NESREA Seals 39 Facilities Over Violation of Environmental Laws
The National Environmental Standards and Regulations Enforcement Agency (NESREA) has sealed 39 facilities in different parts of Nigeria over violation of environmental laws.
The Director General Of NESREA Prof. Aliu Jauro, disclosed this during a press briefing with journalists in Abuja.
Jauro said that the facilities had been given notices of compliance concerns in line with legal provisions but failed to abate their infractions against the environment. For failing to comply with the extant environmental laws, Jauro said that the facilities will be penalized for their offences and some will be prosecuted in courts of competent jurisdiction.
“The Agency is indeed strengthening its enforcement infrastructure by building the capacity of its workforce and reviewing the National Environmental Regulations to make them more deterrent and also incorporate emerging environmental issues,” he said.
The Director General informed that the Agency in the coming weeks, will host its Annual Federal/ State Regulatory Dialogue, which brings together environmental policy makers at both the State and Federal Levels, as well as captains of industries and the academia to discuss the National Environmental Regulations and ensure that roles are well delineated for ease of operationalization.
According to Jauro, the main objectives of the 2022 National Regulatory Dialogue are to fill in identified gaps in some select National Environmental Regulations, delineate roles and responsibilities among stakeholders, and incorporate operationalization of Eco-Guard into the National Environmental (Permitting and Licensing System) Regulations.
The Regulations slated for review include
- the National Environmental (Electrical/ Electronic Sector) Regulations, 2011;
- the National Environmental (Sanitation and Waste Control) Regulations, 2009;
- the National Environmental (Permitting and Licensing System) Regulations, 2009;
- the National Environmental (Domestic and Industrial Plastics, Rubber and Foam Sector) Regulations, 2011;
- the National Environmental (Food, Beverages and Tobacco Sector) Regulations, 2009; and
- the National Environmental (Hazardous Chemicals and Pesticides) Regulations, 2011.
“There are emerging environmental issues and interventions that have come up since some of these National Environmental Regulations were developed. Take for instance, Circular Economy, an environmental protection model being championed globally and which Nigeria is implementing under the Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) Programme,” he stated.
“Some of our regulations predate the EPR, hence the need to review and incorporate it. The review of the regulations will also address the lapses that have been noted in the course of implementation.”
The National Environmental (Health Care Waste Control) Control Regulations 2021and the National Environmental (Polychlorinated Biphenyl) Regulations 2021, developed by the Agency were recently gazetted and are set for operationalization.
NESREA is the foremost environmental enforcement Agency of the Federal Government saddled with the responsibility of enforcing all environmental laws, guidelines, policies, standards and regulations in Nigeria; prohibiting processes and the use of equipment or technology that undermine environmental quality; and also enforcing compliance with provisions of all International Environmental Agreements, Protocols, Conventions and Treaties to which Nigeria is signatory.