THE Olu of Warri Kingdom, Ogiame Atuwase III, has called for the protection of the Niger Delta mangroves from foreign interests seeking to exploit them under the guise of carbon credit offsets.
The traditional ruler made the call during an ongoing art exhibition showcasing the works of Art scholar and environmentalist, Dr John DeBebs, in Lagos.
The solo exhibition, organised by Crimson Fusion Curators, will began on March 5 would ends March 13. The exhibition is with the theme, ‘The Intersecting Worlds of Climate Change, the Mangrove and Art’.
The Olu of Warri said there was urgent need for indigenous communities to safeguard their land and heritage.
He said that the forests absorb and store carbon at an astonishing rate, offering a natural solution to climate crisis.
The traditional ruler said: “They are more than just ecosystems; they are the lungs of our heritage. “They sustain our life, they protect our shores, and they preserve our identity.
“While we have looked upon them for generations, others from far have begun to look at them differently through satellite images, through the lens of economic speculation and with intentions that threaten the collective sovereignty of the people of Niger Delta.
The world now acknowledges what we have always known about, that mangroves are among the most efficient carbon sources on this planet.”
He noted that the Itsekiri’s and the entire Niger Delta would not allow their heritage to be exploited by those who neither understood its significance nor bear the cost of its destruction.
The Curator of the works, Oriiz Onuwaje, said the exhibition was aimed at celebrating the beauty of the Niger Delta, and the beauty of the mangroves.
Onuwaje said, in spite of the disaster and underdevelopment used in describing the Niger Delta, there is beauty in the region, one of which is the mangroves.
The curator, however, said that climate change was affecting the mangroves, such that there was need to protect, conserve and regenerate them.
“Everywhere you turn, they’re talking about the crisis in the Amazon in South America. The mangroves of the Niger Delta hold more value to the world than the Amazon,” Onuwaje said.
Describing a mangrove, Oriiz said: “This is a piece of engineering because as it grows, it brings out more roots from the top into the ground to secure the ground itself.