Âé¶¹ÒùÔº

October 29, 2018

Ghana must move from coping with floods to adapting for them

Ghana has at least one one major flood disaster every year. Credit: chunya2009/Flickr
× close
Ghana has at least one one major flood disaster every year. Credit: chunya2009/Flickr

Ghana flood problem. Over about 50 years, 4 million people affected by floods, resulting in economic damage USD$780 million. one major flood disaster has occurred every year over the past 10 years.

Floods are not uncommon in West Africa. Rainfall variability and land use changes them increasingly common throughout the region.

In Ghana's urban areas, like Accra and Kumasi, floods are mostly triggered by poor drainage, the dumping of waste into waterways and the low of settlements. In northern Ghana, some floods are caused by from a dam in Burkina Faso.

The floods expose communities to health risks, food and .

The problem is Ghana's government currently reacts to the floods using coping strategies. These don't deal with the underlying risks, are expensive and don't consider that floods will get worse. The government must take steps towards more proactive management.

Get free science updates with Science X Daily and Weekly Newsletters — to customize your preferences!

Reactive strategies

After every flood, the country's national disaster management organisation – along with the military, police, and other emergency personnel – for rescue and emergency relief.

The government then repairs damaged infrastructure, clears waterways and properties built close to drainage channels.

The problem is this with the underlying causes of the floods, or prepare people for them. Money that could go towards future prevention is instead on perpetual cycles of recovery.

These coping strategies will get more costly because the flood is set to get worse. The amount of rainfall classified as "heavy" is to increase between 2010 and 2050, with the wet seasons projected to get wetter and the dry seasons drier.

This will be felt intensely in the urban areas as populations continue . Already, 40% of Accra is classified as "highly prone" to flooding. This will increase as, due to more building, less water into the soil.

The case for flood risk adaptation

The government needs to make the country more resilient and able to withstand the challenges posed by intense and frequent floods.

Ghana participates in a variety of adaptation programmes. Like the network and the . But this translated into action.

The government has also taken on projects to protect against floods, but these are focused on the coastal areas. For example the sea defence project.

The current greater Accra Metropolitan Area is constructing drains and culverts in Accra. But this isn't a major part of the project.

Much more needs to be done. Ghana must fully transition from coping strategies, to proactive, long-term measures. These include:

The initial cost of adaptation measures will be expensive, but it will pay off. Research for every US$1 spent on flood risk reduction, it saves at least US$4 to US$9 otherwise spent in an emergency response when disaster occurs. The Netherlands is a classic of a country that has taken flood risk adaptation seriously. A quarter of the country is below sea level and 60% of its people in flood-risk areas but the measures it has taken have reduced the likelihood of major flooding.

Ghana can take advantage of predictions and past experiences of floods to aggressively pursue risk adaptation. Failure to do this will increase disasters, and social and economic disruptions.

Provided by The Conversation

Load comments (0)

This article has been reviewed according to Science X's and . have highlighted the following attributes while ensuring the content's credibility:

Get Instant Summarized Text (GIST)

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.