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West Africa's Fulani nomads fight climate change to survive
by Staff Writers
Niamey (AFP) Dec 5, 2019

They are one of the last great nomadic peoples of the planet, a community of some 35 million people scattered across 15 countries in West Africa, from the dusty Sahel down to the lush rainforests.

The Fulani are pastoral herders who migrate with their cattle, following the pendulum swing of the seasons.

But their age-old way of life is under threat.

Booming populations have intensified conflicts for land, religious extremism has shattered social bonds and climate change is driving them on an ever more desperate search for pasture.

While they are well used to the extreme conditions of this often inhospitable region, today they face threats from longer and more severe droughts to greater rain and flooding.

Niger, a country in which more than 80 percent of population lives off agriculture, is at the forefront of the climate emergency.

The Fulanis there have seen their herds decimated by droughts and hunger in recent decades -- and this decline is gaining speed.

Every year an area of over 1,000 square kilometers (380 square miles) is lost to the spreading desert and soil erosion.

The sixth poorest nation in the world also has the highest birth rates with women on average bearing seven children.

This fuels a vicious spiral that has seen demographic pressures and the struggle for resources intensify competition with farmers for land.

Many Fulani have had to abandon herding and settle down in towns in bid to feed their families.

They have become security guards or petty traders as huge numbers of people have flowed to Niamey and other capitals in West Africa.

It is no surprise in this context that community elders speak of a "curse".

Cows represent far more to the Fulanis than just a source of revenue: they are a symbol of freedom and a way of life to be defended ferociously.

Factfile: The Sahel and climate change
Niamey (AFP) Dec 5, 2019 - The Sahel, the vast region that stretches along the Sahara's southern rim from the Atlantic to the Red Sea, is on the front line of climate change.

Its extreme vulnerability to drought and shifting rainfall patterns is ratcheting up problems of poverty, population pressure and jihadist violence, experts say.

- Weather extremes -

Since the start of the Industrial Revolution, global temperatures have risen 1.1 degrees Celsius (1.98 degrees Fahrenheit), according to a report issued in September by United in Science, gathering the world's leading climate agencies.

But this average warming is around 50 percent greater in the Sahel. In the last quarter of the 20th century, the region suffered the worst droughts of anywhere on the planet.

More recently, it has seen dramatic changes in rainfall patterns, with torrential downpours that cause temporary spurts in vegetation in scorched areas.

Rainfall -- on average -- is higher than 30 years ago, but much of it comes in the form of more extreme events, said Geremy Panthou, a climatologist at the University of Grenoble Alpes, who is working with Amma-Catch, a specialised meteorological agency in West Africa.

"We have recorded a large increase in extreme precipitation. Storms are more violent and droughts, when they occur, are more severe," Panthou told AFP.

- Mounting impact -

These extreme events are having far-reaching consequences.

The region is very poor, has one of the highest demographic growth rates in the world and, in many areas, the soil has been damaged and suffered deforestation for firewood.

In countries where irrigation and drainage systems are sorely lacking, heavy rains have triggered repeated flooding of the Niger River. Rising seas stoked by global warming are also fuelling erosion in western coastal states of the Sahel.

According to the UN's expert group, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), agricultural yields are likely to fall by 20 percent per decade in some parts of the Sahel by the end of the century.

By the same timescale, the population in the six western countries of the Sahel alone -- Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, Mauritania, Niger and Senegal -- is likely to rise sixfold to 540 million, according to UN projections.

Hunger is already chronic. Between June and August this year, 9.7 million people were in a state of acute food insecurity, according to the UN's Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).

There has been a massive rural exodus in recent years, although exactly how many of those fleeing the countryside are doing so because of climate change, or because of poverty and jihadist violence, remains unknown.

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres warned in September that the mix of ills was fuelling violent extremism and tension over declining resources.

- Emergency plan -

In February, 17 Sahel countries set down a plan to invest $400 billion (350 billion euros) in fighting climate change by 2030.

The scheme would earmark $1.3 billion in projects to limit greenhouse-gas emissions and help adaptation to climate change.

The plan is overwhelmingly dependent on foreign aid, but experts say there is plenty of evidence to show that people in the Sahel are already taking matters in hand.

Many fishermen who depended on Lake Chad, which has shrunk by 90 percent over the last 40 years, have turned to farming the rich exposed soils.

Another example of resilience is eco-forestry, to provide shade for cattle and fending material for crops.

"Tens of thousands" of smallhold farmers have joined programmes to plant trees in the Sahel, said David Cleary of a US NGO, the Nature Conservancy.

"It's in a part of the world that has all sorts of political issues and civil conflicts, but it's still been possible to do some positive things," he said.

"Rather than being portrayed as a basket case, the Sahel is showing some significant ways of what a more enlightened future might look like. If the Sahel can do it, it's pretty encouraging."


Related Links
Africa News - Resources, Health, Food


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AFRICA NEWS
Climate change threatens end of trail for Niger's nomadic herders
Bermo, Niger (AFP) Dec 5, 2019
Ali's sharp eyes scanned the heat-shimmered horizon, searching in vain for clouds. It was noon and 45 degrees Celsius (113 degrees Fahrenheit) on the ninth day of their quest to reach new pastures. There was no tree anywhere, no shelter at all for his family, 27 sheep and six camels. "We heard that the first rain has fallen in the north. That's where we're going," the turbaned herder said, as he filled up a water bottle at the side of the road. An arduous trail lay ahead: more than 100 ... read more

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