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NEMA collaborates with stakeholders ahead of climate variability
Following this year’s prediction of high risk of flooding, Director General National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) Mustapha Habib Ahmed said stakeholders must work together to avert the consequences of the forecast and build disaster resilience in communities across the country.
Addressing a technical meeting of experts convened by NEMA in Abuja to analyze the 2023 Seasonal Climate Prediction recently released by the Nigerian Meteorological Agency (NiMet) and Annual Flood Outlook released by Nigeria Hydrological Services Agency (NIHSA), Mustapha Habib Ahmed assured that the Agency will do its best to escalate collective efforts towards efficient flood risk management in the country.
“It has become more relevant and timely in consideration of our recent experiences of wide spread floods and related disasters that affected several states, which many of the affected communities are yet to recover from the impacts of the devastating event, that we organize a technical meeting.
“The 2022 flood coupled with its associated hazard is therefore a wake-up call for emergency responders and development partners to work assiduously to avert a repeat of the incident especially in consideration of the heightened level of vulnerability in several communities of our country,”he said.
He urged participants at the meeting to carefully analyze the 2023 seasonal prediction and flood outlook to produce a comprehensive and well-articulated early warning messages including vulnerability and risk mapping that could be downscaled to the grassroots.
“We cannot rest until we have built a critical mass of resilient Nigerian citizens that are conscious of their duty for care to one another and willing to take those actions that will save lives and safeguard livelihoods in the event of imminent disasters,” he further said.
He also added that as emergency managers, there was a need to always strive to develop a clear and practical early warning system that will enable their partners and the public to match early warning with early action to avert loss of lives and severe disaster impacts across socio-economic sectors.
In his remarks, the Director General of NIHSA Engr Clement Onyeaso Nze highlighted this year’s flood outlook which indicated that 314 Local Government Areas are at high risk of flooding between April and November with a total of another 312 LGAs falling within moderate flood risk areas.
Participants at the meeting included technical experts from NiMet, NIHSA, academia, dam managers, States Emergency Management Agencies (SEMAs) and the Red Cross.