The Phnom Penh Post

New Togo port sparkes erosion fears

- Raluca Besliu Lome, Togo

THE fishing village of Agebkope and other seaside communitie­s along Togo’s coast have long lived with the consequenc­es of erosion from the strong winds and waves of the Atlantic Ocean.

“Several multiple-storey houses have already collapsed and our cemetery has been affected as well,” said village chief Jean-Dolayi Duevi.

“We have had to exhume 47 bodies and move them to the cemetery in Baguida” near the capital, Lome, he told AFP.

Erosion affects coastal communitie­s around the world but is becoming a major environmen­tal and social problem in Togo, where some 22,000 people rely on fishing to make a living.

Relentless wind and wave action is washing away between five to 10 metres of shoreline ever y year, according to Togo’s environmen­t ministry.

But in some places, it is eating into the coast by up to 25 metres.

Houses have been swept into the sea and others teeter on the brink, affecting most of the tiny country’s 56 km of coastline, some estimates suggest.

Togo is one of six West African nations to receive $210 million in World Bank funding to fix dunes, build seawalls and dykes.

Rising tides as a result of climate change as well as human activity are blamed for the problem.

In Agebkope, locals blame the damage on the constructi­on and expansion of the deep sea port in Lome since the late 1960s.

Others point the finger at a new nearby fishing port that has been under constructi­on since April last year.

Disrupted sediment

The new port is expected to open in February and has been mostly funded by 14.4 billion CFA francs ($25 million) from Japan’s overseas developmen­t agency.

Togo’s government has contribute­d an additional 2.1 billion CFA francs.

The 178 fishing boats using the dilapidate­d and overcrowde­d existing port will operate from the new berths, allowing them to prepare for trips, land catches and to moor more safely.

It will also accommodat­e 300 or so people who are involved in fish product distributi­on.

But fishing communitie­s fear the new port could also harm those it is supposed to help, by increasing erosion and forcing residents to move inland.

“The building site of the new fishing port that is right next to our village frightens us,” said Ben Vonor, 57, who lives in Agbekope.

“The sea was advancing before as well but much slower. Since they started putting stones everywhere, it is progressin­g much faster and changes can be seen daily.”

Tchannibi Bakatimbe, a project manager at Togo’s environmen­t ministry, said expansion of the deepwater port in recent years has disrupted the accumulati­on of sediment.

The direction of water currents has changed and sand is prevented from being deposited. Instead, sediment on the beach is taken away.

Local residents also contribute to coastal erosion by collecting sand and gravel to build houses as a source of income.

There was no immediate comment from the authoritie­s at the main port, which handles the bulk of Togo’s internatio­nal trade and is a transit hub for landlocked neighbouri­ng countries.

Relocation, compensati­on

Agebkope chief Duevi is also the coordinato­r for the village developmen­t committee, which has represente­d several seafront communitie­s since 2016.

The body now wants the government to take steps to relocate entire villages inland and pay them compensati­on for the loss of their livelihood­s.

Some villagers – mistrustfu­l of t he g over nment a f t e r bei ng l e t down by false promises in the past – are wary of getting a response in time and are thus making their own arrangemen­ts.

Jeremy Assogbe, a 62-year-old security guard, said: “This is the third time that I will have to move. I have been on the coast for at least 10 years.

“I will no longer stay on the coast this time because I have suffered too much here. It is too tough here.”

Others are more optimistic, hoping that once in use, the new port will allow them to catch more fish. But even then there are dangers.

Fishing banks could be pushed back into the ocean, forcing fishermen to venture further from the shore, leaving them and their small wooden boats at the mercy of the powerful waves.

 ?? YANICK FOLLY/AFP ?? A picture taken in Lome, on June 2, shows the effect of the erosion near huts belonging to a fishermen village near at the site of the constructi­on of the new port.
YANICK FOLLY/AFP A picture taken in Lome, on June 2, shows the effect of the erosion near huts belonging to a fishermen village near at the site of the constructi­on of the new port.

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