Nigeria warns of widespread floods in 2026, flags risks in 33 states


ABUJA, ⁠April 16 (Reuters) - Nigeria faces a high risk of ⁠widespread flooding in 2026, with more than ‌14,000 communities exposed across 33 of the country's 36 states as well as the Federal Capital Territory of Abuja, the hydrological ​agency said on Thursday.

Unveiling its ⁠annual flood outlook, the ⁠Nigeria Hydrological Services Agency (NiHSA) said in a statement that ⁠flooding ‌was expected to peak between July and September at the height of the rainy ⁠season, threatening cities, farmland and critical infrastructure.

NiHSA ​said 14,118 ‌communities were classified as high risk, with another ⁠15,597 facing ​moderate risk. The figures were broadly in line with those of recent years.

Major cities including Abuja, Lagos ⁠and Port Harcourt could see severe ​urban flooding, while coastal states such as Bayelsa, Delta, Rivers, and Lagos are vulnerable to river and tidal ⁠floods.

Nigeria is prone to flooding during the rainy season, which typically begins in April and ends in October.

In 2022, its worst floods in more than ​a decade killed over 600 ⁠people, displaced 1.4 million and destroyed 440,000 hectares (1.09 million ​acres) of farmland. Last year, ‌more than 200 people died ​in one flooding incident alone.

(Reporting by Camillus Eboh; Writing by Elisha Bala-GbogboEditing by Gareth Jones)

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