Effectiveness of Flood Disaster Management Strategies in Benue State, Nigeria: Evidence from the 2022 Makurdi Flood Event
Ternenge Ezra Akaahar *
Department of Geography, Rev. Fr. Moses Orshio Adasu University, Makurdi, Benue State, Nigeria.
Monday Akpegi Onah
Department of Geography, Rev. Fr. Moses Orshio Adasu University, Makurdi, Benue State, Nigeria.
Patricia Ali
Department of Geography, Rev. Fr. Moses Orshio Adasu University, Makurdi, Benue State, Nigeria.
*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
This study evaluated the effectiveness of flood disaster management strategies during the 2022 Makurdi flood in Benue State, Nigeria. A mixed-methods design was used, involving 384 household questionnaires (365 retrieved) and 12 key-informant interviews. Quantitative data were analyzed using frequencies, percentages, means, standard deviations, and effectiveness indices, while qualitative data were examined thematically. Findings show that 68% of households relied on sandbags or wooden barriers and 60.5% cleared drains, but only 15.6% monitored rainfall and 15.1% stored food and water. Early warnings reached 77.3% of respondents, yet 33.7% received them only a few days before flooding; radio (58.4%) and social media (46%) were the main channels. The Household Preparedness Effectiveness Index (HPEI) was 3.40 (moderate) and the Early Warning Effectiveness Index (EWEI) was 3.49 (moderate). Response actions were largely reactive: 34.5% stayed at home, 27.1% moved to higher ground, and only 11% evacuated to camps, with just 20% acting immediately after warnings. Major challenges included poor drainage maintenance (mean = 3.12), late warnings (mean = 3.00), and weak institutional coordination (mean = 3.11). The Composite Flood Management Effectiveness Index (CFMEI) was 0.55, indicating moderate overall effectiveness. To improve outcomes, the study recommends strengthening early warning systems (radio, SMS, community networks) and integrating NiMet/NIHSA forecasts; promoting household preparedness through awareness, evacuation training, and support for sandbags and door-step raising; clarifying roles of NEMA, SEMA, local government, and community leaders and establishing joint response frameworks; investing in drainage infrastructure, enforcing land-use regulations, and pre-positioning relief materials; and developing sustainable recovery programs that restore livelihoods and housing with community participation.
Keywords: Effectiveness, flood disaster, management strategies, flood event