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Home NEWS $14bn needed to revive Lake Chad – Buhari

$14bn needed to revive Lake Chad – Buhari

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President Muhammadu Buhari on Tuesday in Paris asked developed countries to make strong financial commitments to the $14 billion urgently needed to revive Lake Chad and save communities dependent on its water from extinction.

Addressing a high level meeting on “Climate Change Challenges and Solutions in Africa’’, on the sidelines of the on-going UN Climate Change Conference, COP 21, Buhari said no fewer than five million people living in the Lake Chad Basin countries have been displaced by the depletion of the lake due to climate change.

According to a statement by his Special Adviser, Media, Femi Adesina, the President said the shrinkage of Lake Chad, a former inland sea, had resulted in increased social conflicts, high rates of migration and cross-border movements.

“Nigeria has a large population of over 170 million people and in some parts of Northern Nigeria, a farm that used to belong to 10 people now belongs to over 100 people. They have no other place to live and no land for cultivation,’’ he said.

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President Buhari recalled that research conducted by a professor in a London university and published more than three decades ago had predicted that unless one or some of the rivers from the Central African region are diverted to empty into the Lake Chad basin, the lake will dry up.

He noted that sadly that prediction has become reality as the lake which covers over 25,000 square kilometers in 1925 have shrunk to 2,500 square kilometers.

“The amount of resources required and the high technological expertise and infrastructure needed to be undertaken to revive Lake Chad has to be mainly financed by the G7 and the United States.

“The cost is great and more than $14 billion is needed to revive the lake.

“But if that is achieved, at least five million people from Central African Republic to the Lake Chad Basin countries (Chad, Niger, Nigeria and Benin) will be rehabilitated.

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“When this is done, those who are daring to cross the Sahara desert and the Mediterranean to come to Europe will remain at home because they have land where they can cultivate and earn a respectable living,’’ he said.
-Leadership

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