Climate change, sea level rise and coastal inundation along part of Nigeria Barrier Lagoon Coast

The phenomenon of ocean surges and other morphological processes along the Lagos coastline have generated serious public concern on the vulnerability of infrastructures and coastal services along the entire stretch of the Barrier-Lagoon coastline of Lagos State. This study examines Badagry coastal e...

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Published inJournal of Applied Sciences and Environmental Management Vol. 18; no. 1; p. 41
Main Authors ODUNGA, SHAKIRUDEEN, BADRU, GBOLAHAN, BELLO, OLALEKAN MUMIN
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Nigeria World Bank assisted National Agricultural Research Project (NARP) - University of Port Harcourt 01.03.2014
Dr. Michael Horsfall Jnr, University of Port Harcourt, Department of Pure and Industrial Chemistry
Joint Coordination Centre of the World Bank assisted National Agricultural Research Programme (NARP)
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Summary:The phenomenon of ocean surges and other morphological processes along the Lagos coastline have generated serious public concern on the vulnerability of infrastructures and coastal services along the entire stretch of the Barrier-Lagoon coastline of Lagos State. This study examines Badagry coastal environment inundations that arise from sea level rise. The study uses an iterative GIS-based simulation that mapped area inundated based on Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change - Special Report on Emissions Scenarios (IPCC -SRES) classification (A1, A1T, B2, A1B and A2) and Locally Oriented Economic Development Scenarios (LOEDS). The results of IPCC-SRES scenario analysis show that area inundated at the high emission and worse case sea level rise is less than 0.13% of the study area while the LOEDS inundation area starts having significant impacts as from 4 meter rise in sea level. Since it is only environmental catastrophism and anthropogenic activities that can attain such serious dimension at local, regional and global scales in sea level, it is recommended that coastal protection infrastructures should be integrated in any major developmental activities.
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ISSN:1119-8362
2659-1502
1119-8362
2659-1499
DOI:10.4314/jasem.v18i1.6