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Climate Clock

Leading Reporters Meet Adanma Njumogu, a resilient Nigerian entrepreneur who is at the fore of promoting and shipping eco-friendly palm broomsticks. Image
BusinessHeadlines

Meet a Nigerian lady at the fore of promoting and shipping eco-friendly palm broom sticks

by Leading Reporters March 17, 2023
written by Leading Reporters

Meet Adanma Njumogu, a resilient Nigerian entrepreneur who is at the fore of promoting and shipping eco-friendly palm broom sticks to the international market, as alternative to synthetic and non-biodegradable sweeping brooms. 

Adanma, just like many other Nigerian young entrepreneurs believes that the issue of climate change should go beyond rhetoric, and should rather integrate promotion of lifestyles, products and the needed sensitization that tend to stir a healthier, and neater environment consciousness. 

Adanma is the founder of  Kedad Online Store, an affiliate of Peppico Impex Limited.  Both companies source and export organic agricultural products and biodegradable cleaning materials to Asia, Europe and the Americas.  They as well maintain local sales point in major cities across Nigeria.

Adanma is a graduate of Public Administration.  She worked and consulted with many organizations, including Family Tree.  It was in the course of a research work that took her to many rural areas that she found out the need to increase environmental consciousness,

“My association with the rural people stirred a new urge to reengage them on the need to protect the environment and by extension their health by resorting to healthy alternative products and lifestyles.

“My desire is to become a voice in health and environmental protection.  From what we consume to what we use, we should ensure that we are staying free from what harms our health and our environment.

In an interview with Shedrack Light, an SME ideation and promotion specialist, Adanma said that her interaction with Nigerians, especially those living in rural places afforded her the opportunity to identify not only challenges, but also workable solutions towards promotion of eco-friendly options and products.

“Part of my job took me to rural places in riverine parts of Nigeria.  I interacted with the people.  I understand first hand that the people are victims of environmental degradation and that they are willing to do the needful if they have enough information about global warming, climate change and the risk of environmental degradation.  This consciousness birthed Kedad Online Store and her sister company, Peppico Impex Limited. 

“The company deals on eco-friendly cleaning and organic agro-allied products.  We sale and export palm broom sticks to both local and international markets.  Our research showed that people are becoming more conscious of their environment so much now that they are resorting to products that are biodegradable, healthy for them and the environment.  As a matter of fact, most countries overseas are making laws that promote eco-friendly and biodegradable products. 

“We are selling organic and biodegradable products.   Beyond selling these products, we advocate for higher engagement, collaboration and sensitization for a safer environment.  Rightly said, we are both dealers in palm broom sticks and advocates of a safer, and neater environment through the use of safe and biodegradable products.

March 17, 2023 0 comments
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Africa & WorldBusiness

World’s third Climate Clock arrives in South Korea

by Leading Reporters May 14, 2021
written by Leading Reporters

Herald Corp. installs Climate Clock on roof of Seoul headquarters to raise awareness about climate crisis…

At a glance, the series of numbers — six years, 235 days, six hours, four minutes and 55 seconds — makes little sense.

But they are arguably the most important numbers for humanity. They represent the time we have left until the Earth’s deadline: the “point of no return” in the climate crisis.

The monument-sized Climate Clock showing the numbers was unveiled Thursday on the roof of the Herald Corp. headquarters in Seoul, sending a chilling warning that the Earth is racing toward catastrophe.

The digital clock, which is 8.5 meters wide and 1.8 meters long, is the first permanent Climate Clock in Asia and the third in the world. The first was set up in Berlin in 2019 and the second in New York in 2020. 

With South Korea’s landmark N Seoul Tower in the background, the Climate Clock in Seoul shows that as of Thursday the Earth had about six years, 235 days, six hours, four minutes and 55 seconds before global warming reaches irreversible levels, based on current emission rates.

The Climate Clock installed in Berlin, Germany in 2019. (The Climate Clock)
The Climate Clock installed in Berlin, Germany in 2019. (The Climate Clock)
The Climate Clock installed in New York City, the US in 2020. (The Climate Clock)
The Climate Clock installed in New York City, the US in 2020. (The Climate Clock)

Created by artists Gan Golan and Andrew Boyd, the Climate Clock counts down how much time is left before we deplete the Earth’s carbon budget — that is, the amount of carbon dioxide we can still release into the atmosphere while limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels.

According to scientists, keeping the world from warming by more than 1.5 degrees Celsius from preindustrial levels is crucial if we are to avoid the catastrophic impact of climate change — rising sea levels, flooding, droughts, extreme heat waves, wildfires and other disasters.

“Grounded in the latest climate science, the Climate Clock tells us what we need to do by when,” Boyd told The Korea Herald. “In short, we need to build a 100 percent renewable-powered future in less than seven years.”

The numbers on the Climate Clock are based on the amount of global carbon emissions as well as the amount of the world’s energy supplied from renewable sources, currently at 12 percent and slowly rising. The data comes from the Mercator Research Institute on Global Commons and Climate Change, and from One World in Data, respectively.

The arrival of the Climate Clock is part of the Herald Corp.’s campaign to address the climate emergency, which the company sees as the defining challenge of our time.

Through the campaign, Herald Corp., which owns two of Korea’s major newspapers, The Korea Herald and The Herald Business, seeks to draw attention to the climate crisis and remind Koreans that the Earth has a deadline, it said. 

The monument-sized Climate Clock, which is the third of its kind in the world and the first in Korea, is set up on the roof of the Herald Corp. headquarters office in Huam-dong, Yongsan-gu, Seoul. (Park Hae-mook/The Herald Business)
The monument-sized Climate Clock, which is the third of its kind in the world and the first in Korea, is set up on the roof of the Herald Corp. headquarters office in Huam-dong, Yongsan-gu, Seoul. (Park Hae-mook/The Herald Business)

The Climate Clock’s co-creators welcomed its presence in Seoul.

“After too many years where governments and major media platforms did not take the climate crisis seriously enough, it is incredibly heartening to partner with Herald Corp., who are making the climate emergency a priority focus of their reporting and advocacy,” Boyd said.

“Media companies and organizations such as The Korea Herald play an indispensable role in highlighting the urgency of the climate crisis as well as the many solution pathways, particularly the rapid deployment of renewable energy, available to address it,” he added.

The installation of the Climate Clock comes at a critical point for the global efforts to combat the climate crisis.

This year is marked by significant political events, including the P4G summit — Partnering for Green Growth and the Global Goals 2030 — to be held in Seoul on May 30-31, as well as the UN Climate Change Conference, also known as COP26, set for Glasgow on Nov. 1-12.

“We hope the Seoul Climate Clock will serve as a lightning rod for South Korea’s climate movement and raise the country-wide emission-reduction targets that South Korea brings to the COP26 UN Climate Summit in Glasgow, Scotland later this year,” said co-creator Golan.

“With luck, Seoul’s Climate Clock will not only spark momentum nationally, but also encourage other key countries in East Asia to raise their climate ambitions,” he added. 

The monument-sized Climate Clock, which is the third of its kind in the world and the first in Korea, is set up on the roof of the Herald Corp. headquarters office in Huam-dong, Yongsan-gu, Seoul. (Park Hae-mook/The Herald Business)
The monument-sized Climate Clock, which is the third of its kind in the world and the first in Korea, is set up on the roof of the Herald Corp. headquarters office in Huam-dong, Yongsan-gu, Seoul. (Park Hae-mook/The Herald Business)

The Climate Clock project, which involves a team of artists, scientists, engineers, designers and activists from around the globe, is an open-source project presenting a “critical window” for internationally-coordinated action to reduce emissions and avert climate disaster.

According to the founders, the Climate Clocks — some small, others large — are being built temporarily or permanently at homes, schools and public spaces all over the world from Sydney to Istanbul. Another monumental clock is set to be unveiled in Rome in May at the earliest.

The creators said they had previously made a small-sized climate clock for Greta Thunberg, the teenage activist from Sweden, before her appearance at the United Nations Climate Action Summit in 2019.

In an effort to contribute to achieving climate equity and justice, the Climate Clock team charges licensing fees to for-profit organizations, municipalities and governments that want to set up the clocks. The funds are spent on activists seeking to bring the Climate Clocks to their cities, according to the organization.

For individuals hoping to make their own watches or portable clocks, free kits are available on its website.

By Ock Hyun-ju (laeticia.ock@heraldcorp.com)

May 14, 2021 0 comments
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Headlines

Nigeria becomes first African country to receive climate clock… As FG reiterates effort to mitigate impact of climate change

by Leading Reporters April 28, 2021
written by Leading Reporters

Kenny Folarin, Abuja

In furtherance of the actualization of the Sustainable Development Goal 13 on Climate Action, Nigeria has become the first African country to receive the climate clock which aim at creating awareness and mitigating the impact of Climate Action in the country.

Nigeria becomes first African country to receive climate clock

Alhaji Mohammed Alhaji Danjuma received the clock on behalf of the His Excellency Muhammadu Buhari GCFR and the federal government.

Founder and Chairman Zoetic Global, U.S.A Amb Jerome Ringo

Founder and Chairman Zoetic Global ltd, U.S.A, Amb Jerome Ringo presented the climate clock to the Alhaji Mohammed Alhaji Danjuma, during the ‘High Level Presentation Ceremony of the Climate Clock to Nigeria in Abuja.

In her remarks, Dame Tallen, reiterated that the federal government is continuously pulling efforts to fight climate change in the country.

She also reaffirmed that the federal government is working with the local, national and global climate community towards meeting the set climate target.

In her words: “Climate change is a global issue, impacting different parts of world and at varying degrees. However, developing countries like Nigeria have less capacity to adapt to climate change impacts. In that order, women and the vulnerable groups have the least capacity to adapt to the impacts. So, when you are looking for the face of climate change- look at the face of the women.

“This is quite evident in our communities in Nigeria, where over 60 per cent of the workforce in agriculture sector are women.

“The impact of climate change in Nigeria is huge. The drying up of Lake chad to 10 per cent of its original size has caused undue hardship to the lives in that region. It has adversely affected lives and livelihoods and increased vulnerability of our young ones to restiveness and militancy.

“Nigeria is losing about 5 kilometers a year to desertification, causing force migration, loss of farm lands and untold hardship to communities and families. Women and children are most impacted by this hardship.

“Flooding has become a yearly event in Nigeria, I recall news items where mothers have helplessly watched their homes overtaken by flood, farmlands lost and in some cases, like in Akwa Ibom State, a mother struggled to save her toddler from the wave of flood but she lost out to the flood.

“It is therefore a great pleasure that today, the Climate Clock is being launched in Nigeria, the first African nation to have it and women are well represented”. She added.

Speaking in the same vein, Founder and Chairman Zoetic Global Ltd., Jerome Ringo, stated that the decision on which African country to present the climate clock was decided in two seconds.

He said that Nigeria and Nigerians have potentials to create or possibly solve climate change problems; therefore he called on the federal government to lead well and harness these potentials.

“I recognize that Nigeria is the largest economy on the planet and a lot of innovative youths roam the country. But what really drove me the most about bringing the clock to Nigeria is not where the country is now, but where it is going.

“Nigeria is on a threshold of being the catalyst to begin the movement like no other country in the world. Why, because you suffer the most adverse effects to climate change, it is not the fault of the African people, it is a call to rise and take action towards climate change,” he added.

Chief Executive Officer, Ecologistics Integrated Services Ltd Dr. Paul Abolo

Also speaking, Chief Executive Officer, Ecologistics Integrated Services Ltd. and African Clock Initiative, ACCI, Dr. Paul Abolo, noted that the presentation of the climate clock is a Strategic approach to creating awareness for climate action.

He said, “The climate clock happens to be one of those strategies through which we need to draw awareness, sensitisation, about climate action. However, we have decided in Nigeria that the presentation of the climate clock has to go through a strategic approach.

“Regularly, a top down approach is usually adopted but Nigeria said no, we have to adopt a bottom up approach.

“We adopted an approach whereby this clock will go through a climate champion where our youths, women, will have opportunities to see the clock and understand the imports of the clock; until it gets to the presidency, that is the approach Nigeria has adopted to distribute this clock.”

In her goodwill message, President, Women in Renewable Energy Association, WIRE-A, Chief Mrs. Anita Okuribido, explained that the climate clock is a graphic to demonstrate how quickly the planet is approaching 1.5℃ of global warming, given current emissions trends.

She added that it also shows the amount of carbon dioxide (CO₂) already emitted, and the global warming to date; stressing the need for Nigeria, Africa and the world to arise to the rising challenges of climate change.

“Climate change is a global issue, impacting different parts of the world at varying degrees. Climate change will be the greatest threat to humanity and global ecosystems in the coming years.

“There is a pressing need to understand and communicate the impacts of this change, and make active actionable commitments and contributions to mitigating this crisis”. She added.

April 28, 2021 0 comments
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Africa & World

ECOWAS Ambassador to UN receives new Climate Clock in NYC

by Leading Reporters April 26, 2021
written by Leading Reporters

Monday morning, in advance of President Biden’s Earth Day Leaders Summit on Climate, the UN Ambassador of ECOWAS (Economic Community of West African States), which represents 15 African nations, was gifted a handheld climate clock in front of the monumental Climate Clock in Union Square, New York City.

Climate Clock Action

The clock was presented to the UN Ambassador, his excellency Mahama Kappiah, by Jerome Ringo, former chair of the National Wildlife Federation, and currently Goodwill Ambassador to the Pan African Parliament.

Kappiah is the first UN ambassador to receive a climate clock, with the hope that more of these clocks continue to spread throughout the UN. Ringo will be taking more handheld clocks to several African leaders when he travels there later this week.

Ringo stated: “This clock is a call to action. Future solutions are great, but we need NOW solutions. Solutions that create green jobs that can replace the fossil fuel economy.” The moment was celebrated by a significant change in the now famous giant clock: a sign of hope.

Climate Clock Action

The Deadline that has been displayed since it’s launch in September is now joined by a new “Lifeline” that displays the percentage of global energy currently supplied from renewable sources — 12.2 percent, and going up, but it needs to be going up much faster to meet our deadline. For more information on the science behind the clock:  https://climateclock.world/science.

Ringo used the shift in the clock to speak to the different responsibilities that different nations had for meeting our climate deadline. “Africa, like other developing regions who suffer climate impacts from CO2 historically released by industrialized nations, deserves a lifeline.

Climate Clock Action

They need countries like the US, that are the greatest contributors to the problem, to contribute the most to this renewable lifeline that is on the clock. The United States is only 5% of the world’s population but is responsible for 25% of the world’s carbon emissions.”

As President Mohammadu Buhari also took part in the the virtual Leaders Summit on Climate, being hosted by the US President Joe Biden, and attended by 40 world leaders.

Also at the event were climate activists Xiye Bastida, Alexandria Villasenor, and Ayisha Saddiqa, many of whom are also receiving clocks and taking them to the Biden Global Leaders summit in Wash. DC on Earth Day.

April 26, 2021 0 comments
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