Ferdinand F. O. Daminabo1,
Anthony D. Enwin
Department of Architecture
Rivers State University of Science and Technology,
Port Harcourt, Rivers State, Nigeria
E-mail: ferdydaminabo@yahoo.com;
ABSTRACT
The United Nations
Intergovernmental panel on Climate Change (IPCC) early this year warned on the
effects of Climate Change being severe globally. There are potent and new
evidences emerging from the scientific world strengthening the argument on
climate change, the impact of which is likely to be erratic and very harsh. The hydrological
systems in many countries and regions of the globe are going to be severely
affected, just as variations in precipitation or melting ice will impact on
water resources and its quality. This paper considers the potential risks of
flooding in urban centres and the extended implications on rural communities
and especially in the Niger Delta region. With most of the Niger Delta exposed
to the coasts, the issue of submergence, coastal flooding, and coastal erosion comes to the
fore because Coastal systems are
significantly sensitive to changes in sea level and ocean surge.
The Urban areas and its built assets will be exposed to massive urban or coastal
flooding and its large populations displaced due to land loss to rising sea
levels and storm surges. With Port Harcourt in sharp focus, this paper will
examine the current disposition of flooding within the urban scape, the
possible causes and also look at what mitigation factors will be necessary to
address the situation. With the IPCC report warning of grave danger to entire
ecosystems and the built environment due to climate change, and consequent
altering of hydrological systems, this paper will also consider how the fencing
of properties have exacerbated flooding of properties, roads, drainages and
water courses within the urban centre and remote locations in the face of
anticipated extreme precipitation expected to cause both inland and coastal
flooding as rivers and tributaries swell. This is based on the premise that
most urban centres hold large populations and huge economic and other physical
assets and this gives credence and justifies the need for this research to
isolate the possible risks and proffer mediatory routes to the emerging and
intractable problem.
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