All posts by Adam Dimari

Adam Dimari is an environmental consultant who is dedicated to educating people from all works of life on the drastic effects of environmental pollution and the need to tackle them the right way.

The Environmental Impact of Climate Change on the Lake Chad Basin

Drought in Lake Chad

It seems inadequate to use poverty, hunger and suffering to describe the reality in the Lake Chad Basin. It’s noteworthy that this region in West Africa is the world’s most neglected and the worst humanitarian crisis since World War II. The populations in this region are trapped between insecurity and climate change.

Drying Lake Chad

The crisis in this region, which covers parts of Nigeria, Niger, Cameroon and Chad, has left about 11 million inhabitants in dire need of humanitarian aid.

It is absolutely devastating to behold the human face of this crisis. Many people are internally displaced and hungry. And to exacerbate the problem, civilians, especially women and girls face unspeakable levels of insecurity and violence.

Suffering in Lake Chad Basin

Civilians in that area are subjected to living with the daily threat of terrorist attacks, killings, kidnappings and rape. This crisis has displaced more than 2.4 million people, but there are not enough resources to meet the people’s most basic needs. These affected people either live in refugee or internally-displaced people’s camps, while others end up in urban centres. Without anything else to barter for daily necessities like food, sexual exploitation (a.k.a. sex-for-food) has become the order of the day, even in the camps.

The UN affirms the reality on the ground in the Lake Chad basin. This underscores the overpowering scale of this crisis, and the urgent and immediate need for humanitarian responses. In Primefield’s view, both short-term and long-term responses should be put in effect without wasting more time.

In order to find a sustainable solution to this crisis, people need to thoroughly understand the root cause of the crisis and what caused it to spiral out of control in the first place. Yes, we all know that frequent violence by armed groups like Boko Haram triggered the current crisis. However, they are not the root causes. The truth is that there have been long-standing developmental challenges, such as, decades of political marginalisation of this region’s communities and widespread inequality. The successive governments have not adequately invested in basic services like education and health care, and that has led the communities to feel left behind and alienated.

We can draw parallels to the frustrations some communities in the US felt before Trump and in the UK before Brexit, pushing them to extreme alternatives. Over time in the Lake Chad basin, the situation has implanted lack of trust and a deep sense of exclusion between the communities and the government. As if all these are not enough, the region also faces enormous environmental stress.

Droughts have become frequent and prolonged, meaning less water and arable land. The inhabitants of the Lake Chad Basin are predominantly pastoralists and farmers and they depend on Lake Chad for their survival. Less water in the lake means not only fewer jobs, but also extreme poverty.

There are increasing accounts of exacerbated tensions between fishermen, pastoralists and farmers. Joblessness and hunger make more and more young people vulnerable to recruitment by armed groups like Boko Haram. This feeds into the armed conflict with the government, which in turn contributes to displacement of people, both internally and cross-border.

Frankly speaking, climate change doesn’t convert people to terrorists, nor does it change law-abiding citizens to become criminals. But it does act as a threat multiplier, exacerbating existing risks and making it increasingly hard to work on solutions.

Food and water must be present in a stable society. The scarcity of these resources pushes people to become increasingly desperate. Imagine what young people can do, when jobs are not available. Some out of desperation opt to join armed groups, such as, Boko Haram, which promises steady salary and good food, when they recruit in fishing and farming villages.

Farmers complain of the dangers of wheat harvest season, as Boko Haram insurgents frequently raid to loot their harvest, in order to feed their soldiers. It is important to note that Boko Haram also provide basic services like education. In the absence of government-provided functioning schools and trained teachers, eager parents and children are drawn to their negative influence. Even though not everyone joins insurgency, the alternatives are still nothing to write home about. There are dangers of others drifting away into petty crime or more sinister, violent crime. In order to survive, girls and women are increasingly being pushed into prostitution.

The ongoing hunger, violence and the breakdown of law and order are not tragic coincidences. Rather, these factors are closely-related and one leads to the other and they jointly create a dangerous mix of suffering and social collapse.

Climate change can’t be ignored, while considering these factors, because it exacerbates the ugly catalysts of the crisis and fuels the fragility that has engulfed the Lake Chad Basin for years.

As both the UN, various governmental bodies and NGOs respond to the crisis, it is important to recognize that there will be a permanent resolution of the issues, only if we understand the negative effect climate change is having on these social stressors.

Any effective solution must address the underlying causes of the crisis, must be durable and sensitive to the environmental impact of climate change on the Lake Chad Basin.

Why do some fish thrive in oil-polluted water?

Science News , 26 January 2016.

 

Guppy fish in Oil water
Guppy fish in Oil water

Scientists thought guppies in Northern Trinidad could be a rare example of adaptation to crude oil pollution. But they found something else.

When scientists from McGill University learned that some fish were proliferating in rivers and ponds polluted by oil extraction in Southern Trinidad, it caught their attention. They thought they had found a rare example of a species able to adapt to crude oil pollution.

Fish Thrive in Oil water
Fish Thrive in Oil water

 

At a time when humans are imposing an unprecedented burden on the world’s ecosystems, studying how organisms can tolerate pollutants is crucial to understanding the impact of human activities — and to helping to mitigate it in the future.

Led by Dr. Gregor Rolshausen, then a postdoctoral researcher at McGill working with Prof. Andrew Hendry, the team went to study the guppy fish living in polluted areas, comparing their morphology and genetic makeup to those of similar guppies from non-polluted parts of Trinidad.

But the key to the guppies’ survival in oil-polluted waters was not what the researchers had expected. Prof. Hendry explains:

 

LAKE CHAD BASIN OUR COMMON HERITAGE

ENVIRONMENTAL DEVELOPMENT AND SUSTAINABILITY IN THE LAKE CHAD BASIN

Receding Lake
Receding Lake

 

Lake Chad Basin Commission

Lake Chad Island
LCBC Leaders

 

Introduction: The Lake Chad Basin Commission (LCBC) was established on 22nd of May 1964 by the four countries that border Lake Chad: Cameroon, Niger, Nigeria and Chad. The Republic of Central Africa joined the organization in 1996, Libya was admitted in 2008. Observer status is held by Sudan, Egypt, the Republic of Congo and the Democratic Republic of Congo and N’Djaména, Capital of Chad where the Headquarters of the Commission is situated. The mandate of the Commission is to sustainably and equitably manage the Lake Chad and other shared water resources of the Lake Chad Basin and to promote regional integration, peace and security across the Basin.

LCBC Leaders
LCBC Leaders

 

We have achieved tremendously during the 2006 Conference in Chad with the members of the Nigeria delegation on the Resuscitation of the Lake Chad Basin. Those in attendance  includes The President of Lake Chad Basin Commission (2003-2007) Hon Mohammed Umara Kumalia, the Secretary LCBC, Ministers, Parliamentarians from Member States of the LCBC, Cameroun, Niger, Chad, Nigeria, Republic of Congo and DR Congo, International Partners, Environmental organisations, Non-governmental organisations and the members of the press.  All the programmes were good and interesting  including the briefs on the international donor conference programme that would follow later. When the project is implemented it will benefit over 30 million people.

 

Lake Chad Basin

The Lake Chad is shared by Chad, Niger, Nigeria and Cameroon. It is located between 12° and 14° 20 N, 13° and 15° 20 E. The sailing area is situated at the altitude of 283 m.

frnd Lake Chad trans bordering map

 

The Lake Chad basin covers a surface area of about two million square kilometer. Which is equivalent to the Caspian Sea, which existed 600 years AC. The Lake Chad is fed by the Chari and Logone rivers.  In the western part, another tributary, the Komadogou Yobé also crosses a marshy plain. It displays three major types of landscape.

  • Many islands located in the eastern bank, which match the emerged summit of immerged erg dunes.
Lake Chad Island
Lake Chad Island

 

  • Areas of open water
  • Rooted or floating vegetation islands called bench islands (mostly Cyperus papyrus and water reeds).
Lake Chad Water weeds cover areas
Lake Chad Water weeds cover areas

 

Environmental Development and Sustainability   

The Lake Chad is progressively receding due to increase in atmospheric temperature that lasted for extended period of time (Climate Change). The environmental issues identified were the unstable of the ground water movement and fresh water availability, water pollution, ecological effects of biodiversity, and effects of biodiversity on ecosystems. sedimentation in rivers and water bodies.

Drying Lake
Drying Lake

 

The environmental effects by the receding Lake has turned millions of economically buoyant Nigerians to near abject poverty, forcing them to become refugees in neighbouring countries.

Drying sites
Drying sites

 

The Lake Chad basin was in its key-days, one of the Africa’s leading fields in the production of rice, wheat, beans, maize, potatoes, onions, dried fish and livestock, most of which were traded in Nigeria.

Chad Basin Development Authority Commercial farming Commercial farming
Chad Basin Development Authority

 

The federal government needs to take the lead in the current international efforts to save the lake, it is of strategic interest to Nigeria government for the Lake to be resuscitated because to create millions of jobs, reviving of the multi-billion naira federal government investment Chad Basin Development Authority and also for the exploration of Oil  and Gas . The neighbouring Countries have already gone far in the Oil and Gas industries tapping from the same source of the Lake Chad.

LCBC MEETING
LCBC MEETING

 

To sustain a awareness and development process by way of several different tracks requires the ability to inform with facts, to be able to inspire, and some practical engineering of mandates and budgets. It needs to be able to drive discourse at high level to inspire political interest.

Save Environment
Save the Environment

 

Environmental issues are already front and centre in Nigeria’s media eye. In recent years, the media has focused on climate change, promoting in particular the need to plant trees. The impact of Climate Change in the Lake Chad has highlighted the need for a media spotlight to put the issues to the public, to encourage debate on causes and solutions.

Laka Chad Open Water
River Congo –  Water transfer site

 

 Suggestions

A. Strategic Approach

The central issue to address is; to widen and deepen understanding of the strategic importance of the environment, across the political and institutional board, to encourage its prioritization, and to stimulate demand for further donor support for Lake Chad Basin water transfer.

B. Practical Guide to Supporting Key Drivers

The main aim is to kick-start a process for environmental awareness and strategic development, beyond what exists, to lay the foundations for re-orienting political, economic, institutional, and personal mindsets.

1.Target the University of Maiduguri, ABU, Ibadan, and Port-harcourt to build solid knowledge and data on environment and natural resources in terms of

Professionalism,Training and Development
Professionalism,Training and Development

 

  • Improved quantity and quality of water in the Lake Chad Basin
  • Restoration, conservation and sustainable use of bioresources in the Lake Chad Basin
  • Conservation of biodiversity in the Lake Chad Basin
  • Restoration and preservation of ecosystems in the Lake Chad Basin
  • Strengthened participation and capacity of stakeholders, and institutional and legal
  • frameworks for environmental stewardship for the Lake Chad Basin (all factors of production) as central to core business and profits
Lake Chad Water Transfer Project
Frameworks 

 

2. Support private sector associations to formulate the National Business Agenda vis a vis the Environment as the foundation for profits and national development.

Environmental Conservation
Environment Conservation & Preservation

 

3. Run media training workshops for conventional broadcasters and broadsheet journalists which focus on the wider importance of the environment to


Service médical à domicile de Medici Generici à Rome

Service médical à domicile de Medici Generici à Rome

Notre équipe fournit un service de soins de santé à domicile, garantissant professionnalisme et confort pour les patients à Rome.

the economy, to stability, development, and how it affects the ordinary Nigeria consumer.

Environmental Journals
Environmental Journalism

 

We sincerely appreciate the opportunity and commitment of the Nigeria delegation headed by the President Hon. Mohammed Kumalia towards the agenda of resuscitating the Lake Chad Basin by member countries and to the Friends of the Lake Chad, thank you.

Prepared by Adam Ali Dimari