Thursday, December 7, 2017

Time to deal with it rather than ignore it.


    At this stage, we covered a decent amount of hazards that Morocco deals with. I wanted to choose two of the most dangerous hazards that I believe my country is in need to create a solution before its too late. These hazards I talked about them before and really think they are a danger to the safety of the country and could possibly end up in a crises, so I will give a summary with some statistics to help.

      As I wrote about it in my previous blogs, Morocco is a country that is located at the top of Africa, surrounded by the Atlantic ocean on the west, the Mediterranean from the north, and Algeria from the east. Seeing it on the map we might think that most of the problems or hazards come from the sea. However, is not the case. From the Tectonic plate blog, we discovered that northern part of Morocco lay on top of two plates boundaries, the African one, and Eurasian one. So we can immediately conclude that the first hazards that the country need to deal we and be prepared for all the time is earthquakes. The border plates are known as a transform fault, which means two tectonic plates slide past one another. Each year the African plate moves upwards to the Eurasian plate and that create friction and tension between each other; and eventually, that energy will be released under a form of waves under the earth surface, which generally make the earth move in a certain intensity and that what make the earthquakes deadly or not. The most affected area is the northern section of Morocco since it is in direct contact with the plate. In order to prevent a major disaster, here is some recommendation that would help: Have regular programmes in schools and advertisement that keep people aware of the danger and the step necessary in case of an emergency. Create research teams to monitor every activity possible near the plate boundaries, and provide necessary equipment and the latest technology in earthquakes to keep track of the data; that later would be combined with the historical data recorded for better prediction. Also, Create an emergency evacuation plan for the northern region that is being in the danger zone and has a high percentage of facing a major earthquake.

      Morocco never had to deal with hurricanes or cyclones even it has two coastal borders, but it recorded some severe storms, so I don’t think that is something the country is threatened by at this moment unless the climate changes are getting worst and disrupting the system. What Morocco need is a serious land management due to erosion.

   Erosion is the second hazards because it is present, and visible throughout the country’s land. Most of Morocco’s soils are fragile and subject to erosion. The country has scarce natural resources, especially arable land, and water. Intensive agricultural production, large-scale irrigation schemes, industrialization, and urbanization have been creating mixed outcomes in the country. In addition, from living there as an example, the country has faced severe problems of air, water and soil pollution, environmental health problems, deforestation and soil erosion and is regarded as very vulnerable to the impacts of climate change. Not only that, natural hazards such as floods and droughts occur periodically as I was able to explain in wildfires and drought forum. It is estimated that areas in the process of degradation affect the livelihoods and food security of about 1.5 million households in Morocco, who then further extend their agricultural production and livestock systems to other marginal and fragile lands, thus seriously further degrading the natural resource base. An economic analysis has estimated the global cost of lost productivity in Morocco as a result of land degradation at between USD 91 and 178 million per year.

   With a total land area of 71.085 million hectares, Morocco’s land use can be summarized as 5.8 million hectares of forests (8%), 9.2 million ha of agricultural lands (13%) and 46 million ha of pastures, rangelands, and deserts. The plant biodiversity in Morocco registers 4500 species, with 537 endemic species. This means the country lies in second place in terms of diversity in the Mediterranean basin after Turkey. What I want to mention as well, is that the southern part of Morocco is basically a desert, which is an unforgivable condition as we know. What makes this issue even more complicated is that the fact that the wind action transports eroded material above or along the surface of Earth either by turbulent flow or by laminar flow (in which adjacent sheets of air slip past one another); and that make the land more vulnerable. And in my opinion, the southern parts would be a priority area/region, to at least reduce the speed of the erosion process. An example of solution could be: buildings barriers, increase the number of trees planted and preserving any kind of vegetation that already exist to help, plus inform the citizens and educating them of how important it is to not destroy whats left.

    I would construct my house somewhere were there no possibility of having to deal with an earthquake for sure. So I would have my house exactly near where my family house is in right now ( the north-west of Morocco) and here is why. The city where my family lives is located in the number agricultural region of the country, so the natural resources like vegetation and water are available. Plus my city is forming a triangle that we call the economic triangle, which is a group of three cities (kenitra, Rabat, Casablanca) that are well developed and can cope with a disaster.Plus the necessary help and equipment would be much closer and have an easy access to it if I would have my house inland for example.






Note:  the statistic and some terminology were taken from these sources,
file:///C:/Users/Folio%20Ultrabook/AppData/Local/Packages/Microsoft.MicrosoftEdge_8wekyb3d8bbwe/TempState/Downloads/OASIS_2_Morocco.pdf
https://www.britannica.com/science/erosion-geology
http://geology.com/nsta/transform-plate-boundaries.shtml