Flooding: Nigerian Government Requires Over $20b to Dredge Three States

By Tunde Akanbi, Ilorin

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The Nigerian Government will require over $20 billion to carry out dredging of Rivers Niger, Benue and Kaduna to check perennial flooding in the areas.

 

The Managing Director, of the Hydroelectric Power Producing Areas Development Commission (HYPPADEC), Alhaji Abubakar Yelwa,  disclosed this while speaking at the 2023 stakeholders meeting on flood mitigation and other related issues in Ilorin, the Kwara state capital, North Central Nigeria,

 

According to him, the clamour by Nigerians for the dredging of the rivers will be difficult for the federal government to handle alone without intervention from international donor agencies.

 

The HYPPADEC boss said that the estimated cost for dredging the rivers, as in 1983 when the Federal Government asked for the cost, was $ 2 billion, adding that the cost had astronomically gone up over 10 times.

 

Yelwa who was responding to suggestions from participants at the meeting for the dredging of the rivers as part of solutions to the annual flood disaster affecting riverine communities under the commission’s areas of focus, said that the funding of the project was beyond the commission and the federal government.

 

“The dredging of Rivers Niger or Benue, as the case may be, has always been repeatedly suggested in all the places we have visited. We have visited about five states including Kwara, and almost all the states were asking for dredging.

 

“In 1983 when the former Shehu Shagari government asked for the cost of dredging of River Niger and Benue, a bill of $ 2 billion was given. That was in 1983. You can imagine the scope now, even if the dollar had remained the same, the scope would have gone up 10 times. That is why it is difficult.

 

“It is not what HYPPADEC can fund, and not even the federal government without making recourse to international organisations for intervention and that is what we are working towards to mobilise international donor agencies for intervention”.

 

To mitigate the 2023 flood prediction by the Nigerian Meteorological Agency, Yelwa said the commission would embark on afforestation programme, adding that trees would be planted in five hectares of land in each of the five local government areas in Kwara North senatorial district, being a flood-prone area of the state.

 

Also speaking, one of the civil society organizations at the event, Global Hope for Women and Children Foundation (GLOWHWOC), called for a multi-sectoral approach toward mitigating floods in Kwara state.

 

Speaking through its team lead, Christy Abayomi-Oluwole, the organization also said that the Rapid Response Team on flooding should be reviewed towards addressing challenges associated with flooding and their effects on dwellers of riverine areas.

 

Dominica Nwabufo

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