A shared vision to improve flood resilience in Mozambique
In an effort to recover and learn from the impacts of cyclone Freddy, which devastated Mozambique in February and March, the country’s authorities requested technical assistance from the Netherlands Enterprise Agency’s Disaster Risk Reduction and Surge Support (DRRS) programme, which assembled a team led by IHE Delft Associate Professor Fredrik Huthoff. Their findings have now been published in a report.
The cyclone displaced thousands of people and destroyed critical infrastructure, including homes, roads and water supply systems. It ruined crops, worsening Mozambique’s food insecurity crisis and caused a cholera outbreak. Huthoff said the DRRS team, which included flood risk experts and spatial planners who worked together with local stakeholders, focused on long-term resilience.
“Mozambique, including Zambézia province, has faced multiple devastating events like these in recent years, and there will surely be more to come. Besides fixing what was damaged and helping those that have been affected, much more attention is needed to reduce vulnerabilities and to create conditions that help quicker recovery,” he said. “We can help in making the right choices by highlighting the key physical processes that act – and interact - at various scales and connecting these to impacts, perspectives and potential effective and sustainable actions.”
“I believe this participatory approach helped in creating understanding and stimulating collaboration between different stakeholders. This groundwork is needed to achieve real and lasting impact in improving flood resilience,” said Huthoff. The outcomes of the workshop are now available in the report ZAMVISÃO: Creating a shared vision on flood resilience in Zambézia, which was recently presented to the authorities in Mozambique.
Living with the sea and rivers
Manuel A. Alculete Lopes de Araújo, the mayor of Quelimane, a coastal city that suffered major cyclone damages, welcomed the effort: “In our city we live with the sea and the rivers, and our lives depend on them. They are our partners,” he said. “We have to work with them and make them part of our plans for the future. This is an important step to help that goal.”
Fredrik Huthoff
Associate Professor of Hydraulic Engineering
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