The Lagos State Government has launched a water-based public engagement platform, “Library on the Lagoon,” in a move to deepen environmental awareness, tackle pollution, and strengthen its blue economy agenda across inland waterways.
Unveiled yesterday, the initiative
signals a shift toward integrating community-driven advocacy and creative
engagement into the state’s broader maritime sustainability strategy, with
officials positioning it as a scalable model for cleaner and more economically
viable waterways.
Speaking at the launch on behalf of the
Commissioner for the Environment and Water Resources, Tokunbo Wahab, the
General Manager of the Lagos State Environmental Protection Agency (LASEPA),
Dr. Tunde Ajayi, said the project aligns with the agency’s ongoing efforts to
monitor and reduce pollution across Lagos’ lagoon systems.
“We thought it was important to engage
the creative arts. This initiative provides a platform to reach creative minds
who care about environmental protection,” Ajayi said.
He noted that LASEPA’s regulatory work,
particularly around pollution density and water quality indicators, would be
strengthened by public participation and awareness-driven interventions.
“Bringing people into this awareness and
encouraging discussions about cleaning the lagoon and ocean is a simple but
powerful form of advocacy,” he added.
Ajayi expressed optimism that the
initiative could support practical waste reduction outcomes within the lagoon
ecosystem.
“This is one of the ways to mop up
plastic waste that has found its way into the lagoon, and it is a very good
one,” he said.
Project Director of the initiative,
Maryam Kazeem, described the concept as a redefinition of traditional knowledge
spaces, repositioned within Lagos’ maritime environment to drive behavioural
change and policy-relevant conversations.
“The research for this project started
about a year ago. We are thinking about the lagoon as a social research space,
where a library is not just a stationary place but something created through
interaction and shared experience,” Kazeem said.
She explained that the platform enables
participants to engage directly on the water through guided activities designed
to interrogate the lagoon’s historical, environmental, and economic relevance.
“At the centre of the exercise is a
trash wheel powered by a typewriter, which is still in its prototype stage. The
idea is to invite people to sit with the water, observe it, and think
critically about their relationship with it,” she added.
Kazeem stressed that the initiative is
also structured to confront the growing threat of pollution in Lagos waterways
through experimental tools and collective engagement.
“It is more than what one person or even
government can handle alone. We need to think about it collectively,” she said.
Also speaking, the Special Adviser to
the Governor on Blue Economy, Damilola Emmanuel, framed the initiative as a
multi-stakeholder model capable of supporting long-term maritime sustainability
and economic utilisation of inland waterways.
“We are very excited because government
cannot do it alone. We need the private sector, the non-profit sector, and
everyone to work together to preserve our lagoons,” Emmanuel said.
He added that the state government is
already considering expansion of the initiative across multiple water corridors
in Lagos, given the strategic importance of its extensive lagoon network to
transport, tourism, and environmental resilience.
“This is just one location, but we will
continue to support its expansion. We want it to reach every part of Lagos
because our lagoons are very extensive,” he said.
The one-week programme, running from
April 26 to May 2, 2026, between 12:00pm and 6:00pm daily, is being held at the
Five Cowries Creek Terminal, Falomo, Ikoyi, and is expected to serve as a pilot
for broader replication.
Developed through a collaboration
involving LASEPA, Iranti Press, and A Whitespace Creative Arts Foundation, the
project underscores a growing policy direction in Lagos that links
environmental protection with economic sustainability under the blue economy
framework.
Industry observers note that beyond its
advocacy value, the initiative reflects an emerging recognition that
sustainable management of Lagos’ waterways—critical to coastal trade,
fisheries, and urban transport, will depend not only on regulation but also on
sustained public engagement and behavioural change.







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