Apparently it's come to this ...

On a related note, up until a few weeks ago I was involved in exploratory 
work looking to engage the President of the Maldives on political advocacy 
for geoengineering research (and perhaps even actual research on 
micro-bubble technology) via a direct connection ... then he was overthrown 
in a coup.  http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-16945764

Josh Horton
[email protected]


http://www.unisdr.org/archive/25649

Migration not a matter of choice but survival, says Kiribati President*By 
Brigitte Leoni*

*BANGKOK, 15 March 2012* - Following a recent decision by its Cabinet to 
buy land in Fiji as 'climate change insurance' for its population, Kiribati 
President, Anote Tong has called on the international community to address 
the effects of climate change that could wipe out the entire Pacific 
archipelago. 

While the governments of both the Pacific island nations are currently in 
talks about the nearly 6,000 acres of fertile land on Fiji's main island, 
Viti Levu which is being offered by a church group for $9.6 million, 
President Tong hopes that it will never be necessary for the 103,000 people 
of Kiribati to leave. 

The move comes three years after President Tong took centre stage at the 
Global Platform for Disaster Risk Reduction to implore the international 
community to take effective action against climate change before it became 
too late for Kiribati and other small island developing states of the 
Pacific. 

This week he told the media: "We would hope not to put everyone on one 
piece of land, but if it became absolutely necessary, yes, we could do it. 
It wouldn't be for me, personally, but would apply more to a younger 
generation. For them, moving won't be a matter of choice. It's basically 
going to be a matter of survival." 

Jerry Velasquez, Head of UNISDR Asia Pacific, believes that now is not time 
to give up. "We still have time to build community resilience and press on 
with efforts to mitigate catastrophic climate change before it's too late. 
Climate migration, if it has to happen, should be an adaptation option for 
resilient communities," he said.

Kiribati is at the heart of the debate on climate change. Many of its 
atolls rise just 2.0 metres above sea level. It is comprised of 33 tiny 
islands scattered across the ocean with more than half its population 
crowded onto one island - South Tarawa, the capital. 

This recent development in Kiribati comes on the heels of a new Asia 
Development Bank (ADB) report released last week, which states that 
low-lying Pacific islands will be extremely vulnerable to sea-level rise, 
high intensity cyclones, and storm surges. 

The report, Addressing Climate Change and Migration in Asia and the Pacific 
highlights that with warmer seas, more intense cyclones could become a 
pattern. It further predicts widespread coastal inundation for Kiribati's 
main island. 

Released at the Second Asia-Pacific Climate Change Adaptation Forum in 
Bangkok, the report identifies Kiribati, Tuvalu, and Papua New Guinea as 
Pacific migration hotspots due to climate change. 

Kiribati and Tuvalu face the highest threat from sea-level rise while Papua 
New Guinea is expected to experience greater risk from flash flooding 
across the highlands and coastal flooding along the south coast, according 
to the report. 

According to ADB some 42 million people in the Asia Pacific region were 
displaced by environmental disasters in the past two years. Larger 
countries will also face tough migration challenges due to climate change 
in the coming years. India, for example, has the highest number of people 
who may be affected by rising sea levels; thirty seven million of its 
citizens may be impacted by climate change by 2050. 

"If we cannot save Kiribati tomorrow, we will also be obliged to move 
millions of people from Dhaka, the capital of Bangladesh, Manila, the 
capital of the Philippines and many other cities in the world sooner or 
later'', said Jerry Velasquez. 

Over the last five years, President Tong has continued to stress that his 
country may become uninhabitable by the 2050s due to rising sea levels and 
salination provoked by climate change. 

On Abaiang, one of Kiribati's remote outer islands, an empty sandbar is 
evidence of the encroaching sea. There was a village there once called 
Tebunginako. Residents were forced to relocate after the sea ruined crops 
and drinking water. Then a large storm destroyed their houses. Some of the 
villagers have rebuilt further inland; others have scattered for good.

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"geoengineering" group.
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msg/geoengineering/-/wGDrZfdwGFkJ.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/geoengineering?hl=en.

Reply via email to