Assessment of the Vulnerability of the Southwestern Coast of Benin to the Risk of Coastal Erosion and Flooding
Loading...
Date
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
The coastal zone of Benin is inherited from the last marine oscillations of the
Quaternary. A rich and very fragile environment, it presented until the 1960s,
a shoreline in dynamic equilibrium over the entire 125 km of coastal line.
Since the 1960s, with the construction of important development infrastructures (ports, dams, groins), the Beninese coast is now subject to risks of
coastal erosion and seasonal flooding due to the overflow of lagoon water bodies. The present study, based on socio-economic surveys in the communes
of Ouidah, Comè and Grand Popo, exposes the extent of coastal risks and
socio-economic and environmental damage in the southwestern coastal zone
of Benin. The results show that in terms of land, 2.9 ha and 5.7 ha of land
have been permanently lost to coastal erosion in the communes of Ouidah
and Grand Popo respectively. Similarly, 212 ha of crops of all types were affected by the flooding, including 35 ha destroyed, i.e. 6.67 ha, 11.3 ha in
Comè, 4.67 ha Ouidah and 14 ha Grand Popo. Also, 6435 buildings were affected, and 4235 huts were damaged. In addition, working tools, food stocks
and other items are counted among the losses recorded by coastal hazards
with their corollaries of diseases. The cost of losses and damages in the 08
districts amount to 418,000,000f cfa of which 266,000,000f cfa of damage and
152,000,000f cfa of loss.
