Nigeria’s Invisible Battle with Climate Change
The winds no longer whisper as they once did, nor does the rain arrive with the certainty it used to. The land, once fertile and full of promise, now cracks under the weight of a changing climate.
Slowly but surely, climate change is reshaping Nigeria’s landscape, altering lives, and threatening the very foundation upon which millions depend. Farmers in the North gaze at the sky, praying for rain that no longer comes when it should.
When it does, it arrives in torrents, drowning crops and washing away homes. In the South, the tides creep further inland, swallowing communities whole, while urban centers like Lagos face the looming threat of a rising sea.
The climate no longer follows the rhythm of nature; instead, it swings unpredictably between extremes, leaving devastation in its wake. Rising temperatures are making the land less hospitable for crops.
The heat saps moisture from the soil, withering plants before they have a chance to bear fruit. Cattle, once a source of wealth and sustenance, are dying from dehydration, forcing pastoralists to migrate in search of greener pastures.
But where they go, tension follows. Farmers and herders, both victims of a climate they cannot control, now find themselves locked in violent conflicts over dwindling resources.
The forests, once lush and full of life, are disappearing at an alarming rate. Trees that once stood as nature’s shield against the sun’s fury are now being felled for timber, farmland, and urban expansion.
With every fallen tree, the earth loses a vital ally in regulating temperature and absorbing carbon. In the North, desertification creeps forward like an unrelenting tide, swallowing farmlands and turning vibrant ecosystems into barren wastelands.
The struggle for survival becomes fiercer, forcing many to abandon their ancestral homes in search of a livelihood elsewhere. Water, once abundant, is becoming a luxury. Rivers shrink, wells dry up, and entire villages are left to struggle for survival.
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Those who can, move to the cities, hoping for a better life. But urban areas are no sanctuary. The heat in Lagos, Kano, and Port Harcourt is stifling, turning concrete jungles into suffocating furnaces. Power shortages make the suffering worse, as people battle both the scorching sun and the frustration of a failing system.
Floods come with little warning, submerging roads and homes, displacing families, and erasing years of hard work in mere hours. The cost is counted not just in naira but in lost dreams and shattered lives.
Those who once called the coast home now watch helplessly as the sea reclaims their land. Fishers struggle as marine life dwindles, forcing many to abandon a trade passed down through generations.
But climate change is not just an environmental crisis—it is a silent architect of poverty and displacement. As agriculture falters, unemployment rises, leaving countless young Nigerians with limited options.
Many are lured into crime, human trafficking, or even extremist groups that exploit their desperation. Climate refugees, once farmers or fishermen, now wander unfamiliar streets, hoping for a fresh start in cities already bursting at the seams.
The crisis is not on the horizon—it is here, reshaping the nation in ways both visible and insidious. The signs are clear, yet the response is sluggish. The government drafts policies, but without proper implementation, they remain words on paper.
Renewable energy is discussed, but investment in fossil fuels continues. Awareness campaigns are launched, yet many Nigerians remain unaware of how deeply climate change affects their daily lives. Solutions exist, but without collective action, the damage will only worsen.
The question is no longer whether climate change is real but how much longer Nigeria can endure its consequences without decisive action. The time to act was yesterday. The second-best time is now.
The land is speaking, the waters are warning, and the skies are restless. Will Nigeria listen before it is too late?
Mahmud Yerima is a 200-level student of Mass Communication at Maryam Abacha American University of Nigeria (MAAUN), in Kano State. He can be reached via: [email protected].