• About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Breaking News
  • Explainers
  • Listen Live
Wednesday, June 24, 2026
Citinewsroom - Comprehensive News in Ghana
Advertisement
  • Home
  • News
    • Regional News
      • Ahafo Region
      • Ashanti Region
      • Bono East Region
      • Bono Region
      • Central Region
      • Eastern Region
      • Greater Accra Region
      • Northern Region
      • North East Region
      • Oti Region
      • Savanna Region
      • Upper East Region
      • Upper West Region
      • Volta Region
      • Western Region
      • Western North Region
  • Sports
    • World Cup
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Articles
  • Explainers
  • Editorials
No Result
View All Result
Citinewsroom - Comprehensive News in Ghana
  • Home
  • News
    • Regional News
      • Ahafo Region
      • Ashanti Region
      • Bono East Region
      • Bono Region
      • Central Region
      • Eastern Region
      • Greater Accra Region
      • Northern Region
      • North East Region
      • Oti Region
      • Savanna Region
      • Upper East Region
      • Upper West Region
      • Volta Region
      • Western Region
      • Western North Region
  • Sports
    • World Cup
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Articles
  • Explainers
  • Editorials
No Result
View All Result
Citinewsroom - Comprehensive News in Ghana
No Result
View All Result

When the rains come, Accra pays the price – Prof Emmanuel Daanoba Sunkari writes

June 23, 2026
Reading Time: 3 mins read
ShareShareShareShare

Every year, when the rains gather over Accra, anxiety settles into the city. Dark clouds no longer promise relief from heat alone. They signal flooded streets, stranded commuters, submerged homes and the familiar question whispered after each disaster: why does this keep happening?

Accra’s floods are often described as acts of nature, but the truth is more uncomfortable. Rain exposes what the city has allowed to grow unchecked. Concrete has spread faster than planning, drains have become dumping grounds, and wetlands that once absorbed excess water have been steadily erased. When the rain falls, it simply reveals the cost of neglect.

The human toll is always the same. Families lose belongings they worked years to acquire. Small businesses are wiped out overnight. Children miss school. Traffic grinds to a halt, productivity collapses and, in the worst cases, lives are lost. These are not isolated tragedies. They are annual events, predictable and preventable.

One place to start is beneath our feet. Accra’s drainage systems were never designed for today’s population or for the heavier downpours that climate change is making more frequent. Many drains are too narrow, poorly connected or choked with silt and plastic waste. Clearing them only when floods occur is like mopping the floor while the tap is still running. Drainage maintenance must become routine, visible and well funded, with systems redesigned to match current realities rather than outdated assumptions.

But drains alone cannot save a city that has built over its own escape routes. Water must flow somewhere, and in Accra its natural paths have been blocked by houses, shops and roads constructed on waterways and floodplains. Enforcement of planning regulations has been weak, uneven or delayed by political considerations. Yet without firm and fair enforcement, flooding will remain inevitable. Future development must respect flood risk maps, and difficult conversations about relocating structures from high risk zones can no longer be postponed.

Waste is another silent accomplice. After every flood, the evidence is there for all to see: plastic bottles, sachet water bags and household refuse packed tightly into drains. Poor waste collection and careless disposal turn heavy rain into a disaster. Improving collection services, supporting recycling and reducing plastic use are essential, but so is changing public behaviour. Flooding is not just a government failure. It is also a collective one.

Nature, once pushed aside, may still be part of the solution. Wetlands and green spaces act as the city’s natural sponges, slowing runoff and absorbing excess water. Many of these areas around Accra have been filled, built over or degraded. Restoring them is not a luxury. It is infrastructure of the quietest and most effective kind. Parks, permeable pavements and tree cover do not make headlines, but they reduce flood peaks and make neighbourhoods more livable.

Even with better planning and infrastructure, floods will still occur. When they do, preparedness matters. Early warning systems that reach communities in time can save lives. Clear evacuation routes, trained emergency responders and local volunteers can reduce chaos when waters rise. A city that knows what to do before disaster strikes suffers less when it does.

Ultimately, tackling flooding in Accra is about choosing foresight over reaction. It is about accepting that the city has outgrown old systems and old habits. Each flood should not be treated as a surprise or a temporary crisis, but as a message repeating itself with growing urgency.

The rains will return next year, as they always do. Whether they bring renewal or ruin depends on what Accra decides to fix before the first storm breaks.


Explore the world of impactful news with CitiNewsroom on WhatsApp!

Click on the link to join the Citi Newsroom channel for curated, meaningful stories tailored just for YOU:
https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029VaCYzPRAYlUPudDDe53x

No spam, just the stories that truly matter! #StayInformed #CitiNewsroom #CNRDigital

Source: Professor Emmanuel Daanoba Sunkari | Director of Environment and Ecology | Sir Padampat Singhania University, India
Tags: AccraFloodingGhana News
ShareTweetSendSend
Previous Post

Tariff hikes a disincentive to manufacturing, industrial growth – FABAG

Next Post

Scorching heat claims 18 lives in France

Related Posts

Featured

Prison officer remanded over alleged drug smuggling into Kete-Krachi Prison

June 24, 2026
Featured

ECOWAS Court dismisses Torkonoo’s challenge against removal

June 24, 2026
National Chairman hopeful of the NPP, Awentami Paul Afoko
Featured

Bawumia’s presidency is coming – Paul Afoko declares

June 24, 2026
Featured

Irresponsible gun ownership threatens national security – Toobu

June 24, 2026
Education

GES to release NSP recruitment shortlist on July 20

June 24, 2026
Business

SEC sets Aug 31 deadline for online investment platform registration

June 24, 2026
Next Post
File Image

Scorching heat claims 18 lives in France

ADVERTISEMENT
Citinewsroom - Comprehensive News in Ghana

CitiNewsroom.com is Ghana's leading news website that delivers high quality innovative, alternative news that challenges the status quo.

Archives

Download App

Download

Download

  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Breaking News
  • Explainers
  • Listen Live

© 2024 All Rights Reserved Citi Newsroom.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Regional News
      • Ahafo Region
      • Ashanti Region
      • Bono East Region
      • Bono Region
      • Central Region
      • Eastern Region
      • Greater Accra Region
      • Northern Region
      • North East Region
      • Oti Region
      • Savanna Region
      • Upper East Region
      • Upper West Region
      • Volta Region
      • Western Region
      • Western North Region
  • Sports
    • World Cup
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Articles
  • Explainers
  • Editorials

© 2024 All Rights Reserved Citi Newsroom.