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Times Reporters > Civil Society Organisations > World Water Day 2025: Civil Society Urges FG To Declare State of Emergency on Nigeria’s Failing Water Sector
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World Water Day 2025: Civil Society Urges FG To Declare State of Emergency on Nigeria’s Failing Water Sector

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By Publisher Published March 21, 2025
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By Chidi Ugwu

Ahead of the Saturday 22 March, World Water Day 2025, water justice groups, comprising Civil Society Organisations, on Thursday raised the alarm over the poor state of water utilities across calling on the Federal Government to declare state of emergency on water sector.

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The group, made the call during a public presentation of a report entitled: Dry Taps, A damning verdict on the state of water utilities in Nigeria’ raising fear that the utter neglect of water utilities may be a precursor to privatisation of the sector, same way the electricity sector was sold to high return seekers entrepreneurs.

Timesreporters reports that the report, an outcome of fact-finding exercises which included visits to water utilities in six states of the federation – Enugu, Edo, Lagos, Oyo, Kogi and Kano, provides an insight into the seeming intractable water crisis that has enveloped all states of the federation with particular focus on the reasons behind the prevailing lack of portable water for Nigerians.

Speaking, AUPCTRE General Secretary, Comrade Sikiru Waheed explained that though the scope of the research is limited only to six out of Nigeria’s 36 states, it deliberately captures the situation in at least one state per geographical zone, making it a sneak peek into the overall picture of the access to water situation in the entire federation.

Due to manpower and resource challenges the research focused on the water situation in the cities since we know it is already a forgone conclusion that the rural communities where 70 percent of Nigeria’s population live rely only on streams, rivers and in a few cases private water vendors and boreholes to meet their domestic water needs.

In his remarks, Executive Director of RDI, Philip Jakpor said: “The investigations we conducted exposed what is already in plain sight. Now we can lay the blame for the perilous state of water in Nigeria exactly where it should be – Government at state and federal level that continue to vote monies for the water sector yet there is nothing to show that the funds are used for what they are meant for. It is a wicked strategy across board to ultimately collapse the water utilities and pave the way for their privatisation”.

Also speaking Executive Director of EDEN, Barrister Chima Williams said: “What we have found in all the states we visited is that the state governments are only sloganeering on ensuring their citizens have unfettered access to potable water. It is a ruse. How else can one explain their neglect of water utilities that were built with billions of naira? It is shocking and very depressing”

Similarly, Executive Director of CFSF, Comrade Sani Baba cautioned: “If the government continues on this trajectory of neglect of the water utilities then a public health disaster of unimaginable proportions is inevitable. The appetite for privatisation sweeping across the country from Lagos to Kano and the other states is a wind that will ultimately blow no good because it does not concern itself with the situation in the rural communities”

While presenting findings from their respective states, Coordinator of EWNA, Reverend Kolade Fadahunsi, Executive Director of SERDEC, Tijani Abdulkareem and Executive Director of NELCCI, Florence Ifeanyi-Aneke said that the disturbing situation in the water utilities was demoralising staff, many of whom are near retirement and there are no plans on ground to replace them.

In Kano the three waterworks combined only meet the needs of less than 10 percent of the population in the city. The case is similar to Enugu where the previous administration is said to have voted billions of naira for expanding the network of mains but nothing on ground to show what the funds went into. Currently, the Enugu Water Corporation has only 11, 234 customers.

At the Eleyele Scheme in Ibadan a disturbing sight in the premises is the number of electricity generators used to pump water due to the erratic power supply. In Edo State the Ikpoba river dam that is supposed to feed the headworks in Ugbowo and Iyaro has been left fallow. Some privately owned fish ponds were also sited within the vicinity. The dam, which used to produce over 90MGD, was confirmed to be no longer operational as the pumping facility had been abandoned.

Kogi state is also in the red as the Greater Lokoja Waterworks and all other zonal sub-station offices are not producing water and have been on lock down since the 2022 floods damaged them.

In Lagos, about N760 million was committed to rehabilitation of the 48 mini and micro waterworks in 2017 following findings that there was already a deficit of 500 million gallons per day in water supply in the state. Subsequently there have been votes for the sector but disturbingly, nothing on ground suggests that the monies were put to good use as most of the waterworks are comatose, impaired or at best operating far below their installed capacities. The Adiyan and Iju Waterworks visited in the course of this investigation work sub-optimally.

The groups also made recommendations to the government on how to address the water crisis. They include the need for the declaration of a state of emergency in the water sector and the integration of broad public participation in formulating plans to achieve universal access.

They also want the federal and state governments to reject all forms of water privatization and commodification and the need for them to fully uphold the human right to water as an obligation of the government, representing the people.

They demanded a probe of billions of naira in loans for the countless water schemes littered across the federation and the strengthening of public accountability in the management of water resources, among others.

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Publisher March 21, 2025
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