Abstract:
· Monrovia skilled its hottest dry season on report in 2024. Local weather fashions predict the town might withstand 118 extra scorching days yearly by mid-century.
· Consultants warn extended publicity to excessive warmth will increase the chance of warmth exhaustion, dehydration, and being pregnant issues, with girls hit hardest. Liberia is ill-prepared.
· Monrovia, Paynesville, Accra, and Kassa obtain grants to determine warmth dangers and defend residents. Paynesville has launched a 25-year Local weather Motion Plan to information city planning and strengthen resilience in opposition to rising temperatures.
By Aria Deemie, local weather change reporter with New Narratives
DOWNTOWN, Monrovia – The air inside Uptown Storage on Broad Road feels trapped and heavy, thick with grease and iron. Squatting underneath the hood of a sedan, 22-year-old mechanic Jartu B. Woobay grips an extended steel clutch with each arms, tightening bolts as sweat glistens on her brow and mixes with engine oil.
Warmth is a continuing a part of Jartu’s each day job. Because the dry season looms, reminiscences of final 12 months’s record-breaking warmth dangle over the town’s crowded garages, markets, and streets.
“The store could be very scorching most frequently, even with the followers on,” she says, sliding out from beneath the automotive. “I’ve felt dizzy and drained, however this work wants power and vitality. You simply maintain going.”

That warmth isn’t simply uncomfortable, it’s lethal. The Lancet Countdown on Well being and Local weather Change, a world analysis collaboration working with the World Well being Group, tracks how rising temperatures, air pollution, and excessive climate are affecting human well being. In its newest report, the group warns that the world’s failure to behave on local weather change is now costing thousands and thousands of lives yearly. It discovered that heat-related deaths have elevated by 23 % for the reason that Nineteen Nineties, claiming greater than half one million lives yearly, whereas excessive warmth prompted staff around the globe to lose over 640 billion labor hours in 2024 alone.
“The local weather disaster is a well being disaster,” stated Dr. Jeremy Farrar, WHO’s Assistant Director-Basic for Well being Promotion, in a WHO information launch. “Each fraction of a level of warming prices lives and livelihoods.”
In Liberia, that warning feels speedy. Local weather fashions present that Montserrado County, which incorporates Monrovia, might face 118 extra extraordinarily scorching days annually by mid-century in contrast with 1995–2014. Meaning longer, harsher dry seasons that threaten the well being and livelihoods of individuals like Jartu, and a metropolis nonetheless struggling to arrange.
The World Financial institution warns that African cities are experiencing among the quickest temperature will increase globally, but most stay underprepared to guard residents from heat-related dangers. In its Local weather Threat Profile: Liberia, the Financial institution identifies Monrovia and Paynesville as among the many nation’s most heat-exposed areas, with restricted municipal capability to adapt.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Local weather Change additionally reports that Africa is warming sooner than the worldwide common, with important will increase within the frequency and depth of heatwaves projected for the approaching a long time.
However Liberia is ill-prepared. A $10 million Weather Warning System approved in 2020 stays non-operational, leaving farmers and susceptible communities with out essential forecasts. With unreliable and unaffordable electrical energy provide throughout the nation air con is a dream for many Liberians.
At her storage, Jartu depends on endurance, self-supplied water, and restricted breaks. “The warmth makes the work slower, not more durable,” she stated. “You simply handle.”
Well being Dangers from Excessive Warmth
“When the physique can not regulate temperature, the consequences may be devastating,” says Dr. Richard J. Doe, a Liberian medical physician and public well being specialist. He warns that extended publicity will increase dangers of warmth exhaustion, dehydration, and warmth stroke, particularly amongst outside staff. Youngsters, the aged, and pregnant girls are notably susceptible.
“Followers solely flow into scorching air; they don’t cool an area,” Dr. Doe says. He additionally worries that Liberians don’t have data of how to maintain themselves protected. “Easy measures—relaxation, hydration, correct air flow—can save lives.”
And it may be considerably worse for girls. At a regional Excessive Warmth Reporting Workshop held in Accra, Ghana, in February, organized by the worldwide nonprofit Local weather Resilience for All, well being and local weather specialists warned that ladies face distinctive organic dangers underneath excessive temperatures.
“Girls’s our bodies reply in a different way to warmth stress,” stated Kathy Baughman McLeod, CEO of Local weather Resilience for All. “Cardiovascular methods, pores and skin construction, and hormonal fluctuations create vulnerabilities that science is simply starting to doc. Extended publicity raises the probability of warmth exhaustion, issues throughout being pregnant, and diminished productiveness for girls whose livelihoods rely upon outside work.”
In sensible phrases, McLeod defined, excessive warmth can pressure the center and improve dehydration dangers throughout menstruation, being pregnant, and menopause. “Extended publicity raises the probability of warmth exhaustion, issues throughout being pregnant, and even diminished productiveness for girls whose livelihoods rely upon outside work,” she stated.

Jartu doesn’t consider herself as totally different from the lads she works alongside. Most days, she pushes by means of the warmth the identical approach they do, lifting, sorting and hauling till her shirt is soaked by means of. What she doesn’t know, specialists stated, is that her physique reacts in a different way in excessive warmth — that she must drink extra water, quiet down extra typically and take quick rests to keep away from overheating. In a male-dominated job like this, she worries that asking for further breaks would possibly make her appear weak or much less dedicated. Merely not understanding, specialists word, places her at better danger than her colleagues.
City Warmth Resilience Grants in Africa
In an effort to handle the rising danger, Monrovia and Paynesville, together with Accra, and Kassa, a city in Southern Province, Sierra Leone, turned among the first African cities to obtain African City Warmth Resilience Grants, introduced at this 12 months’s Africa Local weather Summit in Addis Ababa. Every metropolis receives $40,000 to map warmth hotspots, assess susceptible communities, and launch public consciousness campaigns. Funded by means of Local weather Resilience for All – the grants goal to assist cities design sensible, community-based methods to guard residents from excessive warmth.
The small funding—about $40,000 per metropolis—is meant to assist primary knowledge assortment and public consciousness campaigns, marking one of many first regional efforts to deal with excessive warmth as a municipal planning subject relatively than a climate drawback. Officers stated the grants might assist cities with restricted capability start to grasp the place warmth hits hardest and which residents are most in danger, although significant change will rely upon how successfully the cities implement the work.
Consultants stated Freetown, the capital of Sierra Leone, affords a glimpse of what small-scale interventions can obtain. With assist from Local weather Resilience for All, the town put in shaded constructions and solar-powered cooling methods in markets, the place girls merchants had
reported shedding as much as 60 % of their earnings throughout peak warmth. To coordinate long-term responses, Freetown additionally appointed a Chief Warmth Officer, the primary in Africa.

Impressed by that mannequin, Paynesville has begun taking comparable steps—appointing its personal Warmth Officer and launching a 25-year Local weather Motion Plan (2025–2050) to information citywide climate-smart growth. The plan goals to chop greenhouse fuel emissions by half by 2030 and obtain carbon neutrality by 2050.
It focuses on 5 predominant pillars: resilient infrastructure, sustainable waste administration, a round financial system, climate-smart enterprise parks, and low-carbon transport. Proposed actions embrace upgrading drainage in flood-prone zones, constructing waste-to-energy crops, increasing solar energy, and selling electrical public transport.

The plan additionally emphasizes group participation, together with tree planting, youth-led environmental schooling, and women-driven inexperienced enterprises. A brand new Paynesville Local weather Motion Workplace will coordinate the rollout, supported by a Chief Local weather Specialist and a multi-stakeholder advisory council.
The Paynesville Metropolis Company constructed an city park at ELWA Junction, which gives shaded areas the place residents can relaxation and search reduction throughout excessive warmth.

Earlier Failed Interventions Have Left Market Distributors Distrustful Of New Plans
However trevious efforts to supply safety elsewhere have been underwhelming and marketeers fear the brand new tasks can be no higher. In 2020 the Monrovia Metropolis Company underneath the administration of President George Weah, started developing greater than 2,000 trendy iron market stalls at Waterside Market to guard distributors. Almost 1500 iron stalls have been put in from Entrance Road to Water Road in 2020, although 216 have already been broken by rain, based on Liberian Market Affiliation Secretary P. Richard Jackson.

Based on the federal government’s 2020/2021 Public Sector Funding Plan, $US1.3 million was allotted for the “Waterside Petty Dealer Relocation” challenge, meant to fund enhancements for 1000’s of distributors working alongside the Waterside hall.
Earlier than building, metropolis officers introduced three pattern stalls. “The one chosen had doorways so distributors might safe their items in a single day,” Jackson stated. “To our shock, the stalls that have been constructed have been totally different from the pattern, leaving some distributors discouraged.” Girls who had beforehand bought from smaller wood tables misplaced promoting house, he added, and a few have been pressured onto sidewalks, typically with out shelter. Makes an attempt by distributors so as to add zinc coverings, he stated, have been met with harassment from metropolis authorities. Markets have been closed, they have been detained by police and requested for cash. Jackson stated he typically needed to go to free their items and mediate on their behalf.
A 2020 survey performed by Jackson discovered that 6,413 distributors operated exterior the constructed buildings. Immediately, he estimates the quantity at roughly 10,000. The iron stalls proceed to deteriorate within the rain, underscoring what he described as an pressing want for refurbishment.

This reporter requested an interview with the Monrovia Metropolis Company in regards to the metropolis’s warmth motion plans and later adopted up with a second letter looking for information for the 2020 Waterside Market stall challenge. However when the reporter returned, an MCC clerk stated the workers member who obtained the primary letter was not there and requested for the paperwork to be resubmitted. Over a number of visits, clerks repeatedly stated the letters had been positioned on Mayor John-Charuk Siafa’s desk and that he would name. No name got here, and by publication time the MCC had nonetheless not launched the contract, the bidders record, or the title of the official who supervised the challenge.
Because the dry season will get underway local weather fashions present that Monrovia is getting into a sample of hotter, longer dry seasons punctuated by sharp temperature spikes. At Uptown Storage, the followers maintain buzzing. Jartu wipes her forehead with the again of her hand and slides again underneath the automotive. “You simply handle,” she repeats—phrases that echo throughout a metropolis the place the warmth is simply getting more durable to bear. For a lot of Liberians, “managing” the warmth isn’t resilience, it’s survival.
This story was a collaboration with New Narratives. Funding was supplied by the American Jewish World Service. The donor had no say within the story’s content material.
