Climate Risk Adaptation: How It Affects Our Construction Projects
By Alban Ago
It used to be simple. Youâd plan a construction project, set a timeline, and trust the weather to more or less cooperate. But not anymore.
At LELEADER GROUP, based in Benin, weâve seen how shifting weather patterns and climate unpredictability are no longer occasional inconveniences. Theyâre structural risks. Especially in construction.
Torrential rains that arrive weeks earlier than expected. Prolonged dry seasons that crack newly laid concrete. Coastal projects where rising water tables surprise even the most experienced engineers. These arenât abstract climate models. These are our job sites.
Weâve learnedâsometimes the hard wayâthat climate adaptation isnât a future issue. Itâs a present one. And if you build in Africa, or anywhere really, you either adapt⊠or you repair.
Lesson 1: Site selection now includes climate mapping
When evaluating land for an industrial park in Allada, we used to focus on access to roads, proximity to utilities, and soil composition. These things still matter, of course.
But today, we also study rainfall intensity trends, floodplain projections, and wind data over time. Not because we want to seem progressive, but because our margins depend on it.
In one case, we adjusted the layout of an entire facility after seeing satellite data showing increased runoff in one zone. We avoided a future drainage nightmare.
Lesson 2: Traditional materials may not hold up
We had a warehouse in northern Benin where the standard roofing solution worked well for yearsâuntil an extreme heat wave warped the panels. The fix wasnât cheap. Nor was the lesson.
Since then, weâve invested more in composite materials, heat-resistant sealants, and even green roofing elements that reduce ambient temperature.
Yes, they cost more up front. But when you factor in repairs, delays, and replacement? Adaptation pays.
Lesson 3: Schedules canât be rigid
Weather delays have always existed. But now theyâre less predictable. A dry season isnât guaranteed. A light rain can turn into flash flooding with no warning.
So weâve built more flexibility into our project plans. Contractors know this. Clients are informed. Teams are trained to move resources around quickly.
Itâs not about being inefficient. Itâs about being realistic. Rigid plans break. Adaptive ones bend.
Lesson 4: Communities are part of the climate story
In several of our construction projects, especially near rural communities, weâve seen how land use changesâlike deforestationâamplify climate risk.
So we now consult more closely with local leaders. In one project, we co-financed tree-planting and buffer zones to stabilize soil around a new access road.
It wasnât part of the original scope. But it made the road last longer, and it earned local goodwill. Againâadaptation creates both resilience and trust.
Lesson 5: The future is already arriving
As LELEADER GROUP prepares to attend the 2025 Go Global Awards in London, hosted by the International Trade Council, we know that infrastructure is central to Africaâs future. But it has to be future-proofed.
Being part of this global gathering isnât just about recognitionâitâs about learning from other markets. Exchanging ideas. Challenging our assumptions. Climate adaptation isnât an African challenge. Itâs a global construction frontier.
The difference isâin Africa, the margin for error is narrower. So we have to adapt faster.
Final thought
Climate change is no longer a distant concern on a sustainability slide. Itâs in our sand, our concrete, our delivery timelines.
At LELEADER, weâre still learning. Still adjusting. Sometimes we get it right. Sometimes the rain surprises us anyway.
But one thingâs for sure: we canât build for yesterdayâs weather. We have to build for tomorrowâs reality.
Adaptation isnât optional. Itâs survival. And maybe, if weâre thoughtful about it, it can be opportunity too.







