Nigeria is set to strengthen the resilience and sustainability of its built environment as the Federal Government reviews the National Building Code to introduce climate-smart construction standards.
The revised code will incorporate energy efficiency requirements, sustainable building materials, disaster-risk reduction measures and resilient design principles aimed at reducing carbon emissions while improving the safety, durability and performance of buildings across the country.
The Minister of Housing and Urban Development, Muttaqha Darma, disclosed this on Thursday at the National Kick-off Workshop for the Development of the National Decarbonization and Resilience Roadmap for Nigeria's Buildings and Construction Sector in Abuja. He was represented by the ministry's Director of Urban and Regional Development, Mrs. Margaret Adejobi.
According to the minister, the review is part of reforms to align Nigeria's housing and construction sector with the Paris Agreement, the Sustainable Development Goals, the New Urban Agenda and the country's Nationally Determined Contributions.
He said the ministry is also implementing other initiatives, including the Federal Executive Council-approved National Urban Development Policy, a National Policy on Rural Settlement Planning and Development, National Physical Planning Standards and climate-responsive housing under the Renewed Hope Estates and Cities Initiative. The housing programme promotes energy-efficient designs, improved thermal comfort, lower environmental impact and infrastructure built to withstand extreme weather.
Darma said Nigeria's rapid urbanisation requires a fresh approach to planning and managing cities, urging stakeholders to accelerate nationwide adoption of the revised building code, expand green financing for affordable housing, encourage local production of climate-resilient building materials and establish a National Urban Observatory to support evidence-based planning.
"The future of Nigeria's cities and settlements will be determined by the choices we make today. Decarbonization and resilience are no longer optional aspirations; they are development imperatives," he said, while calling on government agencies, the private sector, development partners, professional bodies and civil society organisations to support the National Decarbonisation and Resilience Roadmap.
Earlier, Chairman of the National Multistakeholder Working Group for Decarbonized and Resilient Buildings, Tpl. Grace Bitrus, described the roadmap as a transformative initiative that will reshape how Nigeria plans, designs, constructs, operates and manages its buildings and communities in response to climate change.
She noted that with many of the buildings expected to exist by 2050 yet to be constructed, Nigeria has a unique opportunity to embrace low-carbon, energy-efficient and climate-resilient development. She added that achieving the roadmap's goals will require strong collaboration among government institutions, the private sector, professional bodies, academia, financial institutions and development partners.
"No single institution can transform the buildings sector alone. Every stakeholder represented here today has an indispensable role in achieving our shared vision," she said.