NEMA lists 11 Niger LGs prone to flooding

The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) has designated 11 Local Government Areas (LGAs) in Niger State as high flood-risk zones ahead of the 2026 rainy season.

Mrs Zubaida Umar, Director-General of NEMA, disclosed this on Thursday in Minna, at a stakeholders’ engagement meeting on the 2026 National Preparedness and Response Campaign (NPRC) on flood disaster and related hazards.

The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the theme of the meeting was “Strengthening Disaster Risk Governance for a Resilient Community in Nigeria”.

Umar, represented by Mr Abdulrazak Adebiye, North Central Zonal Director of NEMA, said the affected local government areas were Agaie, Bida, Borgu, Edati, Gbako, Katcha, Lapai, Lavun, Magama, Mashegu and Mokwa.

She said the prediction was based on the 2026 Seasonal Climate Prediction and Annual Flood Outlook released by the Nigerian Meteorological Agency (NiMet) and the Nigeria Hydrological Services Agency (NIHSA).

According to her, 23 states, including the Federal Capital Territory (FCT), covering 132 local government areas nationwide, fall within high flood-risk zones, while 148 local government areas in 14 states are categorised as moderate-risk areas.

Umar said the recurring impact of flooding in Nigeria required urgent and collective response, noting that flood disasters yearly resulted in loss of lives, destruction of infrastructure and disruption of livelihoods.

She added that communities also suffered injuries, displacement and loss of savings due to unmitigated flood incidents and their secondary impacts.

The NEMA boss explained that the agency convened expert review meetings on March 31 and April 1 to assess the implications of the forecasts and evolving climate conditions across the country.

According to her, the review revealed possible delayed or erratic rainfall onset, shorter growing seasons, above-normal rainfall in some areas, prolonged dry spells and increased temperatures.

She said the projected climate conditions could negatively affect agriculture, healthcare, transportation, energy, water supply, education and public wellbeing if proactive measures were not taken.

Umar further stated that NEMA had developed the 2026 Climate-Related Risk Management, Preparedness and Mitigation Framework to minimise the impact of flooding nationwide.

She listed some mitigation measures to include capacity building for local responders, simulation and tabletop exercises, strict adherence to rainfall and flood advisories, prepositioning of relief materials and development of evacuation plans.

She also disclosed that vulnerability maps had been produced for identified communities, adding that technical teams would be deployed to states for grassroots sensitisation and direct community engagement.

Earlier, the Head of NEMA Minna Operations Office covering Niger and Kwara states, Mr Hussaini Isah, described disasters as consequences of poor planning, weak institutions and inadequate preparedness.

He said the engagement became necessary in view of the 2026 Seasonal Climate Prediction by NiMet and the Annual Flood Outlook by NIHSA, adding that the successes recorded in flood management in 2025 were due to strong partnership among stakeholders.

Isah said there was a need for stakeholders to collectively strategise, define their roles and responsibilities and establish clear rules of engagement for effective flood management in 2026.

Also speaking,Alhaji Abdullahi Baba-Arah, Director-General of the Niger State Emergency Management Agency (NSEMA), said the state had established an Emergency Operations Centre which was yet to become fully operational due to shortage of personnel.

In goodwill messages, the Emir of Minna, Alhaji Umar Farouk, represented by Alhaji Mohammed Abubakar, pledged the support of traditional institutions in promoting early warning systems and public sensitisation,

Also, Alhaji Akilu Musa, Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Water Resources,  called for stronger synergy among stakeholders in disaster management .

Dr Zainab Ndanusa, Head, Disaster Risk Reduction Unit, NEMA Minna Operations Office, said Lapai Local Government Area was projected to record the highest rainfall of 1,329mm during the season.

She said Agaie was expected to record 1,321mm, adding that rainfall in the state would likely continue until October 15.