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Project

Water Resource Management and the Changing Climate in Angola's Coastal Settlements
 

Angola
Project ID
107025
Total Funding
CAD 546,800.00
IDRC Officer
Edith Ofwona
Project Status
Completed
End Date
Duration
36 months

Programs and partnerships

Climate Change

Lead institution(s)

Project leader:
Allan Cain
Angola

Summary

Angola's civil war caused a massive movement of people from rural conflict areas to settlements in places vulnerable to climate extremes - low-lying coastal zones, floodplains, and steep ravines.Read more

Angola's civil war caused a massive movement of people from rural conflict areas to settlements in places vulnerable to climate extremes - low-lying coastal zones, floodplains, and steep ravines. Climate-related risks to the population are likely to worsen in the future and it is important to understand and prepare for them. Unfortunately, a dearth of relevant data has made it difficult to assess these risks. The limited climate data that is available shows that Angola's coastal areas are experiencing low rainfall, increasing pressure on water supplies. This project addresses climate risks and inadequate access to quality water faced by informal settlements in three Angolan coastal cities - Luanda, Cabinda, and Benguela/Lobito. The project will assess the impact of climate variability on water markets and infrastructure, and propose changes to how water is governed. Through a series of workshops, research capacity will be strengthened to better inform climate risk analysis and policy development. Systematic data collection will be supported, while databases of existing climate information will be augmented and maintained. As a result of the project, academics and researchers working on climate and environmental issues in Angola will have better access to baseline climate and socio-economic information. Research findings from the project will help in the design of technical and policy adaptation options, as well as the publication of peer-reviewed articles.

Research outputs

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Report
Language:

English

Summary

Planning of human settlements on the Angolan coast should incorporate flooding risks and impacts of soil erosion. “Gaps" in data from 40 years’ war, and loss of 30 years of meteorological information, coincide with the recent period of accelerated climate change. Development Workshop’s research team has been recovering and analysing historical rainfall data from old Angolan archives, libraries in Lisbon and London, and digitizing the information. Large coastal cities in Angola are located at the mouth of river basins, making settlements at particularly high risk of local climatic changes. The presentation includes maps drawn from new databases.

Author(s)
Development Workshop Angola
Dossiers
Language:

French

Summary
Author(s)
Cain, A.
Tiago, J.
Domingos, J.
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