Monday, 17 September 2018

The Conversation/Sally Brown: African countries aren’t doing enough to prepare for rising sea levels

The Conversation

    Edition:

Available editions
Africa

    Job Board

    Become an author
    Sign up as a reader
    Sign in

The Conversation
Academic rigour, journalistic flair

    Arts + Culture
    Business + Economy
    Education
    Environment + Energy
    Health + Medicine
    Politics + Society
    Science + Technology
    In French

African countries aren’t doing enough to prepare for rising sea levels
September 16, 2018 8.29am SAST
Author

    Sally Brown

    Senior Research Fellow, University of Southampton

Disclosure statement

Sally Brown does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.
Partners

University of Southampton

University of Southampton provides funding as a member of The Conversation UK.

The Conversation is funded by the National Research Foundation, eight universities, including the Cape Peninsula University of Technology, Rhodes University, Stellenbosch University and the Universities of Cape Town, Johannesburg, Kwa-Zulu Natal, Pretoria, and South Africa. It is hosted by the Universities of the Witwatersrand and Western Cape, the African Population and Health Research Centre and the Nigerian Academy of Science. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is a Strategic Partner. more
Republish this article

Republish
Republish our articles for free, online or in print, under Creative Commons licence.
One African city trying to manage rising sea levels is Cape Town. Shutterstock/Denis Mironov

    Email
    Twitter8
    Facebook1
    LinkedIn
    Print

Sea levels are rising around the world. In the last quarter century, on the north-eastern African coastline, sea levels have risen by as much as 12cm. The future looks even more worrying.

Some of the more optimistic global climate change projections, which consider a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions, indicate that sea levels could rise to 0.40m by 2100. But if we don’t reduce emissions enough, sea levels could rise to 0.78m by 2100. This scenario could pan out if countries don’t reduce their carbon emissions. High emissions mean increasing global temperatures, which causes seawater to expand and ice over land to melt – both of which can cause a rise in sea level.

Sea level rise is inevitable. Some countries are already considering – or taking – action. Many parts of the African coastline are an unfortunate exception. These areas are at risk of being left behind in the adaption trend.

I found this through my own research in which I assessed the impact of sea level rise, including damage costs and the number of people that could be flooded in the future around the African coast.

All coastal nations will be affected – that’s a total of 50 African countries and surrounding islands. But those that are very low-lying risk being hit the hardest. They face increased flooding, erosion, groundwater salinisation on agricultural land, as well as reduced tourism and economic activity.

Despite these risks, limited action is being taken. Many African countries have more immediate issues and are understandably less concerned by something that may not affect them for many decades.
Huge investment

In our research, we found that the impact of rising sea levels could be reduced by adapting the coastline and infrastructure. This includes building dikes to reduce flooding, and adding sand to beaches to reduce erosion. This could cut damage costs in half by 2100.

But these measures require substantial investment. It would require billions of dollars to provide better protection today. Costs would continue to increase in the future as sea levels rise and populations and cities grow. The number of people affected is projected to be high, unless they adapt. This is particularly true in countries such as Egypt or Mozambique whose populated coastlines are low-lying or prone to storms.

But many African countries don’t have the available funds and have more immediate poverty challenges, so they need to look to international climate funds to help. Although the costs of protection are high, the costs of inaction are even greater.
Population growth

Another challenge in addressing future sea level rise is population growth.

In 2000, 54.2 million people on the continent lived in low elevation coastal zones –- typically land which is less than 10m of elevation above sea level. Experts project that by 2030, this number could have doubled to between 109 and 118 million people.

Currently, 85% of those living in low elevation coastal zones live in urban areas. Planning, particularly for urban areas where populations are expected to grow the most, is therefore needed. One reason why this is slow to happen is that there is a lack of basic local data and guidance to indicate how sea levels will rise how coasts will change, and when and what the consequences may be.
Affecting livelihoods

Managing the coast is also challenging when livelihoods depend on it.

For instance around Ghana’s capital Accra and the wider Volta delta, sand mining on the coast is common. Selling sand to the building trade is big business and provides many people with a living.

But sand is a valuable resource when it comes to protecting the environment. It stops the wave buffering the land and reduces flooding by providing a barrier between land and sea. Without sand, the effects of sea level rise would be worse.

Similarly, those living in the Nile Delta, Egypt will need to adapt to a changing coastline. One suggestion was for communities to move away from the coast. But resettlement isn’t viewed positively as it would affect people’s livelihoods.
Future planning

One city that is trying to manage its present and future sea level rise is Cape Town in South Africa.

Over a period of almost 30 years, the rate of residential and commercial developments in Cape Town doubled. Seeing problems of infrastructure loss and damage due to erosion and flooding today, the municipal government knew this would worsen as sea levels rise. As a result it was trying to establish a coastal set-back line, where development of new infrastructure is prohibited on the seaward side.

This proved difficult to develop because the threat isn’t immediately obvious, and other issues are at play. The coast provides multiple amenities and resources, and when these are not perceived to be under threat, people may not realise a “do nothing” approach may be a bigger threat overall in years to come.

Addressing sea level rise is challenging. Even basic recommendations to reduce risk are difficult to reinforce as more fundamental development, social and sustainability issues also need to be considered.

    Emissions
    Africa
    Global warming
    Climate change adaptation
    coastline
    Rising sea levels

    Tweet
    Share
    Get newsletter

You might also like
Google searches reveal where people are most concerned about climate change
Key internet connections and locations at risk from rising seas
Lessons from cities that plan for their rivers
Climate change: we need to start moving people away from some coastal areas, warns scientist
Sign in to comment
8 Comments
Oldest Newest

Show all comments
Most popular on The Conversation

    South Africa’s Blombos cave is home to the earliest drawing by a human
    Namibian genocide victims’ remains are home. But Germany still has work to do
    African countries aren’t doing enough to prepare for rising sea levels
    South Africa won’t become less violent until it’s more equal
    Why NASA chose Senegal to find out more about an asteroid in outerspace

    Why Botswana is no longer a safe haven for elephants
    What would it mean to decolonise palaeontology? Here are some ideas
    ‘Fake food’ in South Africa: myths, misinformation and not enough data
    People across Africa have to travel far to get to a hospital. We worked out how far
    Why aid workers, particularly local ones, need better protection

Expert Database

    Find experts with knowledge in:*

Want to write?

Write an article and join a growing community of more than 72,600 academics and researchers from 2,514 institutions.

Register now
The Conversation
Community

    Community standards
    Republishing guidelines
    Research and Expert Database
    Analytics
    Job Board
    Our feeds

Company

    Who we are
    Our charter
    Our team
    Partners and funders
    Contributing institutions
    Resource for media
    Contact us

Stay informed and subscribe to our free daily newsletter and get the latest analysis and commentary directly in your inbox.
Email address
Follow us on social media

Privacy policy Terms and conditions Corrections

Copyright © 2010–2018, The Conversation Africa, Inc.

No comments: