CEIA — Certified Environmental Impact Assessment Practitioner (CEIA)

★ Why this certification was added

EIA is a legal requirement for development projects in Nigeria, across Africa, and globally — covering infrastructure, agriculture, mining, oil and gas, and urban development. Every EIA requires trained practitioners who can assess environmental and social impacts, design mitigation measures, and produce compliant reports. This is directly relevant to the lead consultant’s CGIAR context (agricultural development, pest management, land use) and to the company’s growing development sector client base. Expert instructors are available to deliver this to professional standard.

“Protect the environment. Enable development. Master the balance.”

A rigorous Environmental Impact Assessment certification covering EIA law and regulation, scoping and screening, baseline environmental surveys, impact prediction and significance evaluation, Environmental Management Plans, social impact assessment, stakeholder engagement, and EIA report writing — aligned to Nigerian NESREA standards, World Bank Environmental and Social Framework, and IAIA best practice.

Programme Details Information
Level
University & Professional
Audience
Environmental scientists, agricultural researchers, civil engineers, urban planners, oil and gas professionals, mining sector staff, government environmental officers, NGO staff, and development consultants
Standards
Nigerian NESREA EIA Regulations · World Bank Environmental and Social Framework (ESF) · IAIA Best Practice Principles · IFC Performance Standards · UNEP EIA Guidelines · African Development Bank Integrated Safeguards System · ISO 14001 Environmental Management
Duration
6 months
Format
Self-paced · Live instructor-led · Cohort-based · Blended
Assessment
Proctored online examination (minimum 75%) + EIA scoping document or executive summary EIA report for a defined project scenario
Certificate
CEIA Certificate — Ukeh-Adah Alliance Services Ltd

Course modules

What is EIA? Definition, purpose, and history — from NEPA 1969 to global adoption · EIA in Nigeria: NESREA Act, EIA Decree 86 of 1992, and regulatory procedures · EIA globally: World Bank ESF, IFC Performance Standards, African Development Bank safeguards · Types of assessment: EIA, Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA), and ESIA · Screening: determining whether a project requires full EIA, limited EIA, or exemption · The EIA process: screening, scoping, baseline surveys, impact assessment, mitigation, monitoring, reporting · IAIA best practice principles: participation, accountability, transparency, and credibility · Stakeholder roles: proponents, competent authorities, technical specialists, communities

 

Module 2: Scoping & Terms of Reference | Outcomes: Conduct a structured scoping process and identify key environmental and social issues · Produce a Terms of Reference document for a field EIA assignment

What is scoping? Purpose, participants, and the scoping process · Identifying key environmental and social issues: air, water, soil, biodiversity, people · Spatial and temporal scope: defining the study area and time horizon · Alternatives analysis: comparing project designs and siting options · Terms of Reference (ToR): structure, content, and regulatory requirements in Nigeria · Scoping methods: checklists, matrices, expert judgement, and public meetings · Free, Prior, and Informed Consent (FPIC): principles and process · Hands-on lab: produce a scoping checklist and draft ToR for a sample agricultural project

Module 3: Baseline Environmental Surveys | Outcomes: Design a comprehensive environmental and socioeconomic baseline survey · Use GIS to map sensitive environmental receptors and produce baseline condition maps

Air quality baseline: meteorological data, ambient monitoring, and pollution sources · Water quality baseline: surface water and groundwater sampling parameters and standards · Soil and land: sampling, land use mapping, contamination screening · Biodiversity baseline: vegetation surveys, wildlife assessment, and protected species · Noise and vibration: baseline survey methods, equipment, and standards · Socioeconomic baseline: livelihoods, health, cultural heritage, and gender · Community health baseline: disease prevalence, WASH access, and health facilities · GIS in baseline surveys: mapping sensitive receptors, habitats, and land use · Hands-on lab: design a baseline survey plan using GIS and survey methods

 

Module 4: Impact Prediction, Significance & Mitigation | Outcomes: Predict and evaluate impact significance using matrices and criteria · Design an Environmental Management Plan with mitigation hierarchy and monitoring

Types of impacts: direct, indirect, cumulative, transboundary, and long-term · Impact prediction methods: quantitative modelling, expert judgement, and matrices · Leopold matrix: construction, rating, and limitations · Significance evaluation: magnitude, sensitivity, reversibility, duration, and probability · Mitigation hierarchy: avoid, minimise, restore, offset — applying in practice · Environmental Management Plans (EMP): structure, content, and legal requirements · Monitoring and compliance: designing an environmental monitoring programme · Cumulative impact assessment: combined effects of multiple projects · Social impact assessment (SIA): impacts on communities, livelihoods, and cultural heritage

Module 5: Climate Change & Environmental Justice in EIA | Outcomes: Conduct a GHG carbon footprint assessment and climate vulnerability screening for an EIA project · Integrate climate adaptation and mitigation measures into an Environmental Management Plan

Why climate change is now mandatory in EIA: Paris Agreement, NESREA, and World Bank ESF requirements · Climate screening: determining if a project contributes to or is affected by climate change · Greenhouse Gas (GHG) assessment: estimating project carbon footprint — Scope 1, 2, and 3 emissions · Climate vulnerability assessment: identifying climate-related risks to project infrastructure and communities · Climate adaptation measures: incorporating climate resilience into project design and the EMP · Climate mitigation measures: reducing emissions through technology choice and operational design · Just transition and climate justice: ensuring climate measures do not disproportionately burden vulnerable communities · IPCC climate scenarios: using RCP and SSP pathways to project future climate conditions for EIA · Carbon offsetting and nature-based solutions: when and how to use them in development projects · Climate change and biodiversity: compounding ecosystem impacts and resilience considerations · Writing the climate change chapter in an EIA report: required structure, evidence, and disclosures · Hands-on lab: conduct a GHG screening and climate vulnerability assessment for a sample project

 

Module 6: Stakeholder Engagement & Public Participation | Outcomes: Design and conduct stakeholder engagement meeting IAIA and World Bank standards · Produce a consultation report and non-technical summary for an EIA project

Why stakeholder engagement is central to EIA quality and legitimacy · Identifying stakeholders: mapping affected communities, government, and civil society · Public participation methods: community meetings, FGDs, questionnaires, and online · FPIC: principles, process, and documentation requirements · Vulnerable groups: ensuring inclusion of women, youth, elderly, and marginalised · Grievance mechanisms: designing a fair, accessible project grievance system · Documenting engagement: consultation reports, attendance registers, issues log · Non-technical summaries: communicating EIA findings to affected communities · Gender and social inclusion: mainstreaming gender throughout the EIA process

 

Module 7: EIA Report Writing, Review & Capstone | Outcomes: Write a complete EIA report to NESREA and World Bank ESF standards · Review an EIA document critically using standard review criteria

EIA report structure: all required sections — non-technical summary to appendices · Writing the project description: location, design, construction, operation, decommissioning · Writing the environmental baseline: presenting survey data clearly · Writing the impact assessment: linking activities, receptors, impacts, significance, mitigation · Writing the EMP: measures, responsible parties, timelines, and indicators · Writing the monitoring plan: parameters, frequency, methods, and reporting · EIA review criteria: NESREA review process and World Bank quality check framework · Common weaknesses in EIAs: what reviewers look for and how to avoid rejection · Post-EIA monitoring: environmental compliance and adaptive management · Capstone: produce a complete EIA scoping document or executive summary EIA report for a project scenario of your choice

 

Outcomes

Conduct a complete EIA process from screening to report writing to NESREA and World Bank standards · Design baseline surveys, impact matrices, and Environmental Management Plans · Engage stakeholders using IAIA best practice, FPIC principles, and inclusive approaches · Apply the mitigation hierarchy across environmental and social impact categories · Produce professional EIA scoping documents, ToRs, EMPs, and final EIA reports · Achieve a credential aligned to NESREA, World Bank ESF, IFC Performance Standards, and IAIA

 

Certification requirement

Complete all 7 modules, pass a proctored examination (minimum 75%), submit a complete EIA scoping document or executive summary EIA report for a project scenario, and submit a GHG screening and climate vulnerability assessment exercise.

 

Career pathways

Environmental Impact Assessment Practitioner, Environmental Consultant, Environmental Officer (Government/NGO), EIA Reviewer, Environmental Compliance Officer, Social and Environmental Safeguards Specialist, Development Project Advisor. Average starting salary: $40,000–$80,000 USD.

 

How to request personalised agricultural economics tool training

Step 1

Tell us your tool and context — what organisation are you with, what project, what dataset, what analytical purpose?

Step 2

We assess your request within 24 hours — Dr. Emmanuel Augustine Uke personally reviews all agricultural economics tool requests given his direct CGIAR field experience.

Step 3

A bespoke training plan is prepared — covering exactly the features, workflows, and outputs you need for your specific project.

Step 4

Training delivered one-on-one or in a small team — on your data, your research questions, and at your pace.

Step 5

Certificate of Tool Training issued on completion.

“From Kano State to Benue, from IITA to your lab — we know agricultural data and we will train you in your tools.”

“Enrol Now — Join Thousands of Students and Researchers Worldwide”

“Get Certified. Build Skills. Change Your Future.”

IITA-CGIAR Research Fellow · CAC Registered · Over 15 Years of Excellence · Globally Recognised Certificates