UGANDA: Rising temperatures threatening livelihoods
Friday, 06 March 2009 13:17
KAMPALA, 3 March 2009 (IRIN) - The ice caps on the Rwenzori
Mountains along Uganda’s western border have
receded significantly in the past century and could disappear completely in the
next few years, experts said.
"The results of
recent mapping are alarming," Philip Gwage, assistant commissioner in
charge of meteorology in the ministry of water and environment, said.
"Over the last 100 years, the total glacier area has dropped from 650ha in
1906 to a mere 108ha in 2005. At this rate the Rwenzori will be completely
[devoid] of glaciers by 2025."
Already, melting ice caps
have hit water catchments and eco-tourism. Should changes continue at current
rates, Uganda
would also suffer lower agricultural productivity due to reduced, erratic
rainfall and the emergence of new pests, and increased incidences of diseases
such as malaria.
"South-western Uganda,
where temperatures have risen by 0.3 degrees in a decade, is one of the
hardest-hit areas in terms of disease outbreaks, especially malaria,"
Gwage said. A two-degree rise in temperature, he added, would see many areas in
Uganda
losing their main livelihood of cash crops, including coffee.
Other crops such as
cassava and soya would be affected by new pests, despite being staple crops.
"There are many negative impacts of climate change," the official
said. "These include reduced capacity for electricity generation, which
would have an impact on the economy."
National strategy
To try to mitigate the
situation, the water and environment ministry has prepared a National
Adaptation Plan of Action (NAPA). The strategy aims to increase awareness
within local communities and will invest in science and technology to
facilitate long-term weather forecasting to prepare communities.
Critics, however, say the
government lacks policies and funds to implement comprehensive strategies to
contain the impact of climate change.
"Looking at the
current status in Uganda, there is no weather and climate policy, low levels of
awareness of weather and climate among population, and inadequate determination
of adaptation and mitigation options to control greenhouse gas emissions,"
Robert Bakiika, executive director of the NGO Environmental Management for
Livelihood Improvement, said.
"The situation in Uganda
is alarming," he added. "Over 90,000ha of forest cover disappeared
per year yet deforestation is responsible for up to 20 percent of greenhouse
gases."
In addition, the country
experienced rapid urbanisation and unprofessional urban planning without
eco-housing guidelines, and widespread wetland degradation.
Malaria
The NAPA report notes that malaria has increased
countrywide, including in south-western highland areas where it was not prevalent
before.
"South-western Uganda,
where temperatures have risen by 0.3 degrees in a decade, is one of the
hardest-hit areas in terms of disease outbreaks, especially malaria,"
Gwage told IRIN.
A NAPA survey found an increase in malaria
cases of 43 percent in Ntungamo District, 51 percent in Kabale and 13 percent
in Mbarara.
"There was a general
increase of malaria incidences throughout the country, particularly in
south-western Uganda
where it reached epidemic proportions," notes the plan. In semi-arid
areas, tick-borne diseases have also become rampant because of higher
temperatures; the tsetse fly belt has expanded; while meningitis and eye
infections have increased.
"Climate change threatens
efforts geared towards poverty reduction in an agricultural country like Uganda
[where] the majority are peasant farmers relying on rainfall to produce,”
Gorreti Nabanoga, dean of Makerere University’s Faculty of Forestry and
Nature Conservation.
"This trend
threatens to undo decades of development [and] threatens to frustrate poverty
eradication programmes and the Millennium Development Goals [MDGs]."
Drought
Between 1991 and 2000,
the country experienced drought seven times. As a result, water tables have
dropped, leaving many boreholes, on which the rural poor rely, dry and
affecting hydro-electric power generation.
In addition, what little
rain fell came in concentrated heavy showers and storms, causing floods in
lowlands and landslides in highlands. In 2007, for example, floods hit eastern Uganda,
spreading waterborne diseases and destroying crops and infrastructure.
"A large proportion
of the rural poor lack latrine coverage,” Gwage said. “Floods pose
serious pollution problems to sources of drinking water, with the potential
danger of outbreaks of waterborne diseases such as cholera, typhoid and
dysentery.”
In areas where rainfall
could actually increase, greater evaporation due to rising temperatures would
undo the benefits.
"Drought is the
single most important and widespread disaster in Uganda,”
the NAPA report
noted. “It is increasing in frequency and severity, particularly in the
semi-arid areas of the cattle corridor. The rural poor, whose livelihoods are
dependent on natural resources, are most affected.
Karamoja, in north-eastern Uganda, experiences cycles of natural disasters and inter-communal conflicts mainly over pasture, water and livestock. It has received very limited investment.
In February, the UN World Food Programme noted it was on the brink of a humanitarian catastrophe, after drought cut agricultural output to as low as 30 percent in some areas in 2008. Global Acute Malnutrition (GAM) was bordering on emergency levels.
"Ultimately, the economic crisis and losses of climate change will prevent Uganda from reaching … the MDGs," Bakiika told IRIN.
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