Sunday, 6 October 2019

Towards a greener Sahara: Part 1


A question : September 20th 2019, where were you?  And what did you do?


The evening before, we were in London drinking coffee with Rebecca. When we compared plans for the following day, they couldn’t have been more different. 
Celebrating Mark's
birthday at 35,000 feet
She had made a difficult decision to skip lectures from her course at King’s College London and join with members of the university Students for Global Health Society and millions of young people around the world on the Global Climate Strike. 
We would have loved to join her too but instead we had to wake up at 3am, walk to Terminal 4 Heathrow and board an Air France flight to Paris then on to Abuja and finally Ndjamena, a journey of at least 3500 CO2 emitting air miles.

Could we have done the journey in a different way? Horse and cart, sailing boat and camel train would have made for an interesting blog, and would have been quite in the spirit of Greta Thunberg’s recent voyage to the Climate Change Action Summit at the UN. Alternatively we could have symbolically delayed our flight, but in doing so we would have missed the special MAF charter flight to get out team back to Bardai. In reality neither were practical possibilities, we needed to get back to work supporting and developing the health services in the Tibesti mountains- mid Sahara. However neither we, nor BMS World mission, are ignoring the impact of our travel on climate change. How could we? It is the poor and disadvantaged that we seek to serve who will suffer the most from its consequences. Accordingly all our miles travelled by air to and from Chad or on home assignment are logged and a financial carbon offset is set aside for the BMS Eco-Fund. In an imperfect world, this helps to reduce the unintended consequences of our travel.

 The Tibesti mountains are one of those places where a small change in temperature or rainfall could completely alter the character of the towns and the life of the people that live there. The Sahara is no stranger to climate change there have been previous profound natural changes on the flora, fauna and way of life as it becomes drier and drier. Five to ten thousand  years ago , during the last ice age,  the Sahara was green and the mountains and valleys were the habitat of elephants, giraffes, ostriches and other exotic animals.  
The evidence can be seen in the fossil record at the museum in Ndjamena and also carved on to rocks and cliffs some of which are at just a couple of km from our house.  When the Teda people migrated here, their tradition says from Egypt in about 600BC , the tropical animals had gone , perhaps it was them that introduced the camel ( strictly speaking dromedary) to the area. They may have seen however have seen some North African elephants on their way through modern day Libya. (Hannibal’s hometown Carthage was nearby on the Mediterranean coast).

Flooding in the wadi
They settled  in the mountains mid Sahara at various places where water could be found, sometimes at springs where water flow out of rocks and sometimes in places like Bardai beside a  wadi (a mostly dry seasonal river that floods after rains come in the mountains) . In Bardai they found a place where the water table would have been just below the surface of the sand  along with associated small lakes and  permanent wet lands.  Each year the rains came the wadi would flood and the life sustaining superficial underground water would be replenished. The date palms, which need to be able to get into a water table at most four metres from the surface flourished  and much of the local culture and calendar revolved around the dates, climbing and pollinating, harvesting, using the trunks for housing, the spines as pins, the fibres from the leaves to make ropes, the bases of the branches for firewood, the branches themselves as supports for the long reeds growing in the wetlands which are used for making partition walls and roofing.

An old well
Now the traditional way of life in this rocky oasis is under increasing threat. The palm trees are still there, producing plenty of dates, but the water levels are falling.  Forty years ago there were many gardens and fields throughout the valley, water was drawn from wells using the simple old technology of a counterbalance bucket and the water poured into open channels that irrigated the enclosed fields. Vegetables and amazingly enough wheat was grown to make the traditional Teda flatbreads. Water must have been plentiful. Now there are just one or two of these farms left growing lettuce, rocket  and okra, no one grows wheat.  The disused wells look dry, the wetlands have gone and the water table has fallen to between 2 and 3 metres. The local people say that it just doesn’t rain like it used to. Climate change is significant but hasn’t been the only impetus to change, the turn of the century rebellion that lasted about 8 years took a generation of men off the fields, joining the rebels, or fleeing to Libya or Ndjamena. The remaining villagers,  the elderly, women and children were obliged to live in the towns. Once peace came in 2008 the discovery of gold and the open frontier with Libya have lead to an influx of cheap flour and other foods, all this coupled with climate change there has been no incentive to return to the old way of life.


After the floods at the hospital
In the UK we are getting used to extreme weather events and flooding. The Teda have lived with the risk for thousands of years as a nice flat dry wadi can become a raging torrent. Presumably Jesus had experience of similar events in Palestine, the wise man built his house upon the rock, the foolish one built his house upon the sand ( The Bible Matt 7 24 onwards). Villages and markets were traditionally built on rocky hillsides beside wadis. Now in Bardai there are many buildings on the flat broad sandy areas at a reasonable distance from the main wadi as it is so much easier to build there.

This year heavy rains have come and wreaked damage, the walled hospital filled with muddy water and only avoided serious internal damage when the gates were opened and the water could flow out. Abdoulaye, the gatekeeper awoke to find his small tin shop flooded and lost a lot of stock. He has been here since 2008 and had never seen rain or flooding like it. The same flood waters shot through the town to get to the main wadi, destroying a number of shops. In a nearby village there was much more damage and loss of livestock.

The eco system here is finely balanced, at times hot and dry with temperatures of up to 45C in the shade in the hot months, at others overnight temperatures approaching freezing at night in the cold months. There is little local rainfall and the town is reliant on periodic flooding of the wadi from water that falls on the vast areas of bare rock on the surrounding mountains. Too little, irregular rain and the date palms will die, too much rain at one time and the destruction of property and life is serious. This balance could be jeopardised by even a small rise in global temperatures and accompanying changing weather patterns.


You can see that there have been some important ecological changes in Bardai, as in the rest of the world. Over the next 3 or 4 months we plan to look at how we and our neighbours live here and how that impacts the environment.