Maintenance Notice

Due to necessary scheduled maintenance, the JMIR Publications website will be unavailable from Wednesday, July 01, 2020 at 8:00 PM to 10:00 PM EST. We apologize in advance for any inconvenience this may cause you.

Who will be affected?

Currently submitted to: JMIR Preprints

Date Submitted: Jun 6, 2026
Open Peer Review Period: Jun 6, 2026 - May 22, 2027
(currently open for review)

Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited. Preprints - unless they show as "accepted" - should not be relied on to guide clinical practice or health-related behavior and should not be reported in news media as established information.

Bayelsa's Future is Rooted in Nature: Why World Environment Day 2026 Must Become a Turning Point for Climate Action

  • Akayinaboderi Augustus Eli; 
  • Douye Parkinson Markmanuel; 
  • Morufu Olalekan Raimi; 
  • Charles Oyibo; 
  • Adedoyin Oluwatoyin Omidiji

ABSTRACT

Background:

Coastal regions face accelerating climate and pollution crises, yet political action remains inadequate. Bayelsa State, Nigeria, home to Africa’s largest mangroves and decades of oil extraction, exemplifies this governance failure. This commentary argues that World Environment Day 2026 must catalyse a shift from symbolic environmentalism to enforceable nature-based solutions (NBS).

Objective:

To synthesise evidence on ecological degradation, public health consequences, and policy inaction in Bayelsa; to demonstrate that NBS are cost-effective and urgent; and to hold political leaders accountable for restoration commitments.

Methods:

Triangulation of peer-reviewed climate science, public health surveillance, UNDP benefit-cost analyses, leaked environmental audit data, and budgetary reviews.

Results:

Bayelsa faces a triple burden of sea-level rise, oil pollution (>9,000 unremediated spills), and deforestation. Flood-linked paediatric diarrhoea increased 140% (2020-2025). Despite benefit-cost ratios of 3:1-10:1 for NBS, less than 0.5% of state budgets support restoration. Environmental laws exist but remain unenforced.

Conclusions:

Ecological collapse in Bayelsa is not inevitable; it is a policy choice. Nature-based solutions are not alternatives to development but prerequisites for public health, flood resilience, and economic stability. Bayelsa’s political leaders must declare a climate and ecological emergency, mandate legally binding restoration targets, enforce corporate liability for spills, allocate ≥5% of annual budgets to NBS, and integrate climate resilience into all ministries. Universities should function as monitoring and accountability hubs. The future of Bayelsa, and similarly vulnerable regions, depends not on more science but on whether leaders act on existing evidence before ecosystems pass irreversible tipping points.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Eli AA, Markmanuel DP, Raimi MO, Oyibo C, Omidiji AO

Bayelsa's Future is Rooted in Nature: Why World Environment Day 2026 Must Become a Turning Point for Climate Action

JMIR Preprints. 06/06/2026:103865

DOI: 10.2196/preprints.103865

URL: https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/103865

Download PDF


Request queued. Please wait while the file is being generated. It may take some time.

© The authors. All rights reserved. This is a privileged document currently under peer-review/community review (or an accepted/rejected manuscript). Authors have provided JMIR Publications with an exclusive license to publish this preprint on it's website for review and ahead-of-print citation purposes only. While the final peer-reviewed paper may be licensed under a cc-by license on publication, at this stage authors and publisher expressively prohibit redistribution of this draft paper other than for review purposes.