Farewell Tuvalu 1 of 2
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Farewell Tuvalu
Andrew Simms
Monday October 29, 2001
The Guardian

The world has just shifted on its axis, but not in the way you might first 
imagine. A group of nine islands, home to 11,000 people, is the first 
nation to pay the ultimate price for global warming.

For many years the most interesting thing to happen to the Pacific island 
state of Tuvalu was the sale of its internet domain name, .tv, for $50m 
(£35m). But, just as Tuvalu has traded in its virtual domain, it is about 
to lose its real one.

The authorities in Tuvalu have publicly conceded defeat to the sea rising 
around them. Appeals have gone out to the governments of New Zealand and 
Australia to help in the full-scale evacuation of Tuvalu's population. 
After an apparent rebuff from Australia, the first group of evacuees is due 
to leave for New Zealand next year.

Today governments will converge in Marrakesh for the first meeting since 
agreeing the Kyoto protocol on climate change; the scale of the challenge 
ahead is still emerging, as is the gross inadequacy of current plans. 
Tuvalu is paying for the rich world's experiment with the global 
atmosphere. At that price you could say that it has become the world's 
greatest creditor nation. Although a land of no mobile phones and one radio 
station, Tuvalu is literally going down in history. The archipelago may be 
home to only 11,000 souls, but on other islands another 7m are threatened. 
It doesn't stop there. Go further and in Bangladesh alone another 20m 
people stand to become environmental refugees.

New and old claims to nationhood are at the root of the conflicts through 
which today's global economic powers are reasserting themselves. But the 
impact of climate change means the familiar mental landscape of 
international relations could be turned upside down.

Several decades of dubious management of the global economy made whole 
parts of the world in Africa and Latin America synonymous with debt. 
However, the orthodox debt crisis will pale next to the scale of the 
emerging ecological debt crisis of climate change. Conventional debtors 
will become new environmental creditors and vice versa. And the world is 
not prepared for the implications.

At the least, a new standard of universally recognised global citizenship 
will probably be needed to deal with the loss of nations. That will need to 
be coupled with an inclusive plan to tackle climate change and a 
commensurate compensation framework. Eun Jung Cahill Che, of the 
Honolulu-based Pacific Forum, asks in relation to Tuvalu: "What will become 
of its territorial waters? What are the economic and security implications 
of disappearing exclusive economic zones? Can there be compensation for the 
loss of a country, its history, its culture, its way of life? How do you 
put a price on that?" For at least 200 years, two dynamics have driven the 
global economy. One is the enormous growth of material wealth underwritten 
by humankind's rampant exploitation of fossil fuel. The other is the 
relentless widening of the gap between rich and poor. Now, everyone from 
Tony Blair to the head of the World Bank and former head of the IMF, agrees 
that the rich/poor divide fuels conflict.

James Marriott, a writer, shows how brief the reign of the fossil fuel 
economy is going to be. His great-grandfather was the first in his family 
to smell petrol, and James's parents are the first, and due to climate 
change probably the last, generation to spend their pensions on 
international air travel. Costs and benefits in a warming world are grossly 
unfairly distributed. While countries such as the US enjoy a cheap fuel 
policy, the brunt of climate change - floods, rainstorms and drought - is 
borne by countries least able to cope - such as Tuvalu, Bangladesh and 
Mozambique.

Ecological debt - where the rich take up more than their logical share of a 
finite environmental space - gives developing countries the moral high 
ground in international negotiations. There should be no question now of 
poor countries giving one cent of unpayable debt service to any rich 
country creditor before ecological debts are reconciled. A realistic global 
deal on debt would acknowledge the logical entitlement to share equally the 
global commons of the atmosphere and the economic opportunities it brings, 
within a plan to reduce the emission of greenhouse gases to environmentally 
tolerable levels.

Rockefeller once said that the poor shall inherit the earth but not its 
mineral rights. He could never have guessed that the world would soon face 
a challenge so potentially apocalyptic, that giving the poor their rights 
would become the minimum necessary to clear up the mess and agree a global 
solution to climate change.

Andrew Simms works for the New Economics Foundation and is writing a book 
about ecological debt.

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Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] &  http://bellarmine.lmu.edu/~jdevine


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