The report says Lagos is the only Nigerian coastal city that might
go under if nothing serious is done to stop the effects of climate
change and the poor environmental attitude of the residents.

Lagos was among cities in the developing world facing similar
fate. Cotonou, Liberia and Abdijan in West Africa were in the number.
OECD said that “in the 20th century, sea level rose by an estimated 17
centimetres but conservative global mean projection for sea level rise
between 1990 and 2080 ranges from 22-34 centimetres.
Oceans which have been absorbing 80 per cent of the temperature
increase attributable to global warming are expanding as ice sheets in
the North and South poles melt. These events have led to a rise in sea
levels and increasing flooding in coastal cities. The projected rise in
sea levels could result in catastrophic flooding of coastal cities.”
A University of Lagos don, Dr Emmanuel Enyeribe Ege, said the
prediction about Lagos and other cities re-echoed in Rotterdam in June
this year at a programme entitled Urban Development Tools and Climate
Change and its implication for the world.
It was organised by the Institute for Housing and Urban Development
Studies (IHS) of the Erasmus University, Rotterdam, in The Netherlands.
Dr Ege, who teaches in the Department of Geography said: “From what I
observed, what they (in Europe) are doing regarding climate change and
what we are doing here are poles apart. It is clear that we are too
complacent with climate issues.
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