BCPG President Kunle Awobudu Warns Of Possible Earthquake In Nigeria.

The national President of Building Collapse Prevention Guild, Mr Kunle Awobudu, has expressed the possibility of Nigeria experiencing earthquake and the need for the federal government to immediate take preemptive action by reducing the spate of substandard building construction across the nation.

Recall that mild earthquakes recently occurred in parts of Oyo, Bayelsa, Rivers, and Kaduna states.

According to him, vibrations accompanying the earth tremors resulted in the collapse of mud houses and infliction of visible cracks in modern buildings within the affected areas.

“This development has clearly ossified the harbinger on the possibility of Nigeria having an earthquake induced disaster in the near future,” Awobudu said.

In a press statement made available to journalists in Lagos, Awobudu expressed concern that the notion that Nigeria is safe or far from seismic active regions is no longer tenable.

He disclosed that Shaki in Oyo State has been subjected to intermittent earth tremors this year and climaxed in the first week of June 2016. More so, communities in Bayelsa and Rivers on July 10, 2016 had a similar experience but in this case due to prolonged effect of oil exploitation.

Records from the seismological station of the Centre for Geodesy and Geodynamics (CGG) showed that the earthquakes that occurred in Kwoi area of Kaduna State on 11th and 12th September, 2016 ranged from 2.8 to 3.1 in magnitude.

The statement reads in part: “Shaki and Kwoi towns are not far from the Ifewara – Zungeru fault Zone, which is linked with the Atlantic fracture system. The fault transcends the South-West and North-West of the country, thereby making that stretch of land susceptible to seismicity due to stresses generated within the earth-crust, that is, partial reactivation of fossil plate boundaries.

“Earth tremors occurred in Nigeria in 1933,1939,1964,1984,1990,1994,1997, 2000, 2009, 2011 and now 2016. A series of earth tremors might not necessarily lead to the high intensity earthquake, a reason that should douse our fears.

“However, a study carried out by Dr. Adepelumi Adekunle Abraham of the Department of Geology, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile- Ife and his team of researchers exacerbated the portentous signs in the following grim words, “After the earth tremor of 2009 in South- Western Nigeria, (which) was felt in several towns and villages in Oyo, Osun and Ogun States, a detailed short-term probabilistic earthquake prediction was carried out by our team, our findings indicated the probability of earthquake occurrence in the study area between the year 2009 and 2028 increased from 2.8% to 91.1%.

“The result also showed that the probability of three events occurring annually has the highest likelihood within the predicted years. Also, found that the Weibull probability density model predicts a damaging earthquake (Magnitude 5) before year 2020.”

“Buildings are the bastion of physical development which is used to adjudge a nation’s rung in the global socio-economic ladder.  Investors in buildings should be concerned about the durability of the buildings they are providing fund for. The longer a building exists, the more the revenue or value the owner derives from it. Indubitably, a solidly constructed building can stand the test of time.

“The wise learns from the errors of others. Nigeria must not continue to repeat the mistake of Haiti and Nepal where stringent building regulations were lacking, thereby aggravating the effects of  the earthquakes on buildings. In an earthquake disaster, the vulnerable, substandard buildings have always been the major cause of high death toll. And unfortunately in Nigeria, the National Building Code is legally and practically not in existence just as it was in Haiti.

“A 5.7 magnitude earthquake occurred near Bukoba town in Northern Tanzania on September 10, 2016. According to local authorities, all fatalities were people ‘in brick structures’ that collapsed. Lesson from this experience is a warning to prospective homeowners and developers in Nigeria that they should endeavour to follow due process and avoid quakes. Government should pay due attention to building construction from the scratch by strengthening ministries of physical planning and development control, and also uphold the tenet of professionalism in the nation’s building industry.

BCPG in the statement reiterated the call by the Director of  Centre for Geodesy and Geodynamics, in Toro, Bauchi State, Dr. Tahir Abubakar Yakubu that Nigerian government should establish additional seismological stations to monitor crustal movements in the identified earthquake prone areas, and the suggestions of Dr. Adepelumi Adekunle that Nigerian Government should invest in earthquake electromagnetic precursors monitoring devices that are capable of monitoring foreshocks, main shocks and aftershocks of any future earthquake event.

A nation without an effective national building code will end up in ruin in an occurrence of an earthquake. Enforcement of building regulations without compromise will prevent serious calamity in the future. Many nations, including USA, Japan and Australia have been constructing earthquake resistant buildings in their seismic regions. Nigeria can imitate such preventive measures. To be forewarned is to be forearmed,” the statement reads.

BREAKING: Earth Tremor hits Kaduna community

Fear gripped residents of Southern Kaduna yesterday after two earth tremors shook the ground and buildings but caused no damage.

Urging calm, the Kaduna State government said it had made a formal report to appropriate authorities to investigate and issue appropriate guidance on the development.

Already, experts have warned that six states, Lagos, Rivers, Delta, Bayelsa, Cross River and Oyo, could experience earthquakes before 2020.

The Nigerian Association of Water-Well Drilling Rig Owners and Practitioners (AWDROP) called on the Federal Government to take measures that could mitigate effects in the vulnerable states.

The two tremors, which occurred while people were in church, were particularly strong in Kwoi town, headquarters of Jaba Local Council of Kaduna State. According to information received in Abuja, the incident left many people confused.

“We initially thought it was a bomb blast. The sound and reverberations were repeated within an hour, sending chills down our spines. We were told they were from the Nok area. But a call there showed it was not so. Please, pray for us,” Taliya Ezra said.

An indigene of Kwoi, based in Abuja, confirmed the tremors, but said his enquiries did not show there had been any damage to structures or even the earth surface.

This is the second time tremors would shake parts of Kaduna State this year. On July 30, 2016, Haying Magani in Ikara Local Council of the state was shaken by a light tremor, which destroyed homes and injured people.

According to a statement by Special Assistant to the Governor (Media and Publicity), Samuel Aruwan, Governor Nasir Ahmad El-Rufai confirmed that geological and emergency agencies had been notified.

“The governor sympathises with the people in the Kwoi area over the reported tremors. He has directed the State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) to mobilise to the area and comfort our citizens. The National Geological Agency has also been notified, and has been invited to investigate the tremors and provide appropriate guidance,” reads the statement in part.

Confirming the incident, the chairman, Caretaker Committee of Kwoi Local Council, Ben Kure, said: “I was in church around 10:30 a.m. when, for about three to five seconds, the first one occurred, shaking the entire town and buildings. We came out from the church and inspected the town. There was no damage or injury. Two hours later, while I was driving to Kaduna, a palace official called to inform me that there had been another tremor. There was also no damage.”

AWDROP, at a press conference addressed by its National President, Michael Ale, lamented that lack of Underground Water Abstraction Regulation in Nigeria could induce earthquakes and sea water intrusion, “hence the need for government to ensure strict compliance in the implementation of the code of practice in borehole drilling.”

Ale said his association had been informed of salt-water intrusion affecting underground water usage and subsidence along the land-ocean boundaries in shoreline areas.

Researchers from the Department of Geology, Obafemi Awolowo University (OAU), Ile-Ife, led by Dr. Adepelumi Adekunle Abraham, had, in a report titled, “Preliminary Assessment of Earth Tremor Occurrence in Shaki Area, Shaki West Local Government, Oyo State”, warned of an impending ‘damaging earthquake’ in the next four years.

Adepelumi’s report states: “After the earth tremor of 2009 in southwestern Nigeria that was felt in several towns and villages in Oyo, Osun and Ogun States, a detailed short-term probabilistic earthquake prediction was carried out by our team. Our findings indicate the probability of earthquake occurrence in the study area between the year 2009 and 2028 increased from 2.8 per cent to 91.1 per cent.”