The Federal Government of Nigeria has revealed that it has sealed 39 industries in about seven states in the country for breaching environmental regulations in their various locations.
The FG also added that it had launched an investigation into the mode of operation of the Chinese Miners in Osun state following complaints of environmental degradation, farmland destructions, and water sources by the Chinese miners.
The government disclosed this through the National Environmental Standards and Regulations Enforcement Agency, (NESREA adding that all culprits would be prosecuted. The recently sealed companies were closed after flouting repeated warnings.
This revelation was made known by the Director-General of NESREA, Prof. Aliyu Jauro, who briefed newsmen at a media parley in Abuja, explaining that every environmental offender will be prosecuted.
“Just last week, the agency embarked on an enforcement drive which led to the sealing of 39 facilities in different parts of the country for failing to comply with extant environmental laws,” he stated.
“The facilities had been given notices of compliance concerns in line with legal provisions but failed to abate their infractions against the environment.
“These facilities will be penalized for their offenses and some will be prosecuted in courts of competent jurisdiction. The enforcement is an ongoing exercise and I assure Nigerians that no erring facility will be spared.
“When we say facilities, we are talking about industries that carry out activities that impact on the environment. Most of them are production industries in the brown and green sectors.”
The NESREA boss said the sealed companies included those in the poultry, power, pharmaceuticals, detergents, beverage making sectors, among others.
“There are specific regulations for each of the sectors and we go out to see that the industries comply. So, some of the facilities that were sealed recently include 13 in Anambra, four in Borno, and three in Ondo.
“Others include three in Ekiti, eight in Kano, three in Bayelsa, and six in Delta State.”
He noted that recently, the agency had been inundated with several complaints about the resurgence of the activities of artisanal miners, raising fears of degradation of the environment, destruction of farmlands, and contamination of water sources, especially in the Osun River.
“It is important to note that such mining activities are not new in the area because Osun State sits on a schist belt that is richly endowed with mineral resources like gold, tourmaline, tantalite, topaz, and other gemstones and which attracts the artisanal miners,” Jauro stated.