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RestoreGore Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jan-16-07 08:48 PM
Original message
Lake Chad Is Dying
Edited on Tue Jan-16-07 08:52 PM by RestoreGore
THIS IS A SIN.

This lake provides water to more than 20 million people living in the four countries which surround it , Chad, Cameroon, Niger, and Nigeria. What are the people to do when the water is gone?



Lake Chad Fishermen Pack Up Their Nets


Muhammadu Bello and his nine children used to depend on Lake Chad for their livelihoods. But the former fisherman became a farmer as the waters vanished eastwards from the shores of his village in north-east Nigeria. Experts are warning that the lake, which was once Africa's third largest inland water body, could shrink to a mere pond in two decades. A recent study by Nasa and the German Aerospace Centre blames global warming and human activity for Africa's disappearing water.

Cheating

"Africa is being cheated again by the industrialised West," says Jacob Nyanganji of Nigeria's University of Maiduguri.

"This lake is dying and we are all dying with it."
Muhammadu Bello

"Africa does not produce any significant amount of greenhouse gases, but it's our lakes and rivers that are drying up. America has refused to ratify Kyoto and it is our lakes that are drying up." Villagers in Nigeria's semi-arid border region with Chad, Niger and Cameroon understand full well the consequences of what is happening.

"I don't know what global warming is, but what I do know is that this lake is dying and we are all dying with it," says Mr Bello. "Some 27 years ago when I started fishing on the lake, we used to catch fish as large as a man. "But now this is all the fishermen bring in after a whole night of fishing," he says pointing at tiny catfish piled on the ground in Doron Baga's once-famous fish market.His family now farm on rich, dark loamy soil that was once part of the lake - growing onions, peppers, tomatoes and maize.


"There are constant arguments over territory between fishermen."

Fisherman Muhammad Sanusi

"This entire area used to be covered with water when I first came here," Mr Bello says with a sweep of his hand as we left the village by car heading towards the lake - a journey which took three hours along a bumpy dusty trail. As recently as 1966, Lake Chad, which sits between Nigeria, Chad, Cameroon and Niger, was a huge expanse of water that the locals fondly referred to as an "ocean". The Central African Republic's Logone and Chari rivers empty into the lake. But reduced rainfall and damming of the rivers means that only half of the water now gets to the lake. The Komadougou-Yobe River in far north-eastern Nigeria which also feeds the lake now flows only during the rainy season.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The people of Africa are suffering because of the gluttony of the West in regards to our seeming indifference in understanding how our actions here affect people around the world. It is immoral for us to simply watch their lakes drying up, their land turning to desert, their cattle lying emaciated, their fish dwindling, and their lives and livelihoods lost. As this article also illustrates, the people of Africa on a wide scale do not even know what "global warming" is. All they know is that on a lake that was once thriving now stands a creeping desert with dwindling hope of life.

I am then making an urgent plea to Al Gore to take his Climate Project to Africa. I know he has already done a training session in Australia and is planning one in Britain for this March. I believe it is also imperative that he think about expanding this program to Africa to not only train individuals to spread this truth about the climate crisis, but to also work with those governments and NGOs willing to provide tools to educate on this topic and to also address overpopulation, waste of freshwater resources, and desertification. I would gladly donate what I could to such a cause.

Mr. Gore has stated that we have all we need to solve this problem, and that is not only true of the climate crisis but the water crisis as well. However, due to ignorance, greed, and now this climate crisis, fresh water is and will become a golden commodity to be used as a political/corporate weapon and a way to keep people subservient. Water is a human right, and it is inhumane and immoral for those of us who live in a land of such fortune and plenty to sit and watch while fellow world citizens die from a catastrophe that can be remedied by us pulling together as a global community.

&imgrefurl=http://www.grida.no/climate/vitalafrica/english/14.htm&h=441&w=750&sz=136&tbnid=rZq1se7OwGE1hM:&tbnh=83&tbnw=141&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dlake%2Bchad&start=1&sa=X&oi=images&ct=image&cd=1">The Disappearance Of Lake Chad

If this were the Great Lakes, would you not think this urgent?

Water Is Life
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Deja Q Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jan-16-07 08:56 PM
Response to Original message
1. Hmmm, if it provides water for 20 million people...
Edited on Tue Jan-16-07 08:57 PM by HypnoToad
Could drinking it be part of the problem? (How high must temperatures get before such serious evaporation occurs?)

:sarcasm:


Now to be serious:

They're right, the 'cheating' of the West... and thanks to offshoring, those cheaters are much closer to home.

But, oops! I forgot to mention, they're bickering about the water that remains. Such bickering (which is a common excuse for cheating) is also a staple routine of the West! Seems they are little different when one starts to think about it... :(

On the plus side, the EU, the US, and others are genuinely starting to shift toward wind, solar, and other means of power. And with scientists finding ways to deal with the problem (that's the romantic impossible side of me talking) we'll be okay. Hell, I'd pay real money to get educated so I could make a better, positive difference!

And I've also wondered why nobody can take the salt out of marine water to make it viable for consumption?
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RestoreGore Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jan-16-07 09:15 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. It is our actions today...
"A recent study by Nasa and the German Aerospace Centre blames global warming and human activity for Africa's disappearing water."

There is no denying that overuse, diversion, waste, and mismanagement are primary causes of dwindling freshwater supplies in many places worldwide. However, the evidence is in as well to support that global warming and the human activity exacerbating that global warming is also responsible for Africa's disappearing water, and a large part of that activity is generated right here. "We" may well be OK, but there are millions in Africa right now who most certainly are not.
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NNadir Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-17-07 12:56 PM
Response to Reply #2
7. Thank goodness though, that we don't have to deal with the possibility
that some rancher somewhere in the next 500 years might get a cancer from a so called "dangerous nuclear waste."

Global climate change is a serious matter, maybe involving a few hundred million people, but it is nowhere near as important than that rancher.

This is why everybody can carry on for hours about Yucca Mountain but the matter of Lake Chad is esoteric.
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AliceWonderland Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jan-16-07 09:37 PM
Response to Original message
3. I found this graphic, based on NASA satellite images
Water is human security.

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Nihil Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-17-07 05:28 AM
Response to Reply #3
5. That diagram has a horrible fascination ... (n/t)
:cry:
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RestoreGore Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Jan-17-07 12:41 PM
Response to Reply #3
6. Yes, this is the graph I linked to in the post
And it tells now an all too commmon tale in our world. We must change our ways because we are making this planet uninhabitable for the human race and other species.
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MountainLaurel Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Jan-16-07 10:57 PM
Response to Original message
4. Horrific
:cry: :scared:
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