The Guardian (Nigeria)

Disaster management agencies acquire satellite technology for monitoring flood

- By Odita Sunday

THeneed for Nigeria to accurately forecast and monitor flood, as well as identify flood hotspot areas to make a quick flood damage assessment would be made easier with the introducti­on of satellite technology.

Nigeria’s disaster management organisati­ons and hydrometeo­rological organisati­ons gathered in Abuja on Tuesday, February 9, 2021 for a three- day online regional training workshop on flood monitoring and forecastin­g modeling. The training, organised by the Centre for Space Science & Technology Education ( CSSTE) was part of the Multi-Scale Flood Monitoring and Assessment Services for West Africa ( MIFMASS) project under the Global Monitoring for Environmen­t and Security and Africa ( GMES & Africa) Support Programme which seeks to help Nigeria and other West African nations to adopt a new system of utilising satellite technology in better predicting environmen­tal patterns to help mitigate flood.

Participan­ts were mainly technical operationa­l staff from the Nigeria Hydrologic­al Services Agency ( NIHSA), Nigerian Meteorolog­ical Agency ( NIMET), Nigerian Emergency Management Authority ( NEMA) and the Federal Ministry of Environmen­t.

The training, which holds simultaneo­usly across four other West African countries, aimed at equiping participan­ts with skills and requisite tools to enable them to identify flood- prone areas in order to make a quick flood damage assessment, identify flood monitoring and forecast model, as well as hydrologic­al and hydraulic modeling.

According to the Lead of the CSSTE Consortium, Dr Ganiyu Agbaje, the training was in alignment with one of the major pillars of the GMES & Africa support programme, which was capacity building, and this had led the CSSTE consortium to identify strategic training needs of its collaborat­ing stakeholde­rs on the MIFMASS project with the aim to train and empower them to sustain the product and service outcomes after the lifetime of the programme. In sustaining the successes of the project, he advised government­s to further embrace technology for creative solutions and consider stronger laws to control the indiscrimi­nate dumping of refuse, a major cause of flooding in Africa.

“Human beings are somehow meant to be unruly. So, the society needs to be guided by law, else I can go to your house and just mess it up. If there are no laws to say ‘ you cannot dump refuse here,’ then everywhere will be messy. We need to abide by the regulation­s and rules.

“Also, it has been said that the whole of the Netherland­s is on a flood lane but they use engineerin­g and other means to ensure that they stay afloat most of the time. We have millions of dollars lost every year to flooding in Africa, forcing ECOWAS to make a policy on disaster risk reduction and more has to be done to ensure that the impact is lower,” he said.

THE Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall have received Covid- 19 vaccinatio­ns, Clarence House has said.

It comes a month after the Queen and Prince Philip received their coronaviru­s jabs.

Prince Charles, 72, and Camilla, 73, are in the 70 and over age bracket who are being urged to come forward if they have not yet received the vaccine.

The royals are among 12.6 million people in the UK to have received a least one dose of a vaccine so far.

It is not known which vaccine Prince Charles and Camilla received or whether they were vaccinated together.

Prince Charles tested positive for coronaviru­s in March last year after displaying mild symptoms.

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