Use Sports To Raise Climate change & Environmental Awareness Among Youths And Teenagers – Climatologist

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By Ibrahima Yakubu:
Patron African Climate reporter, Dr yusuf Nadabo, says Sports have the power to address climate change and tackle sustainable development through inspiring, unifying and engaging millions of youths and Teenagers on various ways to protect their environment against all forms of threats to human, animals and even the aquatics world.

This could be as a result of global warming, desertification, and the emergence of new diseases.

Nadabo who is also the Chairman, Governing Board of Kaduna State School of Nursing and Midwifery, Tudun Wada, called on government to embark on programs that will help low-income Nigerians manage weather-related risks with loans, hygiene education and water waste control.

He stated this at the 2nd Edition of the Skating for Climate Change, organized by a Non-Governmental Organization, (NGO),

African Climate Reporters held in Kaduna with the Theme “sport 4climate change-Catch them young”

It was gathered that over 500 youths including little kids were sensitized at the event.

According to him, Sport play a significant role in raising awareness among youths that are residing in both rural and urban cities on the dangers of continuous cutting-down of forest trees, increasing health challenges and new environmental problems due to lack of campaigns on climate in the northern part of Nigeria.

“We believed that children and teenagers love skating sport that is why we are here to educate them through their own game on the importance of protecting their environment and how they can support Government and NGOS and other stake holders on ways to fight global warming and other environmental degradation”.

“We are hoping to use other games in communities like football, table tannis, volley ball, basketball to sensitize our kids on the importance of planting trees around the schools and homes, with the aims of protecting the environment”.

He noted that climate change impacts negatively on nutrition, migration, and infectious diseases, saying, of the 20 top hottest years ever recorded, 16 have occurred in the last 20 years.

Government, he said, must exploit new ways or measures to help Nigerians stay healthy despite floods, droughts and heat waves.

Additionally, he said, heat waves and health without intervention, greenhouse gases will continue to warm up the world, pointing out that heat waves will cause a sharp increase in the rate of health-related issues like cramps, heat exhaustion, heat stroke, dehydration, blood clots, heart attack, stroke, heart failure and renal failure, among others
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Dr. Nadabo explained that the health effects of climate change on human varies by age, gender, geography, and socio-economic status; pointing out that many more people will be exposed to extreme weather events over the next century than previously years.

“We have to embark on programs of helping low-income residents manage weather-related risks with loans, hygiene education and water waste control,” he emphasized.

Speaking further Dr. Nadabo said climate change affects one’s health through the following ways: increase in disease carrying mosquitoes, contaminated water sources and dangerous bacterial infections.

Others include: through mental health issues, Diabetes especially the Type 2, respiratory problems and strokes.

He reiterated that power outages in extreme weather situations could cripple hospitals and transportation systems when people need them most, adding that climate change has caused decline in crop production leading to malnutrition, under-nutrition, hunger and high food prices.

“Occupational hazards such as risk of heat stroke, especially among farmers and construction workers, leading to labour being shifted to dusk to dawn, times when more disease-carrying insects are out.

“Hotter days, more rain and higher humidity will breed more mosquitoes which spread malaria, and more flies which spread infectious diseases. Heat waves can lead to mental health issues like anxiety, depression and suicide.”

He further stressed that being healthy and involved in sports goes hand in hand with a healthy environment.

In a paper titled: “African Wildlife Faces Extinction Due To Climate Change”, the National President,National environmental awareness of Nigeria , Dr suleman Jibril, said that wild animals like Camel, Gazelle in the desert region as well as others in the forestries are constantly facing extinction due to the increase scarcity of water as a result of climate change

He said that the African continent is facing increased hot temperature, sandy dust and other environmental challenges, saying that certain types of Lizards and insects have been vanishing from areas where they once thrived, while mountainsides have grown hotter and drier, birds are moving to higher elevations.

Comrade jibril noted that global warming is on the increase resulting in the incidence of drought which dries up water holes, saying higher temperatures may produce increasing number of wildfires that alter desert landscapes by eliminating slow-growing trees and shrubs and replacing them with fast-growing grasses.

“Many wild life animals are struggling to survive in the forest as a result of climate change, while large number of forest Lizards and Tortoise and big birds have gone extinct and many are on the way due to the increasing threat posed by climate change and human activities in the entire region of Africa.

“Many animals are silently dying without the relevant forestry authorities noticing due to scarcity of water,” he added.

The national president then called on African Union, (AU), Environmental NGOs and other stakeholders to rise to the challenge on the daily fight against climate change, deforestation and desertification in order to save wildlife from going extinct.

Meanwhile, Dr Piman Hoffman who is the Assistant Director African Climate Reporters says, “We need lower emissions on motor vehicles. “We need more alternative fuel vehicles, clean sources of energy.
“We need to offer incentives to people to make the changes that need to be made especially women and children in the communities.
“We need to get the word out and we need to make more people aware that climate change is not a future problem, it’s a current problem,” he concludes.

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