Simple wooden structures padded with coconut tree fronds are helping residents of Dialogue island in southern Senegal to win back stretches of sandy beach from the Atlantic swells that threaten much of the West African coast.
In some areas, half-submerged tree stumps and crumbling abandoned buildings show the impact of the waves – and the ongoing degradation of the coastline, where 56% of West Africa’s economic activity is generated and around a third of its population lives, according to the World Bank.
The ocean was so far away that we used to hear it without seeing it, said Angele Diatta, head of the women’s association in Dialogue Diola village on the island at the mouth of the Casamance River, where the higher tides sometimes sweep through homes.
West Africa has many of these low-lying deltas, making its coastal ecosystems among the most vulnerable to sea level rise, erosion, saltwater intrusion, and flooding, the U.N.’s global panel of climate scientists said in its latest report.
On Dialogue, a method of driving clusters of stakes into the wet shore is helping to protect some beaches on the island. These areas have expanded by around 30 meters (98 ft) since 2019, according to the project’s organizers.
Whenever we gain ground, we can extend the structure, add more sticks, as they say, little by little the bird makes its nest, said local primary school teacher Gilbert Bassene, who has been helping maintain the handmade beach defenses.
Coastal degradation cost Benin, Ivory Coast, Senegal, and Togo a total of $3.8 billion in 2017, according to the World Bank, which supports an ongoing project to relocate 10,000 people from Saint-Louis, a northern Senegalese city that spans a thin peninsula between the Senegal River and ocean.
Some people on Dialogue believe they face a similar fate. It’s not easy to admit but one day the village will have to move, village chief Cherif Diatta said.