Weather data helps authorities respond to deadly floods in Abidjan
When torrential rains and
flash floods deluged parts of Côte d’Ivoire’s economic capital, Abidjan,
an African Development
Bank investment in weather data was critical in the disaster response efforts.
While heavy rainfall is
not unusual for Abidjan from May to July, the sheer volume experienced recently
caused significant damage. At its peak, water levels reached half the height of
a commuter taxi vehicle, leaving the metropolis struggling to cope.
According to Daouda
Konate, Côte d’Ivoire’s Director of Meteorology at the national agency SODEXAM,
some areas experienced the heaviest rains in decades.
“In the Abobo and Cocody
neighborhoods near Abidjan, communities experienced the highest recorded
rainfall levels over the last 45 years,” said Konate.
Strengthened early warning
systems, put in place in 2014, included the creation of an inter-ministerial
and multi-sectoral Disaster Risk Management Platform, a group of about 50
representatives from various ministries and public bodies, districts and
departments, the national assembly and the union of NGOs, tasked to lead
emergency responses.
In 2018, the Bank also
approved a grant of 480,000 euros through the ClimDev Fund to help the country
rebuild its climate and weather information services, following a
post-electoral crisis in 2010-2011, and to further strengthen Côte d’Ivoire’s
extreme weather preparedness capacity.
Côte d’Ivoire used the
grant funding to acquire six automatic weather stations that collect rainfall
data and forward it to SODEXAM, where experts use high-performance computers to
process the data and produce real-time weather reports and flooding risk alert
bulletins for distribution through the Platform.
Under the coordination of
the Minister for Environment and Sustainable Development, the Platform uses
data to develop models that help predict weather conditions in real time. So,
as it became clear that a catastrophic event was approaching Abidjan, the
Platform kicked into action with an email alert via various channels, including
a mailing list of 200 journalists, and SODEXAM’s social media accounts.
All alerts up to amber are
issued through Government Information Broadcasts. When events reach an
emergency level beyond amber, the Platform escalates the issue to the level of
government, the only body empowered to issue a red alert and to implement the
shutdown of services, including transport.
Konate, in his capacity as
President of the World Meteorological Organization’s Regional Association for
Africa, has a vision to build the region’s capacity in data modelling and to
move away from its dependence on models designed for Europe. Reaching that goal
needs more investment in the antennas that collect and analyze data for Africa
to produce context-specific weather predictions.
AGM
Source
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