Abstract:
The incessant reoccurrence of flooding disasters across Nigeria has mandated an urgent outlook on food-risk management
techniques. Ilorin and its environs have suffered immensely from annual food reoccurrence. This study aims to assess food
risk within Ilorin and its environs and proffer adequate food mitigation strategies that governments and policymakers can
adopt to placate future flooding events within the state. Satellite imagery data were acquired and analyzed for food-risk
assessment of the area. Ten highly influential food causative factors were synergized using Multi-Criteria Decision-Making
techniques in this research; they are Land Surface Temperature, Elevation, Soil Moisture Index, and Distance to Stream,
Drainage Density, Stream Power Index, Normalized Difference Vegetation Index, Land Use Land Cover, Slope, and Topographic Wetness Index. Findings showed that approximately 47.2% of the study area had low food risk, while moderate
and high food-risk zones occupied 33.5% and 19.29%, respectively. Most parts of Ilorin and its environs are safe from food
disasters; only about one-quarter of the total area under investigation lies in the high food-risk zones; these areas mostly
fall within the shores of major streams, rivers, and dams within the state. A plot of previous food cases in the state placed
the affected areas in the high and moderate zones of food risk, confirming the efficacy of geospatial techniques in food-risk
assessment. It is hoped that this study's findings and recommendations can be implemented to prevent future devastating
flooding occurrences within the state.