Within the small village of Ogba-Ojibo in central Nigeria, sitting on the confluence of two of the nation’s largest rivers – the Niger and Benue – 27-year-old Ako Prince Omali is counting the steps carved out of the dust, which lead down the loam-coloured banks of the river Niger. This river financial institution, dotted with tufts of spiky grass, is the place villagers come to fish or wash produce and laundry.
Simply final week, three of the steps had been submerged throughout one evening of rain, which raised the water stage by about 5 metres. Usually, you may depend seven steps down into the river. Now, solely 4 stay above the floor of the water, the sticks bracing the muddy steps having washed away within the deluge.
Omali, a subsistence farmer whose one hectare of cropland has been wholly submerged, has been monitoring the extent of water within the river for the previous few weeks. The third-longest on the continent, the Niger is a serious river in West Africa, originating within the Guinea highlands and discharging into the Atlantic Ocean by way of the expansive Niger Delta.
Flooding, probably the most widespread pure disasters on the planet, is a seasonal prevalence for the 4.5 million individuals residing in Kogi State, named for a Hausa phrase that means river. Most Ogba-Ojibo villagers are subsistence fishermen and farmers whose livelihoods are particularly inclined to environmental modifications.
Nigeria has the second-highest variety of individuals on the planet weak to flooding after India – 15 million in whole. In 2022, 470,000 individuals in Kogi alone had been affected by flooding.
However this 12 months is predicted to be significantly laborious. As of mid-September, one million people have been displaced following the collapse of a dam in Borno State, with some nonetheless stranded of their properties, others fleeing to kinfolk in different states or government-supported displacement camps. In Kogi, an additional 250,000 individuals are liable to displacement, in keeping with native authorities.
Often, support companies such because the Crimson Cross, the Worldwide Group for Migration, or the State Emergency Administration Company step in at this level to distribute emergency meals provides, however whereas that is welcome, it doesn’t handle the underlying situation – that the floods come yearly.
Now, new revolutionary programmes are beginning to seem, aiming to assist individuals put together for floods upfront.
Three months of disruption yearly
New concepts are what is required right here, says Omali, because the floods have been getting worse for years throughout the nation as an entire. Again in 2012, when Omali was 15, he recollects, was when “the flooding turned very disastrous” for the residents of his dwelling in Kogi State.
The mud-patched bamboo hut that his spouse and younger daughter dwell in with him has been fully flooded this 12 months, together with the small plot the place his dad and mom toiled over rice and yams when he was younger.
Throughout his childhood, he says, “We began relocating when the floods got here, which might be for 2 and a half to 3 months [each autumn] yearly”. The household would cross the river in small paddle boats with their few belongings to Idah, positioned just a few kilometres away on increased floor. It’s the place Omali goes along with his personal spouse and little one when the water will get too excessive.
Life in Idah is much from straightforward when the household makes its dwelling there for these few months every year. They squat underneath bamboo sticks coated with cellophane luggage to create a makeshift shack; the youngsters’s education involves a halt as all the faculties are closed.
“Persons are crammed collectively, there are challenges with air flow, we have now little or no meals,” says Omali. “The [lack of] entry to hygiene, [clean] water and services may be very tense.”
Throughout these tough durations, all 300 households of Ogba-Ojibo lose entry to their farmland.
It could possibly take as much as 4 months for the floodwaters to subside, draining away fertile, delicate topsoil within the course of.

As of late, Omali farms just below one hectare (2.4 acres) of rice and yams on land inherited from his late dad and mom alongside along with his spouse, Blessing, to feed themselves and their four-year-old daughter. They promote what they’ve left over on the native market.
2021 was top-of-the-line harvest years as a result of the floods had been decrease than normal – Omali and Blessing managed to make 300,000 naira ($183) throughout the 12 months. The next 12 months, he made solely 100,000 naira ($61). And final 12 months, they made nothing in any respect.
When occasions are particularly lean, Omali takes out loans or works as an off-the-cuff labourer throughout the village to make ends meet.
However this previous June, Omali says he found one thing to present him a little bit of hope. He attended a baraza (group assembly) carried out in Ogba-Ojibo by GiveDirectly, a United States nonprofit offering humanitarian support within the type of money funds or financial institution transfers.
There, he discovered a few new programme with a distinction from the standard meals support programmes. Below this new scheme, these residing in flood-prone areas are given the chance to obtain cash earlier than the floods hit, to assist communities brace for the aftershock by stocking up on family items or no matter else they select to purchase, reasonably than simply receiving meals and different necessities afterwards. Some 30,000 individuals enrolled over two weeks, says Natasha Buchholz, GiveDirectly’s senior supervisor primarily based in Mozambique.
The completely different method supplied by the programme includes synthetic intelligence (AI), which the organisation hopes will make extra of a distinction to individuals in flood-vulnerable communities like Ogba-Ojibo.

Utilizing AI to fend off catastrophe
A number of years in the past, Alex Diaz, the top of Synthetic Intelligence for Social Good on Google.org’s philanthropic group since 2019, began brainstorming concepts along with his group, members of Google Analysis, and humanitarian nongovernmental organisations on methods to higher perceive world climate-induced issues to develop the perfect options.
The solutions don’t “all the time need to be technical”, he tells Al Jazeera over a phone name from New York Metropolis. The purpose is to help nonprofits akin to GiveDirectly to construct or leverage AI instruments, such because the SKAI catastrophe harm detection mannequin that Google Analysis constructed together with the World Meals Programme and is now scaling globally, in additional than 80 nations, throughout 1,800 websites.
This mannequin will also be used to pinpoint the areas which are most definitely to be hit the worst by flooding.
A significant predicament with regards to catastrophe aftermath, whether or not it’s a large earthquake or devastating flooding, is that support employees “don’t know the place to go”, says Diaz.
In 2022, after the devastation wreaked by Hurricane Ian in Florida and Puerto Rico, Google used satellite tv for pc imagery overlaid with socioeconomic knowledge to establish these most in want of assist because the Federal Emergency Administration Company (FEMA) can take weeks and even months to assemble this knowledge, in keeping with Diaz.
“Put up-disaster, time is of the essence. We’re utilizing digital layers to get cash out the door, as quick as potential.”
In distant locations in Nigeria, going door-to-door out within the area is extraordinarily time-consuming and bandwidth is all the time stretched. So, since 2020, Google’s analysis group has been constructing AI catastrophe detection fashions, which can be utilized to establish particular person buildings which have been destroyed by hurricanes, floods and different pure disasters.
The detection system makes use of an amalgamation of Google satellite tv for pc imagery and different out there knowledge, together with publicly out there climate merchandise, gauge knowledge from rivers and satellite tv for pc imagery in addition to info the Nigerian authorities supplies, to “practice” a world mannequin to know extremely particular places.
In Nigeria, Google’s AI for Social Good group has additionally been specializing in anticipatory actions to mitigate flooding dangers from the Niger River in Kogi State. The concept was that “deep-learning” machine programs could possibly be designed to forecast pure disasters, “with higher granularity [more accuracy] and extra lead time than what we presently have as the established order”, explains Diaz.

Flooding ‘will intensify’
Dan Quinn, GiveDirectly’s director of humanitarian programmes, says that flooding in Nigeria is just set to worsen.
“We anticipate to see more and more intense flooding in coming years on account of local weather change, which is more and more tough to foretell as rains come earlier or later than we’d anticipate.” He continues: “Main flood occasions additionally change the bodily move of rivers, which may put sure areas at an elevated threat of flooding in subsequent years after a single main occasion.”
“Early warnings with out early actions is a missed alternative,” says Diaz. Based on the United Nations Workplace for Catastrophe Threat Discount, each $1 invested in threat discount and prevention can save as much as $15 in post-disaster restoration, whereas each $1 invested in disaster-resilient infrastructure saves $4 in reconstruction.
In addition to money support, different local weather resilience methods embody bolstering early warning programs, group training and coaching in catastrophe preparedness, investing in flood-resistant infrastructure, and climate-resilient agriculture. Conservation of wetlands and reforestation may also strengthen pure flood defences.
The US Chamber of Commerce has discovered that billion-dollar disasters are actually the norm with the spike in weather-related catastrophes. In 2022, pure disasters price greater than $360bn worldwide.
“I would like my son to dwell in a world with local weather change the place it’s not simply reactive responses,” says Diaz.
Round 2023, GiveDirectly determined to begin investing extra in preemptive actions, says Buchholz, the senior supervisor. The concept is to supply a lifeline earlier than catastrophe strikes by way of anticipatory funds, utilizing AI programmes to assist predict which communities are essentially the most uncovered. “We’re studying loads, it’s a really dynamic state of affairs,” she says.

The flooding in Kogi is anticipated to flare up badly over the subsequent few weeks.
GiveDirectly’s mission in Kogi begins with geo-targeting essentially the most at-risk areas. As soon as the mission areas are established, there’s a registration course of throughout which potential recipients reply to a brief survey by way of SMS to find out their eligibility for help, adopted by just a few cautious verification processes to verify identities. The scheme makes use of USSD shortcodes, which function by way of a SIM-based system, permitting individuals to entry providers on old-style cellphones in addition to smartphones.
GiveDirectly’s name centre is predicated in Ilorin State, about 350km (217 miles) west of Kogi, and if they will’t attain people to verify their identities by cellphone, they may strive to take action in particular person by way of the sector group as an alternative.
As of this week, GiveDirectly had already paid 53 people throughout three completely different wards, however a complete of 52 communities with 4,500 recipients over six wards in Kogi State are anticipated to be paid this flood season.
In addition to working with native leaders akin to village elders to confirm acceptable area places, GiveDirectly additionally companions with banking establishments to ensure recipients have entry to new verification strategies, like ID playing cards, as recipients usually dwell in distant and underserved areas.
When the flood season begins, GiveDirectly makes use of forecast knowledge from Google to establish flood-prone areas. “Triggers” are activated if the world of concern is roofed by water rising above or crossing a predetermined threshold, Buchholz explains. GiveDirectly is alerted by way of an e-mail notification, and anticipatory money for authorized recipients is then launched into their financial institution accounts for them to spend freely. For now, the programme principally pays cash this manner, however for many who would not have entry to a checking account, the group will discover different choices akin to cellular cash wallets. Most recipients fill up on meals and family requirements, whereas native markets are nonetheless open.
These residing in communities with flood triggers will obtain a primary fee earlier than the brunt of the floods truly arrives, of 177,866 naira ($105). After two weeks, the flood state of affairs is reassessed: Whether it is unhealthy, two extra consecutive funds, a month aside, might be paid out to recipients.
“That is the primary time we’re utilizing AI fashions in Nigeria to forecast floods and make funds primarily based on that,” says Federico Barreras, GiveDirectly’s humanitarian programme supervisor.

‘If we relocate, we received’t have any land’
Omali acquired his first switch of 177,866 naira on August 31 this 12 months. “I used to be very, very pleased – at first I couldn’t include my pleasure,” he says. “I shared the cash with my spouse, and he or she went to purchase foodstuffs: maize, rice, beans, condiments for making soup.”
From his first fee, Omali has additionally put aside 90,000 naira (just below $55) for repairs to their dwelling after the flooding subsides. For now, they’re nonetheless staying in Ogba-Ojibo, though the rains have already begun to break their hut.
Ibu Arome, 65, the village chief, is a farmer like his constituents. When this programme first got here to the village, he had no cellphone and was subsequently unable to use. Regardless, he’s grateful for his or her help, he says. “Everybody has a good alternative to use,” he says.
Arome has managed to accumulate a cellphone lately and hopes to have the ability to use it to use for different such programmes sooner or later. “Sooner or later, I hope they will take into account this group once more,” he provides.
Leaving Ogba-Ojibo completely just isn’t an possibility for many residents.
Because the heavy rain continues, Omali says dams have been emptying into the Niger River and water ranges are rising. However leaving Ogba-Ojibo completely just isn’t an possibility for many residents. “We’re predominantly farmers – right here, we have now entry to land. If we relocate, we received’t have any land,” he explains.
Omali seems out previous the huts of Ogba-Ojibo, in direction of the spots alongside the riverbank the place villagers usually fish. Proper now, the waters are swirling far too quick for there to be any fish. However Omali will await the waters to settle down, nonetheless lengthy that takes. Just like the land, the river and the fish are part of the house he received’t surrender on.