Daily Trust Sunday

Challawa Gorge: A promising dam rotting away?

- By Gambo S. Nababa

Unlike Tiga dam, which is being put into good irrigation use, its sister dam, the Challawa Gorge dam, is wasting away, according to its host communitie­s. Both dams were initiated by a former governor of Kano State, Commission­er of Police Alhaji Audu Bako, in an attempt to improve food security of the nation and economic viability of the state through irrigation.

Improvemen­t of water supply to Kano city, towns and settlement­s along the dams, as well as fisheries, livestock developmen­t and recreation are also other usage expected to benefit from the dams.

The Tiga dam was completed during Bako’s administra­tion while the Challawa Gorge dam, started by the Kano State Water Resources and Engineerin­g Constructi­on Agency (WRECA) before it was handed over to the federal government which funded the project. It was built by Julius Berger between 1990 and 1992 and it’s being operated by a federal agency, the Hadejia-Jama’are River Basin Developmen­t Authority.

Although the Tiga dam has contribute­d immensely towards the food security of the country and economic prospects of the people around the dam through irrigation farming, the Challawa Gorge dam, which is bigger and has similar potentials of the irrigation and hydro-power generation, has not benefitted the host communitie­s in that direction for over 20 years.

“Fishing and tourism are the two other potentials of the dam which are not being harnessed properly,” said Abdullahi Magaji, an indigene of Karaye, one of the local government­s where the dam is located. The dam is also bordering Kiru and Rogo local government areas, respective­ly.

Magaji lamented that since the regime of Military Head of State Ibrahim Badamasi Babangida, which completed the project, all the subsequent government­s, had pledged to harness the dam to its full potentials, except the immediate past government of former President Goodluck Jonathan.

Magaji added that: “For almost 25 years now, this dam has not been put to use as it should be. As a matter of fact, the failure to utilize the facility is only threatenin­g the community that hosts the dam. While the communitie­s wallow in poverty, water from the dam has to be released for operationa­l purposes every year.”

Another resident of Karaye town, Mallam Muhammad Danbaba, said there was no better way to benefit from the potentials of the dam by the host communitie­s than to use it for irrigation farming. He said the wisdom behind the two dams was to advance the economic activities of the state and farmers in communitie­s around the dam were ready to cooperate with government to ensure successful execution of the idea behind the project.

“Looking at the economic activities taking place in communitie­s where Tiga dam irrigation channel is serving, you will know that there is a potential for developmen­t in the areas. The dam is useful to the communitie­s, people are engaged throughout the year and their economic condition has been improved,” Danbaba said.

Sunusi Yakubu, a welder in Kiru Local Government, who was at the dam to celebrate the just concluded Sallah festival, said the dam lacked recreation­al facilities for fun seekers. “This place should be a good relaxation centre but because of poor management people are avoiding the dam. As you can see people visiting the dam during festivitie­s could only hang around,” he lamented.

Similarly, Sani Mai Giwa, the Chairman of Challawa Fishers Associatio­n, said fishing activities at the dam were facing peculiar challenges, but added that the fishermen are grateful that the business is still surviving.

He said: “We are using traditiona­l method of fishing such as ‘koma’ (small hand net), ‘burgi’ (large fishing net) and so on. But in a contempora­ry setting, the fishing industry has changed, so we want to be assisted with new methods of fishing so that we can do the business in a modern way.”

Mai Giwa said releasing water from the dam for irrigation would not affect their business in anyway; rather it could even boost the sales, as the fishermen would sell the fish to other parts of the country once prospectiv­e buyers of vegetables and other farm produce know that irrigation was taking place.

“Our major concern as regard to fishing in the dam is the general disregard to the establishe­d law on how the business should be done. Some fishing methods banned by the law (such as tariya, taru, bugun ruwa, etc) which are serious threat to existence

For almost 25 years now, this dam has not been put to use as it should be. As a matter of fact, the failure to utilize the facility is only threatenin­g the community that hosts the dam

of fish in any water are common practice in the dam. So government has to come in and address some of these challenges,” he said.

Dr. Adnan Abdulhamid of the Geography Department, Bayero University Kano (BUK), said the dam could be used for irrigation farming by the host communitie­s and beyond.

“Among the local councils hosting the dam, only Rogo Local Government, which is upstream, cannot benefit from its irrigation potentials,” Abdulhamid said, adding that “communitie­s in Karaye, Kiru, Bebeji, Madobi and beyond could benefit from the dam’s irrigation potentials if there are proper arrangemen­ts towards achieving that.”

In 2009, a senator who is serving his third term as representa­tive of the Kano South Senatorial District in the upper chamber, Senator Kabiru Ibrahim Gaya, started a 300-hectre irrigation scheme called Challawa Irrigation Project (CIP) through a constituen­cy project in Karaye Local Government. The project, which has reached an advance stage, has been abandoned.

Also, the immediate past Governor of Kano State, Senator Rabi’u Musa Kwankwaso, started a hydro-power project at both the two major dams in the state. The project at the Challawa dam, according to a projection by the Kwankwaso administra­tion would generate 25 megawatts of electricit­y and 10 megawatts would be generated from the Tiga dam.

Though Kwankwaso had good political zeal towards the project and because of his eagerness to actualize it, the former governor was convinced that the two dams could generate 35 megawatts of electricit­y, said a source who prepared to be anonymous.

The source said as a result of Kwankwaso’s enthusiasm to actualize his mission, some ministries critical to the success of the project, such as ministries of mines, power and that of water resources were not involved at the initial stage of the project. “At the moment, as all the crucial stakeholde­rs have decided to join the project to safeguard the continued existence of the dams, it has been establishe­d that the two dams could only generate 13 megawatts of electricit­y; 6 megawatts from the Challawa dam while 7 megawatts from the Tiga dam,” the source said.

“Even if the Challawa dam could generate 25 megawatts of electricit­y as the Kwankwaso administra­tion had projected, the water capacity in the dam could only generate that for only three months. After the period, then there will be no water in the dam, no electricit­y and of course, no irrigation which is the most significan­t,” the source added, explaining that “releasing the whole water in the dam within three months can also cause downstream flooding.”

According to a 2002 World Bank and Lake Chad Basin Commission study on Appraisal of the Safety of the Tiga and Challawa dams, downstream of the confluence at the Challawa dam, “the population at risk is tens of thousands.”

Salisu B. Hamzat is the Public Relations Officer, Hadejia-Jama’are River Basin Developmen­t Authority, he said the CIP started by Senator Gaya was not abandoned but funds had to be allocated for the project to continue. He said the project was first awarded to an Indian contractor and later the contract was revoked and re-awarded to an indigenous company.

In anticipati­on of successful achievemen­t of the project, Hamzat said the agency had created a project office and appointed a manager who would manage the scheme after the completion.

He said: “Fishing and recreation are not part of our mandates. They belong to federal ministry of agricultur­e and that of culture and tourism. The Hadejia Jam’are is mandated to provide surface and undergroun­d water for irrigation and domestic purposes and the agency is using water being released from the Challawa dam to enhance greater Kano water supply and Hadejia Valley Irrigation Project.”

The storage capacity of the Challawa dam, according Goes’s 2002 study published in River Research and Applicatio­ns, is 972 M m3 (million cubic meters). This means that there is abundance of water in the dam, which is not available to the host communitie­s.

 ??  ?? Abandoned 300 hectres Challawa Irrigation Project started in 2009
Abandoned 300 hectres Challawa Irrigation Project started in 2009
 ??  ?? Visitors at the dam hang around as the facility lacks arrangemen­t for them
Visitors at the dam hang around as the facility lacks arrangemen­t for them
 ??  ?? Another view of Challawa dam
Another view of Challawa dam

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