AYETORO, Nigeria, Jan 02 (IPS) – In 2021, Ojajuni Olufunsho, a 53-year-old resident of Ayetoro, a city alongside the Atlantic coast, southwestern Nigeria, noticed her residence swept away by the encroaching sea. What was as soon as a spacious 10-room home, a sanctuary for Olufunsho and her 5 youngsters, was swallowed by the relentless drive of rising sea waters.
With no place to go, Olufunsho was compelled to beg a household residing on larger floor to take her household in. A tiny non permanent shelter made out of wooden and aluminium sheets changed the comforts of her earlier residence. She now struggles to outlive by mending garments as her once-thriving tailoring enterprise was destroyed by the waters.
“I was an enormous tailor, and I additionally bought garments, however the waters carried away every little thing. My store was all the time full,” she stated, tears streaming down her face as she recounted her losses.
Ayetoro’s battle with sea stage rise dates again to the early 2000s, however its influence has solely worsened with time. Native residents declare that almost 90 p.c of the city is now submerged by water.



Streets, houses, faculties, and even cemeteries have been swallowed by the rising tides, displacing hundreds of residents. Many have been compelled to maneuver a number of occasions, searching for larger floor to flee the encroaching waters.
The buildings that after stood as symbols of the neighborhood’s resilience now lie as empty shells, victims of the ocean.
“Many individuals have left the city,” stated Comrade Omoyele Thompson, Ayetoro’s Public Relations Officer, noting that the inhabitants has dwindled from round 30,000 in 2006 to only 5,000 in current occasions.
“Properties value tens of millions of {dollars} have been destroyed. Lots of of residential homes, together with a maternity centre and factories constructed via communal efforts, have been ravaged by the ocean surge,” he added, highlighting that many residents now dwell in shanties.
The struggles of Ayetoro aren’t distinctive. Coastal communities around the globe are going through comparable challenges. Rising sea ranges, fueled by local weather change, are inflicting vital destruction, and projections counsel that the issue will solely worsen.
In keeping with knowledge from the African Centre for Strategic Research, African coastlines have skilled a constant rise in sea ranges over the previous 4 many years. If this pattern continues, sea ranges are anticipated to extend by 0.3 meters by 2030, posing a menace to 117 million folks on the continent.
Nigeria, with its huge shoreline alongside the Gulf of Guinea, is among the most weak nations to local weather change. Whereas desertification threatens the northern components of the nation, the southern coastal areas face the rising menace of rising sea ranges.
In keeping with USAID, a 0.5-meter rise in sea ranges may drive as many as 27 to 53 million Nigerians residing alongside the coast to relocate by the top of the century. Sea rise may have devastating results on human actions in these areas, together with agriculture and fishing, all of which kind the spine of Ayetoro’s financial system.
Whereas rising sea ranges pose a world menace, many nations are taking proactive measures to handle the issue. As an illustration, about one-third of the Netherlands lies under sea stage, and components of the nation have even been reclaimed from the ocean. Nevertheless, observers advised IPS that the Nigerian authorities has proven minimal concern for Ayetoro’s plight. With out pressing intervention, they warn, the city could quickly exist solely in images and historical past books.


The Fading Jewel of the Atlantic
Ayetoro, initially based in 1947 by Christian Apostolic missionaries, was as soon as a beacon of self-sufficiency and progress. The city’s community-focused lifestyle, based mostly on spiritual values, fostered a way of unity that earned it the nickname “The Completely happy Metropolis.”
Through the Nineteen Sixties and Seventies, Ayetoro turned recognized for its growth in sectors resembling agriculture, trade, and schooling. The city was residence to Nigeria’s first dockyard, which spurred industries like boat constructing and fishing. In 1953, it turned solely the second city in Nigeria to have electrical energy. These developments made Ayetoro a beautiful vacation spot for vacationers and settlers alike.
Nevertheless, the city’s once-beautiful seashores and thriving infrastructure have now change into distant reminiscences. Ayetoro, as soon as recognized for its vibrant financial system and cultural significance, now stands as a stark reminder of the destruction wrought by local weather change.
Key landmarks such because the market, soccer pitch, neighborhood library, a technical workshop and the neighborhood’s first church have been submerged or destroyed by the ocean. Even the monarch’s palace, an emblem of the city’s wealthy cultural heritage, is now surrounded by swampy water.
Disrupted Lives
For a lot of residents of Ayetoro, fishing has lengthy been their major livelihood. Nevertheless, rising sea ranges have made it more and more troublesome to safe a very good catch. The space to the water has expanded, and gas prices for longer journeys have soared, placing extra pressure on their already restricted funds.
Moreover, farmland and water sources have been contaminated by saltwater, making agriculture practically not possible.
Thompson, who has been combating for the rights of Ayetoro residents, stated, “Persons are residing in full poverty as a result of companies have been misplaced.”
In Might 2024, he helped manage a peaceable protest, with hundreds of residents—together with youngsters and the aged—marching to demand authorities motion. Their placards learn “Save Our Souls” and “Save Ayetoro Now,” however regardless of their efforts, the federal government has failed to reply.
The city’s solely surviving hospital can be in horrible situation and poorly geared up. Certified healthcare staff have fled the realm. In emergencies, residents should transport the sick by boat to hospitals in neighbouring communities. Tragically, many don’t survive the journey.


Damaged Guarantees
Ayetoro’s requires assist haven’t gone unanswered previously, however the response has typically been insufficient or marred by corruption.
In 2000, the neighborhood wrote quite a few letters to the federal government, pleading for assist as the ocean incursions worsened. The federal government did not reply until 2004, when it launched the Ayetoro Shore Safety Challenge via the Niger Delta Growth Fee, promising to construct a sea embankment to guard the city from additional flooding. Nevertheless, tens of millions of {dollars} allotted for the challenge had been allegedly siphoned off, and no work was carried out.
“We learn concerning the intervention in newspapers, however no contractor or gear ever got here to the positioning,” Thompson stated.
In 2009, the challenge was re-awarded to a different firm, Dredging Atlantic, however as soon as once more, nothing materialized.
Nigeria launched the Local weather Change Act in 2021 with the aim of addressing local weather challenges. Nevertheless, critics argue that, like different insurance policies on paper, it lacks the political will to see the sunshine of day.
Idowu Oyeneyin, the 38-year-old mom of three, is offended that nobody has been held accountable for the failed tasks. She stated politicians solely go to the neighborhood throughout election intervals to make empty marketing campaign guarantees.
“The rising coastal sea ranges have introduced immense hardship to my household. My store, the place I bought provisions to assist my youngsters, was fully destroyed by the floods. It wasn’t only a store—it was our major supply of earnings. For the reason that flood ruined my enterprise, I can now not afford to look after my youngsters or meet their college wants,” Oyeneyin stated.
“We want assist from the federal government and organizations to assist us rebuild our lives. Many people have misplaced not simply our companies but in addition our houses and stability. Offering monetary assist and consciousness packages may make a big distinction.”
Her youngsters now attend the one remaining college locally, a makeshift construction of wood huts precariously linked by unstable boardwalks and supported by stilts within the swampy floor. The varsity has been relocated a number of occasions attributable to relentless ocean surges.
Residents say there was three faculties locally. With the lack of two and the pressure on the one one left, a whole bunch of youngsters are actually out of faculty.
“One time, faculties had been closed for about 4 years, and even after they reopened, the devastation within the space made it not possible for kids to entry their faculties. This has been our biggest ache,” Thompson advised IPS.
Zikora Ibeh, Senior Programme Supervisor at Company Accountability and Public Participation Africa (CAPPA), is of the assumption that the Nigerian authorities ought to recalibrate its priorities.
“Till state authorities in Nigeria recognise neighborhood welfare and environmental justice as important elements of their legacy, communities like Ayetoro will proceed to bear the brunt of neglect, exploitation, and local weather change,” Ibeh stated.

The Curse of Fossil Fuels
Ayetoro’s vulnerability to rising sea ranges is compounded by the oil exploration actions within the area. Situated in Nigeria’s oil-rich belt, Ayetoro contributes to the nation’s whole oil manufacturing.
Akinwuwa Omobolanle, who was the queen to the previous king of Ayetoro, desires native and worldwide oil corporations to cease working within the space.
“The crude oil drilling within the ocean and the arrival of foreigners who found pure assets in Ayetoro within the Nineteen Nineties are one of many essential causes of what we face. Since they began drilling oil, issues have been escalating,” Omobolanle stated.
Whereas oil corporations deny accountability for the destruction, environmental specialists need justice.
“Whereas rising sea ranges are undoubtedly pushed by world warming, the plight of Ayetoro, like many oil-rich communities within the Niger Delta, can be a direct consequence of reckless extractivism perpetuated by multinational oil and fuel firms. For many years, these firms have operated with near-total impunity, leaving a path of environmental destruction of their wake,” Ibeh posited.
The Nigerian authorities, she added, doesn’t maintain these firms accountable and demand reparations for the injury carried out, however moderately “successive governments have chosen complicity, upholding company pursuits and income era over the welfare of communities like Ayetoro. This negligence has left the city doubly weak—first to the worldwide impacts of local weather change and second to the unchecked greed of profit-driven industries that deal with the surroundings as disposable.”
Cynthia N. Moyo, Greenpeace Africa’s Local weather and Power Campaigner, advised IPS that it’s important for Africa to transition from fossil fuels to sustainable vitality sources. She argued that fossil fuels signify not solely an environmental menace but in addition a perpetuation of oppression, exploitation, and neocolonialism.
“The science is evident: the intense climate occasions we’re experiencing in our communities are a direct consequence of continued reliance on fossil fuels. These occasions are wreaking havoc on weak communities worldwide. In Africa, the consequences of local weather change are devastating—cyclones, typhoons, floods, and billions of {dollars} in injury happen yearly,” she stated.
Moyo warned that elevated funding in offshore oil and fuel drilling would result in extreme environmental injury, together with the chance of spills that hurt marine ecosystems and destroy the livelihoods of coastal communities. This, she defined, would solely exacerbate the local weather disaster.
“Such actions undermine significant efforts and commitments to transition in direction of renewable vitality. Fossil fuels like coal and oil lie on the core of a damaged, unjust, and unsustainable vitality system that harms each folks and the planet,” she famous.
A Bleak Future?
For the residents of Ayetoro, time is working out. Amid the shortage of presidency assist, they’ve been looking for native options to their worsening plight however with out success.
“We’ve tried to construct native obstacles to cease the flood,” stated Ojajuni Oluwale, a father of seven who has misplaced two homes to the encroaching waters. “We’ve tried bagging sand and putting it alongside the shoreline, however when the ocean rises, it scatters every little thing.”
“Fixing this can require big monetary funding,” Oluwale stated.
At COP29 in Baku, Azerbaijan, developed nations agreed to allocate USD 300 billion yearly to assist creating nations handle local weather impacts. Nevertheless, creating nations criticized this quantity as insufficient, with Nigeria describing it as a “joke.”
There may be widespread skepticism that developed nations, answerable for practically 80 p.c of historic greenhouse fuel emissions, will honor their commitments. In 2009, they pledged to offer USD 100 billion yearly to assist weak nations grappling with worsening local weather disasters, however the promise was sluggish to materialize, although, in accordance with the OECD, developed nations exceeded the quantity ultimately.
In 2022, after years of strain, developed nations agreed to determine a Loss and Injury Fund to supply monetary assist to nations most weak and severely impacted by the results of local weather change. Contributions to the fund have exceeded USD 70 million, with disbursement anticipated to start by 2025.
Tolulope Theresa Gbenro, a local weather skilled in Nigeria, worries concerning the disparity between the local weather financing wants of creating nations, particularly African nations, and the pledges made by developed nations. She famous that at current, local weather finance and accountability are considerably disorganized and missing a transparent, unified strategy throughout varied funding sources.
“It is one factor to have sufficient funding to satisfy the wants, however one other to have the appropriate accountability, monitoring, and auditing frameworks in place to make sure that funds are correctly disbursed and attain essentially the most weak teams. At this stage, I’d say it’s nonetheless a piece in progress as a result of negotiations associated to this can proceed shifting ahead,” Gbenro highlighted.
Whereas Ayetoro awaits any type of help to stop its full destruction, residents report that the psychological toll of their struggling is overwhelming.
“The trauma is insufferable,” stated Emmanuel Aralu, who misplaced his barbershop to the encroaching sea. “Your entire store was worn out in a single day. Not a single merchandise might be saved. Now, I’m struggling to make ends meet, assist my spouse and kids, pay college charges, and address the rising value of residing.”
He continued, “I am struggling for one thing I didn’t trigger. Oil exploration drains assets from our offshore areas, however the advantages go to cities like Abuja and Lagos, leaving us to bear the brunt of the injury. It’s emotionally exhausting.”
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