By Ibrahim Babangida Lawal
On the southwestern coast of Seychelles, the turquoise waters no longer whisper leisure. They warn. What appears to tourists as a postcard-perfect shoreline on Mahé is, for residents, a frontline in a quiet but relentless battle against coastal erosion.
Here, the high-tide mark is no longer a natural boundary. It is an advancing threat.
Across West Africa, from the Bight of Benin to the Gambian coast, experts say the unfolding reality in Seychelles may hold urgent lessons for a region facing similar environmental pressures.
The Disappearing Shoreline
In coastal communities such as Anse Royale and Beau Vallon, the effects of erosion are stark. Granite boulders that once lay buried beneath vegetation now stand exposed, hammered daily by waves. Fishermen recount how shorelines have retreated dramatically within a single generation, describing what they call “creeping tides.”
Scientific data reinforces these observations. While global sea levels are rising at an average rate of about 3.5 millimeters annually, Small Island Developing States like Seychelles experience amplified consequences. A marginal increase in sea level can translate into several meters of beach loss during storm surges.
Rethinking Coastal Defense
For decades, many coastal regions relied on concrete barriers to hold back the sea. But Seychelles is now shifting away from these “grey infrastructure” solutions, which often fail by redirecting wave energy and worsening erosion elsewhere.
Instead, the country is embracing nature.
In Roche Caiman, mangrove forests are being restored as natural buffers. Their dense root systems stabilize the soil and absorb wave energy, acting as living shields against the ocean’s force.
Further offshore near Praslin, coral restoration projects are underway. Divers cultivate coral nurseries that grow into reefs, forming submerged barriers that weaken incoming waves before they reach the coastline.
Lessons for West Africa
Analysts observing Seychelles’ evolving strategy say it offers a practical model for West African nations grappling with coastal vulnerability.
First is the concept of enforcing development setbacks. Seychelles strictly prohibits construction within 25 to 50 meters of the high-water mark. For fast-growing urban centers like Victoria Island, such measures could prove critical in preventing future displacement crises.
Second is the recognition of nature as infrastructure. By treating mangroves as economic and environmental assets, Seychelles has accessed international “blue finance” to fund conservation-driven resilience efforts.
Third is the role of community involvement. Local beach monitoring groups track erosion patterns, generating real-time data that complements satellite analysis and informs policy decisions.
When Retreat Becomes Inevitable
Despite these efforts, not all land can be saved.
Authorities in Seychelles have begun implementing “managed retreat” strategies, relocating roads, power systems, and even homes away from vulnerable zones. Using high-resolution mapping and predictive data, these decisions are guided by long-term risk assessments rather than emergency reactions.
It is a costly and complex process, but one officials describe as unavoidable.
A Shared Coastline, A Shared Future
Thousands of kilometers away, the coastal realities of Seychelles echo along Nigeria’s shores. The salt-laden breeze that sweeps across Anse à la Mouche is no different from the spray along Lagos’ Atlantic edge.
The message is clear. Rising seas are not a distant threat. They are a present danger demanding immediate, coordinated action.
Seychelles may not be able to stop the tide. But in its blend of ecological innovation, policy enforcement, and community engagement, it is demonstrating something equally powerful: how to live with it, adapt to it, and, where possible, outmaneuver it.
For West Africa, the question is no longer whether the waters will rise. It is whether the region will be ready when they do.


