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Nigerian floods kill more than 150, as search for victims continues

Nigerian floods kill more than 150, as search for victims continues

The death toll from devastating flooding in Nigeria has risen to at least 151, the local emergency service says, amid efforts to find more victims.
The sharp toll rise came as bodies were recovered nearly 10 kilometres from the north-central market town of Mokwa, located in the state of Niger, the epicentre of the flash flooding.
Ibrahim Audu Husseini, a spokesman for the Niger State Emergency Management Agency, said the toll could rise further, with bodies being swept down the Niger River.
Mokwa was hit by torrential rains on Wednesday night into Thursday, with the flooding displacing more than 3,000 people, Mr Husseini said.
There were 121 injured in hospital, said Gideon Adamu, head of the Red Cross in Niger state, and more than 100 people were missing.
The market town, located west of Abuja, is a major trading and transportation hub where northern Nigerian farmers sell beans, onions and other food to traders from the south.
At least 500 households across three communities were affected by the sudden flood that built rapidly in about five hours, leaving roofs barely visible and surviving residents waist-deep in water, trying to salvage what they could and rescue others.
Mr Husseini added that two roads were washed away and two bridges collapsed.
Nigeria's rainy season, which usually lasts six months, is just getting started for the year.
Communities in northern Nigeria have been experiencing prolonged dry spells worsened by climate change and excessive rainfall that leads to severe flooding during the brief wet season.
Heavy rains and poor infrastructure lead to flooding that wreaks havoc every year, killing hundreds of people across the West African country.
Residents in the town are still searching for relatives, with some families missing a dozen people.
"We can't give up the search as long as there are families crying out," the Red Cross's Gideon Adamu said.
"If there were some bodies that were carried away by the flooding, we'll find them in the farmland on the Jebba side."
Mr Husseini said his team would need excavators to reach bodies feared buried under the rubble.
President Bola Tinubu said he had activated an emergency response to support victims and "accelerate" recovery.
"Relief materials and temporary shelter assistance are being deployed without delay," the president said, promising "no Nigerian affected will be left behind or unheard of".
In 2024, floods killed 321 people across 34 of Nigeria's 36 states, according to NEMA.
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Kati Thanda–Lake Eyre could be filling at a scale not witnessed in living memory bringing life to those at its edge
Kati Thanda–Lake Eyre could be filling at a scale not witnessed in living memory bringing life to those at its edge

ABC News

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Kati Thanda–Lake Eyre could be filling at a scale not witnessed in living memory bringing life to those at its edge

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Warrnambool council abandons peer-reviewed flood study citing 'supposed science'
Warrnambool council abandons peer-reviewed flood study citing 'supposed science'

ABC News

time3 days ago

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Warrnambool council abandons peer-reviewed flood study citing 'supposed science'

A south-west Victorian council has abandoned an independent and peer-reviewed flood study after councillors decided they did not trust the data. The South Warrnambool and Dennington Flood Investigation found high flood risks in the area and recommended changes to council planning schemes. But at a Warrnambool City Council meeting on Monday night, councillors voted that down, with some claiming they could not believe the "supposed science". Although the study will go no further, the data is already being used by state government agencies, insurance companies, and the council as the most up-to-date flood information. Emergency Management Victoria declined the ABC's request for comment. The southern Warrnambool flood study was a three-year endeavour commissioned and funded by the Victorian government to ensure climate modelling matched the latest rainfall and sea level rise estimates. The investigation was designed to update 2007 data and reassess the impacts of climate change and flooding through to 2100, including the likelihood of a one-in-one-hundred-year flood event. Warrnambool City Council was in charge of managing the study — putting it out to tender, conducting community consultations, and dealing with submissions. Councillors were then required to vote on whether to refer the flood investigation to the state government's planning panel for changes to planning schemes. On Monday night, they voted against doing so. Venant Solutions was the specialist consultancy company responsible for the peer-reviewed report. Principal environmental engineer and lead investigator Michael South said the team used national and localised rainfall inputs, and streamflow and water level data to assess flood risk to the area. Mr South told the ABC the findings were on the "upper end" of risk, but this was on par with statewide assessments and climate inputs. "The methodologies we used for the flood study are consistent with other studies and the trajectory of climate change," he said. "We've never used anything but that." In the last decade, Mr South said he had worked on around 20 flood studies, half of which he had led, and the push-back in Warrnambool was "a first". During Monday night's council meeting, four councillors opposed the flood study, claiming the science was "difficult to comprehend", based on "assumptions", lacked detail, and was unable to be validated. Councillor Vicki Jellie raised the motion against the referral of the study to the state government. "How do we, with the utmost certainty, know that we can believe this data and supposed science?" Cr Jellie said. "Some of this has been undoubtedly an assumption." Councillors were also concerned about loss of land value and crippled development prospects. Mayor Ben Blain was the only councillor to back the study and told the ABC that failure to formally integrate the flood investigation into the council's planning schemes was a loss for residents, prospective buyers, and the region in general. "There's now no obligation for sellers to tell buyers that land falls in flood zones, there will be houses built in floodways, and insurance premiums will sky-rocket."

Farmers face 'new world' of extreme weather as scientists urge action on climate change
Farmers face 'new world' of extreme weather as scientists urge action on climate change

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Farmers face 'new world' of extreme weather as scientists urge action on climate change

Scientists and politicians are warning big policy shifts are needed to mitigate extreme weather impacts, following what farmers describe as unprecedented flooding in the New South Wales Hunter and Mid North Coast regions last month. Climate scientist and University of Melbourne Emeritus Professor David Karoly said a near-stationary high pressure system in the Tasman Sea had contributed to the high rainfall event, stalling a moist, easterly flow of air over the NSW coast. Dr Karoly, who is a member of the Climate Council, said governments needed to take action on climate change to limit these types of extreme events. He said a range of approaches were needed, including changes to farming practices. "Farmers have to think about how they can reduce erosion associated with some of these increased rainfall extremes, but also need to think about how they can manage their farm dams because we're also seeing increases in the frequency of drought," he said. 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She said it was the farm's most difficult season in 31 years, and she and her husband were exhausted by the repeated setbacks. While both farmers are right that Australia has always had extreme weather events like this, what is changing is the frequency and intensity of those events. The Climate Council said the recent flooding disasters are linked to human-led climate change caused by emissions from fossil fuels. Chief executive Amanda McKenzie said a number of events combined to make the May floods more severe. They included an increase in the amount of water vapour in the atmosphere, which reached a record high in 2024 at about 5 per cent above the 1991–2020 average, according to Climate Council data. The Bureau of Meteorology said in its Special Climate Statement 77 in September 2023 that every 1 degree Celsius of warming could increase moisture in the atmosphere by 7 per cent, which could provide more energy for some processes that generated extreme rainfall events. Ms McKenzie said Australia was experiencing 7 to 28 per cent more rain for shorter duration rainfall events and 2 to 15 per cent more rain for longer duration events. Scientists can analyse whether single extreme events are linked to climate change. Extreme weather research organisation ClimaMeter, funded by the European Union and the French National Centre for Scientific Research, has published a paper looking at the link between climate change and the May NSW floods. It studied changes in weather patterns since 1950 and concluded that the extreme precipitation that caused the flooding was intensified by human-induced climate change, with natural variability playing a secondary role. NSW Greens MP Sue Higginson is also a farmer in the Northern Rivers region. Her property on the Richmond River near Lismore was impacted by the 2022 flood, and she puts the blame for such events squarely on climate change. Ms Higginson said some farming practices were no longer viable and communities would need to adjust. "In the north, we're looking at some of our very low-lying cane fields, we know they're no longer viable in the coming years," she said. In some cases, Ms Higginson said farmers would have to move. "When we get to the hard edges where we can't adapt to a changing climate, then yes, we have to retreat and relocate," she said. She said governments must stop approving new fossil fuel projects. "When I see the premier and the ministers out there on the frontline of the disaster zones … but then in the same breath on the same day we see the NSW government approving brand new coal expansions in the Hunter Valley … that sort of hypocrisy or not joining the dots I think is doing no-one any favours," Ms Higginson said. Dr Karoly said while the link between climate change and extreme weather was well-known, Australia did not have a national climate adaptation plan. 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