People in Africa 
are able to live 
with their environment. 
The natural environment 
sustains their livelihoods. 
But when climate change 
impacts on 
the natural environment 
and people cannot live and 
carry out their activities 
to keep their 
level of survival, 
then of course they have 
to move somewhere else.
Honored viewers, 
welcome to Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home.
Africa is a continent 
of diverse beauty 
and natural resources, 
but sadly this region is 
increasingly being affected 
by global warming. 
The once majestic 
Lake Chad, located 
south of the Sahara Desert, 
which spanned 
25,600 square kilometers 
in the mid-20th century 
is now one-fifteenth 
its original size. 
Severe droughts and 
serious food shortages 
are currently 
being experienced 
by millions of Africans, 
creating conflict 
among peoples. 
Africa’s 
average temperature
is rising quicker 
than the global average, 
with experts projecting 
that this trend 
will cause even more 
devastating droughts, 
further food insecurity 
as well as intense floods 
and storm surges. 
In today’s show, 
we will speak with a true 
environmental champion, 
Mr. Nnimmo Bassey 
from Nigeria.
For his role 
in helping Nigerians 
understand and protect 
their environmental rights,
he was named by 
the US news publication 
TIME magazine 
as one of the “Heroes of 
the Environment 2009.”  
Nnimmo Bassey is chair 
of the highly respected 
non-profit group Friends 
of the Earth International, 
which calls itself the 
world’s largest grassroots 
environmental network. 
Friends has two million 
members in 77 nations. 
Mr. Bassey is also 
executive director of 
Environmental Rights 
Action, also known as 
Friends of the Earth 
Nigeria, an organization 
that addresses 
environmental 
human rights issues 
in Nigeria. 
He will share with us 
his perspectives on the 
environmental conditions 
in Africa and discuss 
the relationship between 
migration and unrest 
and climate change. 
In our conversation 
with Mr. Bassey, 
he emphasized that many 
of the harsh consequences 
of global warming 
that scientists 
repeatedly warn of 
are currently being seen 
on the continent. 
This is not an issue 
of what will happen 
in the future. 
This is what is happening 
right now. 
And most of 
these vulnerable, 
poor communities 
are being impacted 
in many ways including 
sea level rise already. 
People are experiencing 
coastal erosions. 
Island states are finding 
that their land 
is being eroded and 
getting submerged rapidly. 
In Africa, you have 
the additional problem 
of desertification.
The Sahara Desert 
is spreading southward 
much faster than used to be. 
Water bodies 
are drying up already. 
For example, Lake Chad, 
the second largest lake 
in Africa is almost a shadow 
of its former self. 
Global warming, 
it means displacement 
of poor local people, 
destruction of livelihoods. 
Farmers don’t have 
the expectations 
of good harvest 
as they used to have. 
They can’t predict when 
to cultivate their crops. 
So, there are multiple, 
multiple impacts.
Desertification is 
a serious issue in Africa 
as it is being accelerated 
by climate change. 
The world’s largest desert, 
the Sahara, 
is located in Africa 
and is advancing 
at a pace of 6% a year. 
It is estimated 
that Nigeria loses 
350,000 hectares of land 
to desertification 
annually.
And if I can use Nigeria 
as an example, it gives me 
a very good template 
to explain the impact. 
We have the desert 
spreading from 
the northern part 
of the country. 
In the southern part, 
we have oil corporations 
engaged in extremely 
degrading activities, 
releasing greenhouse gases 
into the atmosphere, 
carbon dioxide, methane 
and the rest, and of course 
causing global warming 
and sea level rise.  
And so, you’re having 
people being displaced 
from the south part 
of the country 
due to sea level rise 
and coastal erosion 
and salinization; 
the coming in 
of salt waters 
contaminating what was 
fresh water systems. 
And then 
movement downwards 
of people displaced 
by desertification. 
So, you’re having conflicts 
in the middle part 
of the country. 
And people think 
these are ethnic 
or religious conflicts. 
But the real cause 
of this conflict 
as you understand 
it is climate change.
So you feel that 
there’ll be major conflicts 
in the future 
if we don’t address 
global warming quickly?
Even now we are 
having major conflicts 
due to climate change 
and global warming. 
And we are going to see 
a lot more of that 
as more people 
are displaced. 
You are going 
to find nations 
who are erecting barriers 
against migrants coming in, 
those barriers 
will be broken 
by the migrating people 
who’ll press 
against the barriers. 
It will become 
simply unsustainable 
to keep the people away 
because people would 
have no option 
but to move from 
where they used to live 
to where they just can 
find some level of survival. 
So, we can expect conflict 
over water...
Water is already 
a very sore issue 
when it comes to conflict. 
In the Middle East, 
water is like gold. 
I am sorry to use gold 
as an example, but 
I mean just as a metaphor. 
Water is like gold 
and people are fighting 
already over this. 
There is a lot politics 
going on, 
a lot of conflicts going on 
already about water, 
water...access to water. 
You have 
a fresh water system 
you could depend on before, 
but now a lot of people 
have to depend on 
bottled water. 
They call it spring water, 
but most are not 
better than tap water. 
So you have 
a lot of conflicts going. 
We will continue our talk 
with Nnimmo Bassey, 
chair of Friends 
of the Earth International 
after this brief message. 
Please stay tuned 
to Supreme Master 
Television. 
Welcome back to 
Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home, 
where we are speaking 
with Nnimmo Bassey, 
executive director 
of the Nigeria-based 
organization 
Environmental Rights 
Action and chair of 
the environmental 
protection network, 
Friends of the Earth 
International about 
climate change in Africa.
The International 
Organization for Migration 
estimates that more than 
24-million people 
are currently displaced 
worldwide because of 
global warming, and 
projects this number may 
reach 1 billion by 2050. 
Mr. Bassey now further 
addresses this serious issue.
Many of the climate 
refugees we have 
in the world today, 
some of them may not 
really trace the root cause 
of their displacement 
to climate change. 
And this is because 
knowledge 
of climate change 
is still very limited. 
People think that these 
are natural occurrences 
when rain doesn’t fall 
when it ought to fall, 
and when you 
don’t have winter when 
you ought to have winter. 
You know all the things 
are just going upside down. 
But of course we know 
that this is man-made 
climate change. 
It is not natural. 
And so there are 
a lot of people 
being displaced already. 
You know 
in the small island states, 
real climate refugees 
are moving out because 
they stand the risk 
of being submerged, 
and simply going 
under the water. 
I know a small island state 
like Tuvalu in the Pacific, 
many of the citizens, 
I mean it is not 
a very big country, 
but many of the citizens 
are looking for 
where else to go. 
They’re moving 
to New Zealand 
and other places. 
And this is happening 
in Africa. 
A lot Africans 
are moving to Europe. 
It is not just because 
there is no job in Africa 
to do. 
But now the question 
we should ask is 
why there are no jobs?
A lot people live outside 
the formal economy. 
They are not involved 
in stock speculations, 
they are not involved 
in major banking issues, 
and they are not employed 
by government or by 
transnational corporations. 
They are just people 
who make a living 
by engaging in local 
small-scale production. 
Now when the environment 
cannot support that 
due to global warming, 
then people have to 
look somewhere else to live. 
You find people 
going to where 
they can’t find anything 
so they accept jobs 
that others reject, 
and then they are treated 
with no dignity at all. 
It is not out of choice, 
it’s a matter of survival.
We asked Nnimmo Bassey 
to comment on 
how food insecurity 
is being fueled by 
livestock raising where 
massive swaths of forests 
are being rapidly cleared 
to grow animal feed.
Let me just add to 
the war and the troubles 
caused by the addition 
to meat especially 
in the global north. 
We campaign in the south 
against genetic engineering, 
especially our food crops. 
Or genetic engineering 
of anything at all, 
we don’t support it. 
Eighty percent 
of genetically engineered 
foods or crops 
are destined for use 
as animal feeds, 
especially in Europe 
and North America. 
And to make this happen, 
the monocultures lead to 
degradation of forests, 
deforestation, 
and removal of space 
for cultivation of crops 
for human beings. 
So, these are 
real serious impacts. 
And something needs 
to be done about it. 
In the west people are 
consuming meat, 
of course rearing animals, 
factory farms 
and all of that. 
They even have 
genetically engineered 
animals and fishes, 
and all these things. 
People really need to know 
what they’re eating 
and what they are eating 
is costing the planet.
Mr. Bassey feels 
that to find solutions 
to climate change 
we should look to 
the traditional way of life 
led by our ancestors 
which was simple 
and emphasized 
treating our Earth 
with respect 
and in a gentle manner.
I think generally 
over-consumption 
is a problem, 
is a kind of sickness. 
People are addicted to so 
many things in the world, 
even things when they know 
something is unhealthy 
for them somehow 
people just say, “Well, 
it’s going to happen 
to somebody else.” 
Take for example cigarettes, 
it is written on the packet, 
“This is dangerous 
to your health, 
they cause cancer; 
it is going to kill you.” 
And yet 
people pay for poison. 
Our forefathers lived 
better than we do now, with 
less material possessions. 
And so they were happier. 
People valued humanity, 
valued each other, 
valued the environment. 
But today, 
what’s happening, there is 
competition everywhere. 
People want to see 
how much they can eat, 
how much 
they can accumulate. 
And certainly 
we have only one Earth.
We have a duty to, 
of course, to share ideas, 
share, share information 
with one another about 
what should be supported 
and what needs 
to be supported. 
Also, we need to slow down, 
eat slow food, 
not fast food all the time. 
Eat healthy. 
Nnimmo Bassey, 
we salute you for your 
praiseworthy leadership 
of two wonderful and 
important environmental 
organizations 
and for helping 
to inform the world 
of how climate change is
seriously impacting Africa
and other continents. 
May you continue 
to be a guiding light 
in advocating for 
healing Mother Earth 
so generations 
that come after us 
may live in a splendid 
and clean environment.
For more details 
on Friends of the Earth 
International, 
please visit 
www.FOEI.org 
To learn more about 
Environmental Rights 
Action, 
please visit 
www.ERAction.org
Thank you for joining us 
today on our program. 
Coming up next is 
Enlightening Entertainment, 
right after 
Noteworthy News, 
here on 
Supreme Master Television. 
May we always take kind 
and compassionate care 
of the environment.