Sahara Group in partnership with Egbin Power Plc and the Nigerian Conservation Foundation (NCF) has established a nature reserve in Ikorodu, a coastal city in Lagos to promote environmental sustainability.
Speaking on the initiative, Director of Governance and Sustainability, Sahara Group, Ejiro Gray, said the reserve would serve as a sanctuary for animals and plants as well as a carbon sink to help reduce the effects of climate change.
“We are excited at the prospects this partnership holds and the positive impact we expect as Sahara Group continues to lead the charge towards environmental sustainability, especially in Africa, where we have our roots. We also see huge prospects for socio-economic benefits through ecotourism, air quality control, and urban heat reduction,” she said.
Gray said the proposed nature reserve would anchor its activities on four thematic programs, including awareness building and advocacy, environmental education and resource centres, ecotourism destinations, and preservation of cultural heritage.
She noted that it would also serve as a biological laboratory for research, an attribute that stakeholders say can trigger the development of similar reserves in the sub-region.
“This collaboration will leverage the strengths and expertise of both organizations, including Sahara Group’s experience in promoting sustainable development, its commitment to reducing carbon emissions, and the NCF’s expertise in environmental conservation,” she added.
Commenting on the collaboration, the Director General, NCF, Dr. Joseph Onoja, said the organisation was delighted to enter the collaboration with Sahara Group and Egbin Power towards preserving the full range of Nigeria’s biodiversity, promoting sustainable use of natural resources for the benefit of present and future generations; and advocating actions that minimize pollution and wasteful utilization of renewable resources.
“Sahara Group has demonstrated commitment to offsetting its carbon footprint through the conservation of an expanse of forest area within the Egbin Power Plc facility. This is in line with one of the key goals of NCF’s Green Recovery Nigeria Programme, which aims to increase the forest cover in Nigeria to at least 25 percent of the total land mass through the management and expansion of protected areas as well as forest landscape restoration. The environment connects us all, and we will continue to build partnerships with stakeholders in the country and globally,” he stated.
Speaking on the partnership, Chief Executive Officer, Egbin Power, Mokhtar Bounor said the power firm was delighted to play a frontline role in the conservation of the native flora and fauna of the area.
“The nature reserve will demonstrate seamless regeneration of the forest as a paradigm shift from afforestation and ultimately help us achieve a sustainable environmental bank for wildlife and plants that would have been displaced during the construction and other activities, ensuring their availability for research and environmental education,” he said.
Ikorodu which is home to Egbin Power, the largest privately run thermal plant in sub–Saharan Africa that serves over 30 million households in Nigeria has planted over 1,000 trees, deployed electric buggies, scooters, and bicycles, and continues to implement walk-to-walk day and other zero-emissions campaigns, digital publications, and other initiatives aimed at promoting environmental sustainability.
The nature reserve will also create an ecotourism destination that absorbs the number of people relocating to the area because of the proposed Fourth Mainland Bridge and the International Airport at Lekki, among other developments.