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‘The ocean is what we know.’ Can Senegal woo climate refugees inland?

When Madické Sène was a child, the sands at Langue de Barbarie stretched out some 100 yards. Now rising seas have swallowed much of the beach, including his 10-bed house.

It’s one sign of how the climate crisis is already ravaging West Africa’s coastal cities. By 2050, some 113 million people across the continent could be forced to move because of the effects of climate change, including rising sea levels. 

Why We Wrote This

Politicians are waking up to the reality of climate migration. Senegal could offer a blueprint for how coastal African cities might deal with the complex task of relocating citizens from places that have long provided economic opportunities – and emotional links.

In Senegal, some 3,200 residents of the peninsula that forms part of the historic city of Saint-Louis have been displaced. By 2080, tens of thousands more will be affected, with one study predicting 80% of the wider city area could be underwater.

Some 12 kilometers inland, the government has built a displaced persons camp as a temporary stand-in for a new village. But peninsula residents like Mr. Sène have no desire to leave.

“I was born here, and I’ll grow old here,” he says. ”The ocean is what we know.” 

Among just 1,500 residents living in Diougop, the temporary camp, Ndeye Coumba Gueye has taken a state-subsidized cosmetology course – one of several sweeteners aimed at convincing people to relocate there. 

“My hope is that when the [permanent] houses are built, there will be people … who come to live here,” she says.

As Madické Sène grills a pair of crabs he caught earlier in the morning, he stares out at the calm morning waters of the Atlantic Ocean.

“It used to stretch all the way out there when I was a child,” he says of the beach, pointing past a handful of brightly painted fishing boats sitting some 100 yards out in the water. Now, as he sits on a mat, laid out on a newly built seawall, the waves roll in just 25 yards away at high tide. 

His mat, the grill, the crabs, the fabric he’s strung up overhead to provide shade from the sun – all of this sits atop what used to be his ten-room house, swallowed by a particularly swollen sea in 2018. Behind him lie the remnants: the last standing bedroom, a bathroom, and a wooden animal pen for his sheep.

Why We Wrote This

Politicians are waking up to the reality of climate migration. Senegal could offer a blueprint for how coastal African cities might deal with the complex task of relocating citizens from places that have long provided economic opportunities – and emotional links.

Mr. Sène’s set-up is replicated among his neighbors. They’re the scars leftover from the rising sea levels pummeling away at this coastal peninsula known as the Langue de Barbarie, part of the city of Saint-Louis, some 140 miles from Senegal’s capital, Dakar. 

Some 3,200 residents of the peninsula’s crowded fishing quarter, Guet Ndar, have been displaced by the increasingly volatile seas, which have at times flooded the entire peninsula to the point where the ocean spills into the Senegal River on the other side. In response, the government in 2019 erected temporary displaced persons camps 12 kilometers inland. It plans to eventually replace them with a newly-built village.

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