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Nigerian teens develop app to raise awareness of climate change

By Nneka Nwogwugwu 

Three Nigerian teenagers have developed an app they hope will help to tackle climate change. 

The team has created ‘EarthExp’ which combines information about environmental trends with social networking and games.

Users create a city but need to consider how the environment might affect it as it develops.

Fortune Somuadia is one of the developers and explained the thinking behind the app.

“We decided to get people not so fully stuck on our app, but stuck on our app enough to be able to develop a sense of action towards climate change, like developing or thinking of the fact that they can do something to relieve climate change,” she said.

“So it’s basically to use a persuasive strategy to induce a behavioural change in our users and in return we get a positive feedback towards climate action.”  Favor Chibuike helped Fortune create the app. 

“In the game we also have a feature where if you cut one tree you will have to plant three more trees,” she says.

“So, in the game if you don’t take care of your environment and all that other stuff, you notice that it affects the way you behave around your surroundings.”  

It comes as African officials push to make more industrialised nations pay for environmental damage done to poorer countries. Africa needs around $3 trillion to fulfil its self-determined emissions targets, known as nationally determined contributions, that each country is required to submit as part of the 2015 Paris agreement on climate, according to U.N. and Africa Development Bank estimates.

Fortune explains that, although Africa is not the biggest producer of greenhouse gases, they are severely impacted. 

“We are actually very sceptical about it because even for the fact that Africa as a whole doesn’t emit as much greenhouse gases like the Americans and other countries, we are largely affected. So severe floods happen in Africa and heatwaves happens, we are most affected by it.”  EarthExp was a regional winner in a 2022 global competition organised by Technovation; a US-based nonprofit company empowering women and girls to use technology for change.

It comes ahead of the 2022 United Nations Climate Change Conference, or COP27, scheduled for November in Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt.

The mobile application is in addition to their campaigns in schools and around their neighborhood, urging people to dispose of refuse properly and reduce the use of plastic.

Caribbean joins call to escalate action on climate finance

The United Nations’ Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean, ECLAC, says government representatives from several regional countries, as well as international organizations and multilateral and private financial institutions, have called for escalation in action on climate finance, ahead of the upcoming UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP27). 

ECLAC said delegates also called for activation in projects and strengthened institutional framework, as they concluded on Friday their debates at the Roundtable on Climate Finance and the Energy Transition in Latin America and the Caribbean, which took place at ECLAC’s headquarters.

The event, which was held using a hybrid format (in-person and virtual), was one of the five Regional Fora on Climate Initiatives to Finance Climate Action and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in preparation for the 27th session of COP27, which are being organized by the United Nations System, the incoming Egyptian Presidency of COP27 and the UN Climate Change High-Level Champions, ECLAC said.

On the roundtable’s second and final day, it said delegates exchanged experiences on “sustainable and equitable critical and strategic mineral supply chains for the energy transition, and climate finance initiatives for resilience in Caribbean Small Island Developing States (SIDS) and other vulnerable states.”

“We need everyone to roll up their sleeves and immerse themselves in working on these issues,” said Nigel Topping, climate champion COP26, hoping that “between now and the COP27, we can move some of these projects along.”

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