Abstract

In the Global South, including the Sub-Saharan African city-regions, the possible future urban expansion patterns may pose a challenge towards improving environmental sustainability. Land use planning strategies and instruments for regulating urban expansion are faced with challenges, including insufficient data availability to offer insights into the possible future urban expansion. This study integrated empirical data derived from Geographic Information Systems, Remote Sensing, and surveys of experts to offer insights into the possible future urban expansion under spatial planning scenarios to support land use planning and environmental sustainability of city-regions. We analyzed the spatial determinants of urban expansion, calibrated the land cover model using the Multi-Layer Perceptron Neural Network and Markov, and developed three scenarios to simulate land cover from 2017 to 2030 and to 2050. The scenarios include Business As Usual that extrapolates past trends; Regional Land Use Plan that restricts urban expansion to the land designated for urban development, and; Adjusted Urban Land that incorporates the leapfrogged settlements into the land designated for urban development. Additionally, we quantified the potential degradation of environmentally sensitive areas by future urban expansion under the three scenarios. Results indicated a high, little, and no potential degradation of environmentally sensitive areas by the future urban expansion under the Business As Usual, Adjusted Urban Land, and Regional Land Use Plan scenarios respectively. The methods and the baseline information provided, especially from the Adjusted Urban Land scenario showed the possibility of balancing the need for urban expansion and the protection of environmentally sensitive areas. This would be useful to improve the environmental sustainability of the Sub-Saharan African city-regions and across the Global South, where insufficient data availability challenges land use planning.

Highlights

  • The possible future urban expansion may pose significant negative impacts on environmentally sensitive areas (Mohamed and Worku 2020; Gao et al 2020), considering the past/current unregulated urban expansion patterns in the Global South (Aldana-Domınguez et al 2019; Agyemang et al 2019; Agyemang and Silva 2019; Li et al 2018; Barrera and Henrıquez 2017)

  • This study demonstrates the first detailed example of integrating empirical data derived from GIS, Remote Sensing (RS), and surveys of experts to offer insights into the possible future urban expansion under spatial planning scenarios to support land use planning and environmental sustainability in the Abuja city-region, Nigeria

  • Under the Business As Usual (BAU) scenario, the results show that the urban expansion patterns may occur in a leapfrogged/ haphazard manner, especially on land designated for non-urban/built-up, similar to those reported by Agyemang and Silva (2019) for Accra city-region, Ghana that leapfrogged large-scale development becoming new attraction centers

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Summary

Introduction

The possible future urban expansion may pose significant negative impacts on environmentally sensitive areas (Mohamed and Worku 2020; Gao et al 2020), considering the past/current unregulated urban expansion patterns in the Global South (Aldana-Domınguez et al 2019; Agyemang et al 2019; Agyemang and Silva 2019; Li et al 2018; Barrera and Henrıquez 2017). Abuja could be a role model because it is a new settlement and the future certainly means change and expansion that can be regulated using land use planning strategies at urban and regional scales It is the only city developed from scratch using land use planning strategies (Adama, 2020).

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