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Home»Environment/Climate Change»COP30 and Niger’s turn to shine on climate action
Environment/Climate Change

COP30 and Niger’s turn to shine on climate action

By Abdulsalam Mahmud
EditorBy EditorOctober 18, 2025Updated:October 18, 2025No Comments7 Mins Read
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Across the world today, governments are recalibrating their economies to fit a green and sustainable future. From Brazil’s vast reforestation drive in the Amazon to Morocco’s solar revolution in Ouarzazate, nations are realizing that the path to prosperity now runs through the low-carbon economy.

The green transition has become more than an environmental necessity; it is the new global economy in the making — one that rewards innovation, resilience, and foresight. For Africa, this transition is both an urgent challenge and a rare opportunity.

As the continent most vulnerable to climate change, Africa stands to lose the most from inaction. Yet it also possesses immense natural capital — sunlight, land, biodiversity, and youthful human potential — that can power a sustainable transformation. Countries that act early and boldly will not only build resilience but also attract the finance, partnerships, and technologies shaping the next century.

It is in this global context that Niger State, under the visionary leadership of His Excellency, Farmer Governor Mohammed Umaru Bago, has chosen to define its future differently. Over the last two years, the state has pursued one of the most ambitious subnational green economy transformations in Nigeria’s history.

By linking local realities with global climate ambitions, Niger is steadily positioning itself as the country’s hub for climate-smart agriculture, clean energy, and green industrial development. Governor Bago’s administration began by recognizing an undeniable truth — that climate change is not just an environmental issue but an economic one.

Desertification, flooding, and deforestation have long undermined livelihoods across the state. To confront these threats, Niger launched its Green Economy Blueprint, an integrated strategy designed to build resilience while creating green jobs and sustainable prosperity. From that moment, the state’s engagement with the world deepened.

At COP28 in Dubai, Niger presented its blueprint before international partners, and by COP29 in Baku, it had become a recognizable name in subnational climate leadership. These appearances were not symbolic; they yielded partnerships that have since defined the core of Niger’s transition agenda.

One of the most transformative was the Memorandum of Understanding with Blue Carbon, a UAE-based company committed to developing sustainable climate solutions. The agreement to plant one billion economic trees across one million hectares in Niger State stands as one of the largest public–private reforestation programmes on the African continent.

Beyond ecological restoration, the initiative promises rural employment, carbon credit generation, and long-term economic dividends from timber, fruit, and non-timber forest products. Equally significant was the partnership with FutureCamp Germany, a globally renowned firm in carbon markets. This collaboration aims to unlock over ₦1 trillion in climate investments and build the technical framework for Niger’s carbon market activation.

For a subnational entity, this is pioneering work — one that could see Niger emerge as the first Nigerian state to fully participate in voluntary carbon trading, attracting new revenue streams while promoting transparency in climate finance. The MoU with NNPC Limited extends Niger’s climate action to the energy frontier.
It covers a suite of renewable and low-carbon projects, including a greenfield hydroelectric power plant, mega solar parks for institutions, and home solar systems targeting 250,000 households. The agreement also envisions an ethanol plant capable of producing 500 million litres annually, powered by crops cultivated across 100,000 hectares — a project that will create value chains, empower farmers, and reduce dependence on fossil fuels.

Meanwhile, the collaboration with the ECOWAS Bank for Investment and Development for an $11 million Madalla Green Economic Market promises to turn commerce itself into a model of sustainability — blending trade, recycling, and renewable energy in one modern ecosystem. Similarly, Niger’s partnership with the Turkish firm Direkci Camp is reshaping agribusiness through smart agriculture, irrigated soya cultivation, and export-oriented value chains.

These developments are not isolated; they are coordinated through the Niger State Agency for Green Initiatives (NG-SAGI) — the institutional anchor established two years ago and led by Dr. Habila Daniel Galadima. Beyond doubt, NG-SAGI is more than a bureaucracy; it is a policy engine designed to harmonize the state’s environmental, agricultural, and energy programmes into one coherent climate resilience framework.

Under this framework, Niger hosted Nigeria’s first-ever subnational Green Economy Summit in 2023, attracting investors and development partners from across the globe. The summit’s outcomes validated the governor’s approach: local action can be globally relevant if guided by clear vision and credible governance. The pledges and partnerships secured there continue to serve as foundations for current projects — from afforestation to renewable energy and sustainable agriculture.

Another milestone was the creation of the Niger State Agriculture Development Fund, with a ₦3.5 billion startup capital from the state and local governments. The fund is enabling 1,000 young farmers to access grants of ₦1 million each, alongside hectares of land for nurseries across all 25 local governments. This initiative has quietly triggered an agricultural mechanization revolution, empowering a new generation to see farming as business — and sustainability as strategy.

Partnerships with the United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO), the Energy Commission of Nigeria, and the World Energy Council are driving new frontiers in wind energy and industrial decarbonization. Niger’s growing alignment with UNIDO is already yielding plans for circular economy models within the agro-processing free trade zone, blending job creation with environmental responsibility.

And while some of these projects are at different stages of implementation, the direction is unmistakable: Niger State is building a green identity anchored on innovation, inclusion, and international collaboration. Even modest steps, like the installation of solar-powered streetlights across Minna, tell a larger story — one of a government deliberately moving toward a future powered by clean energy and driven by public safety and climate consciousness.

As the world prepares for COP30 in Brazil next month, Niger State’s delegation is expected to present these achievements not as isolated efforts, but as part of a coherent subnational climate narrative. It will highlight how a state once challenged by deforestation and poverty is now leading a structured march toward carbon neutrality and green prosperity.

The focus this time will be on climate-smart agriculture, renewable energy expansion, youth inclusion, and green finance innovation — key pillars that align with the global call for just and equitable transitions. At COP30, Niger’s voice will also speak for Nigeria’s broader subnational climate movement — demonstrating how state-level leadership can accelerate the nation’s commitments under the Paris Agreement.

The lessons from Niger are clear: climate action must be localized, data-driven, and economically beneficial. Beyond the conference halls of Brazil, Niger’s agenda carries deep human meaning. Every hectare reforested, every solar panel installed, and every youth trained in sustainable agriculture is a statement of faith in a livable future.

Climate action here is not an abstract ambition; it is a lived policy that transforms communities, restores hope, and redefines governance as stewardship. If properly amplified, Niger’s story could inspire other states to see climate change not as a threat but as an opportunity — a chance to create industries, attract green finance, and protect generations unborn.

That is the broader promise Governor Bago’s vision now represents: that sustainability is not an aspiration for rich nations alone, but a shared moral and developmental duty for all. As COP30 draws near, Niger’s turn to shine on climate action is not just about showcasing progress; it is about reinforcing possibility.

For a state once defined by its rivers and farmlands, the journey toward a green economy may well become its most enduring legacy — one that proves that in Africa’s heartland, the seeds of a sustainable future are already being sown.

Mahmud, Deputy Editor of PRNigeria and a rapporteur at the maiden Niger State Green Economy Summit, writes via: babasalam1989@gmail.com.

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