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Economic and Spatial Study of the Vulnerability and Adaptation to Climate Change of Coastal Areas in Senegal
Resource ID
0d5cf170-3247-11e6-91fb-040146164b01
Title
Economic and Spatial Study of the Vulnerability and Adaptation to Climate Change of Coastal Areas in Senegal
Date
Sept. 1, 2013, 5 p.m., Publication
Abstract
"The African coastal countries are facing several environmental and socio-economic challenges, such as unplanned urban and economic development, fuelled by a growing rural exodus; non-functional and/or non-existent public infrastructures to handle the demographic growth along the coastline; air, water and soil pollution; and alteration of coastal ecosystems. West Africa, in particular, is facing severe land losses and major damage due to coastal erosion and shoreline loss. This situation impacts coastal communities, infrastructures and users, and hampers economic growth. The institutional, technical and financial capabilities at the regional, national and local scales are not sufficient to effectively meet these challenges. The impacts of climate change will undoubtedly intensify those trends and induce accelerated coastal erosion, loss of land and assets, river or run-off floods, marine submersion, groundwater salinization and changes in the distribution and abundance of coastal and marine habitats and species. The Senegalese coastline is logically affected by the above trend. It stretches over 531 km, crossing 6 administrative regions of the country (Saint-Louis, Louga, Thiès, Dakar, Fatick and Ziguinchor) that are home to 60% of the Senegalese population (12.5 million inhabitants in 2010). The African coastal countries are facing several environmental and socio-economic challenges, such as unplanned urban and economic development, fuelled by a growing rural exodus; non-functional and/or non-existent public infrastructures to handle the demographic growth along the coastline; air, water and soil pollution; and alteration of coastal ecosystems. West Africa, in particular, is facing severe land losses and major damage due to coastal erosion and shoreline loss. This situation impacts coastal communities, infrastructures and users, and hampers economic growth. The institutional, technical and financial capabilities at the regional, national and local scales are not sufficient to effectively meet these challenges. The impacts of climate change will undoubtedly intensify those trends and induce accelerated coastal erosion, loss of land and assets, river or run-off floods, marine submersion, groundwater salinization and changes in the distribution and abundance of coastal and marine habitats and species. The Senegalese coastline is logically affected by the above trend. It stretches over 531 km, crossing 6 administrative regions of the country (Saint-Louis, Louga, Thiès, Dakar, Fatick and Ziguinchor) that are home to 60% of the Senegalese population (12.5 million inhabitants in 2010)."
Edition
--
Responsible
andy
Point of Contact
Fraser
sfraser@worldbank.org
Purpose
--
Maintenance Frequency
notPlanned
Type
not filled
Restrictions
None
License
None
Language
eng
Temporal Extent
Start
--
End
--
Supplemental Information
climate_change
Data Quality
--
Extent
  • x0:
  • x1:
  • y0:
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Spatial Reference System Identifier
EPSG:4326
Keywords
(9973, 68, 659, 48, 68, 'Disaster Risk Assessment', 'disaster-risk-assessment'), (9974, 85, 659, 48, 85, 'WBG', 'wbg'), (9972, 91, 659, 48, 91, 'Climate Change', 'climate-change'), (9971, 252, 659, 48, 252, 'Senegal', 'senegal')
Category
Geoscientific Information
Regions
Senegal