Adetokunbo Ojikutu and Ugochi Oluigbo speak on impact of Harmattan
By TVC News Nigeria
09 January 2020 |
10:28 am
Environmentalists, Adetokunbo Ojikutu and Ugochi Oluigbo in this interview share their views on the impacts of harmattan on both human beings and other non-living things.
In this article
Related
29 May 2019
With the very poor electricity supply in Nigeria, majority of people have resulted in alternative power sources such as fossil fuel, solar, inverter and some of these affect the environment negatively.
25 Jun 2019
Environmentalists encourage tree planting culture to curb air pollution.
9 Jan 2020
Environmentalists, Adetokunbo Ojikutu and Ugochi Oluigbo in this interview share their views on the impacts of harmattan on both human beings and other non-living things.
27 Jun 2021
Advocacy group Mother Nature activists Sun Ratha, Ly Chandaravuth and Yim Leanghy were arrested last week for documenting waste discharge into a city river.
5 Nov 2021
The countries hit hardest by climate change are struggling to attend a UN climate summit that has been hailed as the "best last chance" to stop global warming. What are the implications?
Latest
Tinubu will give Nigeria effective leadership – Buhari, Fire razes building in Lagos market and more
4 hours ago
Find these stories and much more when you grab a copy of The Guardian on Wednesday.
5 hours ago
After massive layoffs, experts doubt that Twitter can hold up its security standards and effectively battle fake news. This could put activists worldwide in harms way and endanger lives of people in disaster areas.
5 hours ago
This weekend's clashes between police and protesters in the small French town of Sainte-Soline reflect growing anger over water reservoirs that are meant to help farmers to irrigate their crops in times of drought.
5 hours ago
The threat level raise for the UK-controlled enclave on the island of Ireland comes ahead of a visit by US President Joe Biden for the anniversary of the Good Friday agreement.
5 hours ago
The country has been witnessing a gradual increase in coronavirus infections in recent days. A new variant could be driving the rise but there's no need to panic, experts say.