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CNN: Lagos Battling Floods, Rising Seas; Soon Unlivable Experts Warn by KRSWon: 8:27am On Aug 23, 2021
Lagos, Nigeria (CNN) - Cars and houses submerged in water, commuters wading through buses knee-high in floods, and homeowners counting the cost of destroyed properties.

Welcome to Lagos during rainy season.

Residents of Nigeria, Africa's most populous nation, are used to the yearly floods that engulf the coastal city during the months of March to November. In mid-July, however, the major business district of Lagos Island experienced one of its worst floods in recent years.

"It was very bad, and unusual," Eselebor Oseluonamhen, 32 told CNN.

"I drove out of my house ... I didn't realize it had rained so much ... There was heavy traffic on my route because of the flood. The more we went, the higher the water level. The water kept rising until it covered the bumper of my car ... then there was water flowing inside my car," Oseluonamhen, who runs a media firm on the Lagos mainland, recalled.

Photos and videos posted to social media showed dozens of vehicles inundated with water after torrential rain. The floods paralyze economic activity, at an estimated cost of around $4 billion per year.

Home to more than 24 million people, Lagos, a low-lying city on Nigeria's Atlantic coast, may become uninhabitable by the end of this century as sea levels rise due to climate change, scientific projections suggest.

The problem is exacerbated by "inadequate and poorly maintained drainage systems and uncontrolled urban growth," among others, according to a study led by the Institute of Development Studies.

Nigeria's hydrological agency NIHSA has predicted more catastrophic flooding in September, usually the peak of the rainy season.

Eroding coastline

Lagos is partly built on the mainland and a string of islands.

It is grappling with an eroding coastline that makes the city vulnerable to flooding, which Nigerian environmentalist Seyifunmi Adebote says is attributable to global warming and "human-induced action over a prolonged period."

Sand mining for construction is a major contributor to shoreline erosion in Lagos, environmental experts have said.

Manzo Ezekiel, a spokesman for Nigeria's emergency management agency (NEMA), told CNN that the riverbank of Lagos' Victoria Island is already being "washed away ... particularly in the V.I area of Lagos." "There's this problem of the river bank being washed away. The increase in water level is eating into the land," Ezekiel added.


A cargo ship passes along a waterway during construction at the Eko Atlantic city site in February 2016.

In Victoria Island, an affluent Lagos neighborhood -- an entirely new coastal city christened 'Eko Atlantic' -- is being built on land reclaimed from the Atlantic Ocean, and will be protected from rising waters by an 8-kilometer-long wall made from concrete blocks, developers say.

Other critics have argued that adjacent areas not protected by the wall will be left vulnerable to tidal surges. CNN has contacted Eko Atlantic for comment.

Coastal cities at risk of being submerged

Low-lying coastal cities in some parts of the world may be permanently submerged by 2100, one study's findings showed. The study published by research group Climate Central stated that affected areas could sink below the high-tide line if sea levels continue to rise.

"As a result of heat-trapping pollution from human activities, rising sea levels could within three decades push chronic floods higher than land currently home to 300 million people," the study said. "By 2100, areas now home to 200 million people could fall permanently below the high tide line," it added.

Global sea levels have been predicted to rise more than 6 feet (2 meters) by the end of this century.

This leaves Lagos, which experts say is less than two meters above sea, in a precarious state, given that a chunk of Nigeria's coastline is low-lying. In a study from 2012, the UK's University of Plymouth found that a sea-level rise of just 3 to 9 feet (about 1 to 3 meters) "will have a catastrophic effect on the human activities" in Nigerian coastal environments.

Adebote told CNN that Lagos' fate "would depend on how we prioritize this science prediction and what corresponding actions we take as a response." "It is only a matter of time before nature pushes back and this could be a disaster," he added.

Nigeria deadly floods

Perennial flooding in Nigeria's coastal areas has left many dead and scores displaced. According to NEMA data, more than 2 million people were directly affected by flooding in 2020.

At least 69 people lost their lives in flood disasters last year. In 2019, more than 200,000 people were affected by floods with 158 fatalities.

"Every year we witness flooding in Nigeria. It is a problem that climate change has brought and we are living with it," Ezekiel told CNN.


A man in Lagos wades through the aftermath of a heavy downpour in 2012.

Beyond Lagos' vulnerability to climate change, poor drainage systems and clogged street gutters in large swathes of the city are believed to have escalated its flooding challenges.

"As much as climate change plays a part in rising sea levels, what you can see in this video is predominantly a drainage system issue," a social media user tweeted while reacting to a video of the recent flooding in Lagos.

However, as flooding rages in some areas, low-income neighborhoods constructed on reclaimed wetlands have to contend with sinking buildings.

Keeping Lagos afloat

Adebote told CNN that for Lagos to stay afloat in the face of floods and rising sea levels, it must adapt to climate change.

"We need to look at our infrastructures -- drainage systems, waste management facilities, housing structures ... How resilient and adaptive are these infrastructures in the face of environmental pressures and when put side-by-side with our growing population?" he said.


An aerial view of Lagos Island in Lagos, the commercial capital of Nigeria, in April 2016.

Authorities in Lagos have since commenced the clearing of the state's water channels to mitigate perennial flooding.

Nigeria's President Muhammadu Buhari has also expressed the country's willingness to partner with global allies in tackling climate change.

"We look forward working with President [Joe] Biden and Vice President [Kamala] Harris. We have great hope and optimism for the strengthening of existing cordial relationships, working together to tackle global terrorism, climate change, poverty, and to improve economic ties and trade," Buhari wrote in a January tweet.

But Adebote remarks that government responses to climate action "have been largely poor."

"There is a lot that must be done and will take consistent and deliberate actions on the parts of various stakeholders for Nigeria to properly take climate actions, especially in adapting to the impacts that are already threatening our livelihood," he added.

An environmental activist, Olumide Idowu, urged government authorities to partner with the private sector in order to boost funds to tackle the issues.

"Government should look at private sector partnerships in order for them to drive climate finance to solve the flooding issues," Idowu told CNN.

Nigeria's economy has struggled in recent years, shrinking financing for climate change and other critical sectors. Authorities are nonetheless still pledging to ramp up the country's climate change response.

Last month, Nigeria's Ministry of Environment announced a presidential approval for a revamped national policy on climate change, aimed at addressing "most, if not all, of the challenges posed by climate change and climate vulnerability in the country," a spokesman for the ministry wrote in Twitter post.


https://edition.cnn.com/2021/08/01/africa/lagos-sinking-floods-climate-change-intl-cmd/index.html
Re: CNN: Lagos Battling Floods, Rising Seas; Soon Unlivable Experts Warn by 143WaZoBia: 8:36am On Aug 23, 2021
Which Lagos? So why’s all the pictures from 2012 to 2016?

1 Like

Re: CNN: Lagos Battling Floods, Rising Seas; Soon Unlivable Experts Warn by bobowaja(m): 8:38am On Aug 23, 2021
CNN should face US that is getting washed away by the day and getting burnt by the night.

Na so them predict massive death for African countries during Corona only for they themselves to be dying like flies in their thousands.

Jokers.

4 Likes

Re: CNN: Lagos Battling Floods, Rising Seas; Soon Unlivable Experts Warn by techwaya: 8:39am On Aug 23, 2021
By 2050 i forsee obigbo Rivers state having a coastline,imo River may portharcourt may disappear.
Re: CNN: Lagos Battling Floods, Rising Seas; Soon Unlivable Experts Warn by Racoon(m): 8:44am On Aug 23, 2021
Climate change is affecting everywhere but most Nigeria's disasters are man-made.
Re: CNN: Lagos Battling Floods, Rising Seas; Soon Unlivable Experts Warn by joyandfaith: 8:45am On Aug 23, 2021
bobowaja:
CNN should face US that is getting washed away by the day and getting burnt by the night.

Na so them predict massive death for African countries during Corona only for they themselves to be dying like flies in their thousands.

Jokers.


Global warming is really. Atlantic city and islands will be submerged. Many lagosians will become refugees.
Re: CNN: Lagos Battling Floods, Rising Seas; Soon Unlivable Experts Warn by bobowaja(m): 8:48am On Aug 23, 2021
techwaya:
By 2050 i forsee obigbo Rivers state having a coastline,imo River may portharcourt may disappear.
See this one. In your dreams will portharcourt disappear. You guys wish evil on to others so that u can reap from it.
Re: CNN: Lagos Battling Floods, Rising Seas; Soon Unlivable Experts Warn by JavaScript90: 8:50am On Aug 23, 2021
Not good
Re: CNN: Lagos Battling Floods, Rising Seas; Soon Unlivable Experts Warn by techwaya: 8:50am On Aug 23, 2021
bobowaja:

See this one. In your dreams will portharcourt disappear. You guys wish evil on to others so that u can reap from it.

Argue with nature not me,na me dey increase Sea level?
Re: CNN: Lagos Battling Floods, Rising Seas; Soon Unlivable Experts Warn by bobowaja(m): 8:50am On Aug 23, 2021
joyandfaith:



Global warming is really. Atlantic city and islands will be submerged. Many lagosians will become refugees.
I am sure you saw where it was written that the Atlantic city is above 8km. Money was spent there. Las Las the surge will be diverted to other less fortunate regions. Maybe to other coastal countries or eastern side of the country. These are what money could afford and the richer states always spend.

1 Like

Re: CNN: Lagos Battling Floods, Rising Seas; Soon Unlivable Experts Warn by bobowaja(m): 8:52am On Aug 23, 2021
techwaya:


Argue with nature not me,na me dey increase Sea level?
So u re wishing portharcourt could submerge so that eastern states can have access to the ocean cheesy

You will wait till eternity.

1 Like

Re: CNN: Lagos Battling Floods, Rising Seas; Soon Unlivable Experts Warn by bobowaja(m): 8:52am On Aug 23, 2021
Africa this, Africa that, and the whites themselves are getting hit by the natural disasters. The torrent of waters that hit Europe and America this year alone is enough to create an academic school on. Even their hinterlands that was away from ocean was heavily flooded. The CNN was blind to all that, na Nigeria and Lagos be their headaches.

1 Like

Re: CNN: Lagos Battling Floods, Rising Seas; Soon Unlivable Experts Warn by techwaya: 8:53am On Aug 23, 2021
bobowaja:

So u re wishing portharcourt could submerge so that eastern states can have access to the ocean cheesy

You will wait till eternity.

So you don't believe that is a possibility?what are you going to do about the increase in water level as a result of melting icecaps and glaciers in the north pole?
Anyway it's good you acknowledged that obigbo is Igboland,
Re: CNN: Lagos Battling Floods, Rising Seas; Soon Unlivable Experts Warn by bobowaja(m): 8:58am On Aug 23, 2021
techwaya:


So you don't believe that is a possibility?what are you going to do about the increase in water level as a result of melting icecaps and glaciers in the north pole?
Anyway it's good you acknowledged that obigbo is Igboland,
For Lagos and portharcourt to submerge. The whole world will first go underwater. The west peddling it are more closer to the polar caps. None of them will survive it before the surge reaches Africa coasts.

And about obigbo, I wonder how u managed to bring that in. I am less concerned if it is igboland or not.
Re: CNN: Lagos Battling Floods, Rising Seas; Soon Unlivable Experts Warn by yanabasee2: 9:02am On Aug 23, 2021
Ok ..
Re: CNN: Lagos Battling Floods, Rising Seas; Soon Unlivable Experts Warn by chatinent: 9:15am On Aug 23, 2021
It's already unlivable.
Re: CNN: Lagos Battling Floods, Rising Seas; Soon Unlivable Experts Warn by SmartPolician: 10:12am On Aug 23, 2021
Yet people are investing billions of dollars in Eko Atlanta. People dey try oh.
Re: CNN: Lagos Battling Floods, Rising Seas; Soon Unlivable Experts Warn by Lilgabby(m): 11:39am On Aug 23, 2021
And the leader of the goddess said, "we will let them build their houses and have each rest of mind of their homes. And when the times comes ...we will besiege the whole island ... We would trap everyone and even the most biggest and popular of the people will not escape our wrath. They keep shifting our lands far far distance like we do not exist bcause of their greeds and power. Time will come, we will rise like a tornado �️ and surround the whole island. The world will shake at it. Time is near" ....that was how i woke up. This is nt the first time its happening. Lets pray. Government keep shifting this water away and drying most of tthe parts turning them into lands. The day this water will rise back to its position. It will shamble everything that get its way and it will be one of this largest tsunami ever sighted. Take note of my words.
I'M THE UNKNOWN!!!!
Re: CNN: Lagos Battling Floods, Rising Seas; Soon Unlivable Experts Warn by ShobayoEmma(m): 11:45am On Aug 23, 2021
This is not a prophesy of doom but prophesy of action. if nothing is done to mitigate it, it will happen and it's effects unfortunately will be felt by both that believe and otherwise
Re: CNN: Lagos Battling Floods, Rising Seas; Soon Unlivable Experts Warn by obi4eze(m): 12:10pm On Aug 23, 2021
Shebi the politicians will rest when Lagos becomes unlivable.
I just pity the masses who keep supporting people that will use your money to enrich themselves, not caring about your future and that of your children.
Re: CNN: Lagos Battling Floods, Rising Seas; Soon Unlivable Experts Warn by billynoni(m): 1:14pm On Aug 23, 2021
A wise Lagosian should be building mansion, in his/her village right now... Incase things sup.
Re: CNN: Lagos Battling Floods, Rising Seas; Soon Unlivable Experts Warn by Reeses: 2:11pm On Aug 23, 2021
billynoni:
A wise Lagosian should be building mansion, in his/her village right now... Incase things sup.
Most Lagosian have no village.
Re: CNN: Lagos Battling Floods, Rising Seas; Soon Unlivable Experts Warn by christistruth01: 2:20pm On Aug 23, 2021
They said the same about the Netherlands 100 years ago


Flood Walls can be built to protect against the Sea like was done in Netherlands and New Orleans
Re: CNN: Lagos Battling Floods, Rising Seas; Soon Unlivable Experts Warn by billynoni(m): 2:23pm On Aug 23, 2021
Reeses:
Most Lagosian have no village.
I promise you, they do.

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