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| January, 2010
Volume 35, Issue 1
MARIN
COUNTY'S NEWS MONTHLY - FREE PRESS
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Africa: Dying, Drying, And Disappearing By Paul Virgo
ROME - Lake Chad was bigger than Israel less than 50 years
ago. Today its surface area is les than a tenth of its earlier size,
amid forecasts the lake could disappear altogether within 20 years. __
Climate change and overuse have put one of Africa's mightiest lakes in
mortal danger, and the livelihoods of the 30 million people who depend
on its waters is hanging by a thread as a result.
Climate change and overuse have put one of Africa's mightiest lakes in
mortal danger, and the livelihoods of the 30 million people who depend
on its waters is hanging by a thread as a result. (AFP/File/Simon Maina)
An unprecedented crisis is looming that would create fresh hunger in a
region already suffering grave food insecurity, and pose a massive
threat to peace and stability, experts say. "If
Lake Chad dries up, 30 million people will have no means of a
livelihood, and that is a big security problem because of growing
competition for smaller quantities of water," Dr Abdullahi Umar
Ganduje, executive secretary of the Lake Chad Basin Commission (LCBC)
tells IPS in Rome. "Poverty and hunger will increase. When there is no food to eat, there is bound to be violence."
The lake, which shrank 90 percent between 1963 and 2001 from 25,000
square kilometers to under 1,500, is bordered by Chad, Niger, Cameroon
and Nigeria. Four more countries, the Central African
Republic, Algeria, Sudan and Libya, share the lake's hydrological basin
and are therefore affected by its fortunes. " Lake
Chad has experienced shrinkage," Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi said at
November's World Food Security Summit at the United Nations Food and
Agriculture Organization (FAO) in Rome. "If it dries up, it will be a
real disaster. I want to warn the world about this imminent disaster."
That disaster has already started. Villages that used to be thriving
lakeside ports are now stranded miles from the water, and have been
swallowed by the advancing Sahara desert. Fishers and farmers are
struggling to survive. "The dramatic situation is
already taking place," Maher Salman, a technical officer with FAO's
land and water division tells IPS. "It's clear that the consequences
have started. There is outward migration. People are looking for water,
so they leave the basin area." Fishers have seen
once massive catches frequently reduced to half-filled buckets. The FAO
says the lake's fish production has fallen 60 percent, and the variety
of fish caught has dramatically declined too.
Farmers who rely on lake waters for irrigation have to move nearer to
the water or abandon their activities. Lack of water has caused pasture
lands to shrivel up and led to a serious shortage of animal feed,
estimated at 46.5 percent in some areas in 2006, resulting in cattle
deaths and plummeting livestock production. This
is the sort of situation former World Bank vice-president Ismail
Serageldin was worried about in 1995 when he said that "the wars of the
20th century were fought over oil, and the wars of the next century
will be about water" - a view echoed in reports by several
organizations including the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency.
While some experts remain skeptical about the prospect of all-out wars
being fought over water, there have been numerous reports of clashes
between farmers and herds-people competing for productive land in the
Lake Chad area. Biodiversity too has been hit by the lake's retreat. So has the region's health situation.
"Due to the movement of people looking for food there is a high level
of interaction, which complicates matters because of the high
prevalence of HIV among Lake Chad inhabitants," says Ganduje. "The
African Development Bank has come to our aid, and we are tackling this."
Little can be done at the regional level about climate change, which is
attacking the lake on two fronts - reducing the rainfall that feeds it,
and accelerating evaporation of its waters due to higher temperatures.
Its shallowness for such a major water body makes it particularly
vulnerable to these attacks. It is a grim
situation, but not a hopeless one. The other half of the problem,
over-extraction, can be tackled locally. "We are
optimistic," says Ganduje. "We are regulating the use of Lake Chad
water. We are drawing up a charter so everyone has common rules and
regulations in the use of water. "We are also
controlling activities on the tributaries to Lake Chad, such as the
construction of dams and irrigation activities. We are controlling
human behaviour in response to other factors that are outside of our
control." This confidence is justified in part by growing understanding of the need for a response.
"There is recognition of the need for new management strategies to be
put into place," says Salman. "The most common conclusion of studies on
the lake's shrinkage is that it is due to both human pressure on water
resources and on climate change. A solution should be possible.
"There needs to be optimum use of the waters in each sector, up-scaling
water conservation and small-scale agricultural technologies for more
efficient irrigation. Awareness about use of the waters is important as
well, so people cut down." The LCBC also has high hopes
of an ambitious plan to replenish the lake to its 1960s levels by
diverting water from the Oubangui River, which is the major tributary
to the Congo River. "The feasibility study has started
and a fund has been set up," says Ganduje. "The heads of state are
confident of progress. If the feasibility study is positive, we believe
we have the political support required." The FAO
says it does not have a position on whether the transfer project should
go ahead, although it has called for very careful consideration of its
impact, including that on the Congo River system. What it views as key
is the presentation of concrete plans to save the lake, so donors can
be badgered into committing to a cause that is crucial to millions of
people. "There is a strategic action plan for the
sustainable development of Lake Chad, but to translate that into action
we need an investment plan," says Salman. "We need more meetings of
donors to get them to commit and make good those commitments through
investment. The good news is that there is a consensus on the need for
action."
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