.

NBMA reiterated its commitment to ensuring that biotechnology activities in Nigeria comply with national laws and international best practices, adding that the public will be kept informed as investigations progress.



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