Chad flagEnvironment & Sustainability Guide · Chad

Environment & Sustainability Guide in Chad

Air quality, green spaces, and environmental policies

Chad faces significant environmental challenges including severe desertification, water scarcity, and climate vulnerability. The Sahel region experiences increasing drought frequency and temperature extremes, threatening agricultural livelihoods and biodiversity. Limited environmental infrastructure and enforcement capacity constrain sustainability efforts.

Air Quality Index

0510
Poor
4.5/10(AQI: 120)
Worsening trend

Chad experiences poor air quality, particularly during harmattan wind season (December-March) when Saharan dust increases particulate matter. Urban areas like N'Djamena face elevated PM10 and PM2.5 levels from dust storms, vehicle emissions, and biomass burning. Limited air quality monitoring infrastructure constrains data collection.

Water Quality

0510
Poor
3.0/10

Chad faces critical water quality challenges with limited access to safe drinking water. Only 51% of the population has access to improved drinking water sources, and water contamination from inadequate sanitation affects public health. The Lake Chad basin, vital for regional water supply, has shrunk dramatically due to climate change and overuse.

Approximately 51% of Chad's population has access to improved drinking water. Water treatment infrastructure is limited, and microbial contamination remains a significant public health concern in rural areas.

Recycling System

Chad has minimal formal recycling infrastructure. Waste management is primarily informal, with limited municipal collection systems outside major cities. Recycling rates are negligible, and most waste ends up in uncontrolled landfills. Informal waste pickers recover some materials, but systematic recycling programs are absent.

Recycling Rate: 2.0%

Green Spaces

Chad contains diverse ecosystems including the Sahara Desert, Sahel savanna, and Lake Chad basin. Protected areas include Zakouma National Park and Goz Beida National Park, which harbor endangered wildlife. However, deforestation and desertification have reduced forest coverage from 11.3% (1990) to 9.3% (2020), representing a 18% decline over three decades.

Forest Coverage: 9.3%
National Parks: 4
Zakouma National Park (3,000 km²), Goz Beida National Park, Lake Chad National Park, and Manda National Park protect critical habitats. These areas face pressure from poaching, pastoral activities, and climate-induced habitat loss.

Environmental Policies

Chad has adopted environmental legislation including the Environmental Code (2002) and National Environmental Action Plan. The country is a signatory to the UN Convention to Combat Desertification and the Paris Agreement. However, enforcement capacity remains limited due to institutional and financial constraints. Recent initiatives focus on combating desertification and protecting Lake Chad.

Key Policies:
  • Environmental Code (2002)
  • National Environmental Action Plan
  • UN Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD)
  • Paris Agreement on Climate Change
  • National Adaptation Programme of Action (NAPA)
Renewable Energy: Chad aims to increase renewable energy capacity, particularly solar power, to address energy poverty. The country has significant solar potential but limited infrastructure investment.

Natural Disaster Risk

HIGH

Chad faces multiple natural disaster risks including severe droughts, floods, dust storms, and localized earthquakes. The Sahel region's climate variability creates recurring food security crises. Lake Chad's shrinkage (90% reduction since 1960s) has displaced communities and intensified resource conflicts.

Severe droughtsFloodingDust storms (harmattan winds)Food security crisesLake desiccation
Climate Change Impacts: Chad experiences accelerating climate change impacts with temperature increases of approximately 0.3°C per decade since 1970, significantly above global average. Precipitation has become increasingly erratic, with severe droughts in 1973-1974, 1984-1985, 2010, and 2015-2016 causing widespread crop failures. The Lake Chad basin has contracted by 90% since the 1960s due to reduced rainfall and increased evaporation. Desertification affects 65% of Chad's territory. Climate projections indicate further warming (1.5-2.5°C by 2050) and continued precipitation decline, threatening food security for 40% of the population.

Sustainability Initiatives

Desertification Combat

Chad participates in the Great Green Wall initiative, an African Union-led program to combat desertification across the Sahel. The project involves tree planting, soil conservation, and sustainable land management across 8,000 km. Community-based approaches engage local populations in restoration efforts.

Water Resource Management

The Lake Chad Basin Commission coordinates transboundary water management among four countries. Initiatives focus on sustainable water use, climate adaptation, and conflict prevention. Projects include water conservation technologies and improved irrigation efficiency.

Wildlife Conservation

Zakouma National Park protection program focuses on elephant and lion conservation through anti-poaching efforts and habitat restoration. International partnerships with WWF and African Parks support management and community engagement in sustainable wildlife protection.

Climate Adaptation

Chad's National Adaptation Programme of Action (NAPA) prioritizes climate-resilient agriculture, water harvesting, and early warning systems. Community-based adaptation projects support drought-resistant crop varieties and pastoral livelihood diversification.

Wildlife & Nature

African ElephantVulnerable
West African LionCritically Endangered
Kordofan GiraffeVulnerable
African Wild DogEndangered
HippopotamusVulnerable
OstrichCommon