By Oyo Amebo


Something remarkable has taken place across Oyo State; a transformation that goes far beyond beautification or routine sanitation.


It is a deliberate reordering of priorities where the environment is treated not as an accessory to development, but as its beating heart.


Under Governor Seyi Makinde and his Commissioner for Environment and Natural Resources, Hon. Seun Ashamu, Oyo has proved that genuine progress happens when human welfare and environmental balance advance side by side.


Hon. Ashamu, a forward-thinking technocrat, has anchored this vision on a simple yet profound belief: “When you protect nature, you protect livelihoods.”


This philosophy has turned environmental reform from a background policy into a daily reality, one that touches streets, farms, rivers, and homes.



In his hands, the environment is not just about green spaces, but about economic vitality, public health, and community pride.

For decades, Oyo was defined by recurring floods and unchecked waste, challenges that eroded confidence in urban governance.
But through targeted mapping of flood-prone zones, continuous desilting of waterways, and the restoration of natural wetlands, the state has begun to reverse years of neglect.
Areas once paralysed by seasonal flooding are now seeing the rains differently, not as a threat, but as a return of rhythm and life.
Urban sanitation, too, has witnessed a quiet revolution. The government’s cleaner city initiative now operates on accountability and participation.
Contractors are closely monitored, residents are mobilised, and every community is encouraged to take ownership of its cleanliness.
Ibadan and other major towns are beginning to wear a new look, streets clearer, air fresher, public spaces reclaimed from decay. The difference is not just visible; it is deeply felt.
Beyond the city limits, the state’s rural communities in Oke-Ogun, Ogbomoso, and Ibarapa are integrating environmental awareness into farming practices.
With government support, farmers are adopting soil protection, afforestation, and erosion control techniques that safeguard both the land and their livelihoods.
The shift is subtle but powerful, a recognition that economic survival depends on environmental care.
By treating environmental management as social investment, Oyo has made sustainability practical and profitable.
Cleaner neighbourhoods reduce disease; green belts cool the cities; protected soils yield better crops. The benefits ripple through every aspect of daily life, healthier citizens, lower costs, and a more stable ecosystem.
Ashamu’s style is methodical rather than dramatic. He focuses on structure, not slogans, on long-term systems rather than one-off gestures.
Through education clubs, community awareness programmes, and hands-on participation drives, he is nurturing a culture where every citizen understands their role as a guardian of the environment.
That cultural awakening is perhaps Oyo’s greatest triumph. Across towns and villages, residents are embracing shared responsibility, organising communal clean-ups, safeguarding drains, and holding one another to account.
The mindset has shifted from waiting for government action to acting for collective good.
The results, though often quiet, are transformative.
Flood risks are falling, cityscapes are cleaner, and the once-distant idea of environmental consciousness is becoming part of Oyo’s everyday identity.
In Oyo today, development no longer competes with the environment, it depends on it. The state’s evolving story is not just about renewal of land and water, but renewal of values.
Through steady planning and shared commitment, Oyo has shown that when people and policy work with nature, true progress begins to grow.

