Kenya’s devastating floods expose decades of poor urban planning and bad land management

kenya’s devastating floods expose decades of poor urban planning and bad land management

Image source:

Floods in Kenya killed at least 169 people between March and April 2024. The most catastrophic of these deaths occurred after a flash flood swept through a rural village killing 42 people. Death and destruction have also occurred in the capital, Nairobi, a stark reminder of the persistent failure to keep abreast of the city’s rapid urbanisation needs. Sean Avery, who has undertaken numerous flood and drainage studies throughout Africa, unpacks the problems and potential solutions.

Image source: @UKinKenya

Are floods in Kenya causing more damage? If so, why?

Floods are the natural consequence of storm rainfall and have an important ecological role. They inundate flood plains where silts settle, riverbed aquifers are recharged and nutrients are gathered. Annual rainfall in Kenya varies from 2,000mm in the western region to less than 250mm in the drylands covering over 80% of Kenya. But storm rainfalls are widespread. This means that floods can occur in any part of the country.

The impact of floods has become more severe due to a number of factors.

The first is how much water runs off. In rural areas, changes to the landscape have meant that there’s been an increase in the amount of storm runoff generated from rainfall. This is because the natural state of the land has been altered through settlement, roads, deforestation, livestock grazing and cultivation. As a result, a greater proportion of rainfall runs off. This runoff is more rapid and erosive, and less water infiltrates to replenish groundwater stores.

The East African Flood Model, a standard drainage design tool, demonstrates that by reducing a forested catchment into a field for livestock pasture, for instance, the peak flood magnitude can increase 20-fold. This form of catchment degradation leads to landslides, dams can breach, and road culverts and irrigation intakes are regularly washed away.

Land degradation in sub-Saharan rangelands is omnipresent, with over 90% rangeland degradation reported in Kenya’s northern drylands. Kenyan research has recorded dramatic increases in stormwater runoff due to overgrazing.

Second, human pressure in urban areas – including encroachment into riparian zones and loss of natural flood storage buffers through the destruction of wetlands – has increased flood risks. Riparian zones are areas bordering rivers and other bodies of water.

By 2050, half of Kenya’s population will live in urban areas. Green space is progressively being filled with buildings and pavements. A large proportion of urban population lives in tin-roofed slums and informal settlements lacking adequate drainage infrastructure. As a result, almost all of the storm rainfall is translated into rapid and sometimes catastrophic flooding.

Third, flood risks are worse for people who have settled in vacant land which is often in low-lying areas and within flood plains. In these areas, inundation by flood waters is inevitable.

Fourth, Nairobi’s persistent water supply shortages have led to a proliferation of boreholes whose over-abstraction has resulted in a dramatic decline in the underground water table’s levels. This leads to aquifer compression, which is compounded by the weight of buildings. The result is ground level subsidence, which creates low spots where stormwater floods collect.

What should be done to minimise the risks?

Rural areas require a different set of solutions.

Natural watercourses throughout Kenya are being scoured out by larger floods due to land use pressures. These watercourses are expanding and riparian vegetation cover is disappearing. The flood plains need space to regenerate the natural vegetation cover as this attenuates floods, reducing the force of runoff and erosion.

There are existing laws to protect riverbanks, and livestock movements in these areas must also be controlled. Any building or informal settlement within riparian areas is illegal and would otherwise be exposed to the dangers of floods. Enforcement is a challenge, however, as these areas are favoured by human activities and often these people are among the poorest.

Urban areas have a host of particular challenges that need to be addressed.

Take Nairobi, Kenya’s capital city. The physical planning process is hindered by corruption. Inappropriate and unsafe developments proliferate alongside inadequate water supply, wastewater and solid waste disposal infrastructure. Sewage effluent is often discharged into stormwater drains, even in high-class areas of the city. And there is little control of development in the growing urban centres bordering Nairobi, with transport corridors being congested. Throughout the country, laws that protect riparian zones are flouted.

None of this is sustainable.

Each municipality is obliged to provide infrastructure that includes an effective engineered stormwater drainage network. And in parallel, wastewater and solid wastes must be separately managed.

The typical stormwater drainage network comprises adequately sized earth and lined channels, and pipes and culverts that convey the stormwater to the nearest watercourse. Constant maintenance is essential, especially before the onset of rains, to avoid blockage by garbage and other human activities.

Modern-day urban flood mitigation measures include the provision of flood storage basins. Unfortunately this is impossible in Nairobi where developments are built right up to the edge of watercourses. Constrained channels thereby cause upstream flooding as there is nowhere else for the water to go.

Attempts have been made to reverse urban riparian zone encroachments, but these efforts faltered due to legal repercussions. To this day, unscrupulous developers encroach with impunity.

It’s essential that the authorities demarcate riparian boundaries and set aside buffer zones that cannot be “developed”.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Provided by SyndiGate Media Inc. (Syndigate.info).

OTHER NEWS

25 minutes ago

Billionaire Sir Jim Ratcliffe slams Tories for bungling Brexit

26 minutes ago

What has changed for Toulouse since last year's loss to Leinster?

26 minutes ago

4 years ago, he was working 8-5 in the US. Now, he’s playing in the Irish top flight

26 minutes ago

Billionaire defense entrepreneur Palmer Luckey has a home like a Bond villain's lair — complete with helicopters, a giant fish tank, and an underground missile base filled with video games

27 minutes ago

WA football's saviour strikes again in major Dees upset

27 minutes ago

The man hanged for printing his own ace of spades

27 minutes ago

Martin Odegaard questions 'strange' Tottenham atmosphere against Man City

27 minutes ago

Man Utd, Chelsea rank highly in worst injury record table; Newcastle top Premier League

27 minutes ago

Soccer-Arsenal must not get 'too emotional' on final day, says Odegaard

27 minutes ago

As Abhijit Gangopadhyay’s remarks spark a row, a look at BJP leaders’ jibes at Mamata

27 minutes ago

Who really owns PRIME drink? A closer look behind the brand

27 minutes ago

'I've never walked away from a fight': Eels boss Arthur

27 minutes ago

Full horror of Oklahoma teen Noah Presgrove's injuries explained - as autopsy results give chilling insight into his final moments

27 minutes ago

Where it REALLY pays to own a holiday buy-to-let: How to choose wisely and turn your second property into a goldmine

29 minutes ago

Kazakhstan’s first Paralympic champion Zulfiya Gabidullina, 58, keeps swimming to inspire others

29 minutes ago

Dangerous to view the world’s conflicts as distant and unrelated: Estonia PM Kallas

33 minutes ago

Mascot race ends in hilarious fashion with ultimate fail seeing competitor suffer embarrassing loss

33 minutes ago

Koos Bekker's net worth today: A look at SA billionaire's fortune

34 minutes ago

Water company’s response to Brixham parasite outbreak is ‘contemptible’ – MP

34 minutes ago

Why can’t America have high speed rail? Because our investment is a ‘rounding error’ compared with Europe’s, says Amtrak’s CEO

34 minutes ago

Melissa Joan Hart says she feels ‘really guilty’ for taking an underage Britney Spears to her 1st club

34 minutes ago

Brexit row erupts over control of Gibraltar’s border

34 minutes ago

'Sunak determined to cling on by his fingernails'

34 minutes ago

DIARISE: SASSA payment dates for the rest of 2024

34 minutes ago

Government ‘worried’ about pro-Palestinian marches, Shapps says

34 minutes ago

Outback cattle station the size of Yosemite transformed after massive donation: 'We really do hope this inspires other philanthropists'

34 minutes ago

Ex-Arsenal star dispels myth about Gunners 'failing' in title race ahead of final day

34 minutes ago

You'll soon be able to control Chromebooks with just your face

34 minutes ago

Josh Kroenke makes promise to Mikel Arteta ahead of Arsenal title decider

34 minutes ago

Where Premier League trophy will be stored as Arsenal and Man City face final day title drama

34 minutes ago

AI Reveals What The X-Men '97 Team Looks Like In Real Life, And It's Uncanny

34 minutes ago

The Yankees lineup is about to face a stiff test

34 minutes ago

Elon Musk launches Starlink satellite internet service in Indonesia, world's largest archipelago

34 minutes ago

The Senate filibuster is a hurdle to any national abortion bill. Democrats are campaigning on it

34 minutes ago

PGA Championship 2024 tee times: Round 4 groups and schedule including Xander Schauffele and Collin Morikawa

36 minutes ago

Man United owner Sir Jim Ratcliffe backs Keir Starmer and slates Tories on Brexit and economy

36 minutes ago

I warn everyone about two symptoms after cancer took my dad in 12 weeks

42 minutes ago

Brazil counts cost of worst-ever floods with little hope of waters receding soon

43 minutes ago

Tesla Cybertruck takes second place to Ford F-150 Lightning, new monthly registration data shows

43 minutes ago

Innocuous move that could sideline luckless Tiger

Kênh khám phá trải nghiệm của giới trẻ, thế giới du lịch