U3A Climate Study

 

Disappearing Countries

Page history last edited by Anonymous 2 yrs ago

THAT SINKING FEELING

Oread Daily http://oreaddaily.blogspot.com/

 

"We live in constant fear of the adverse impacts of climate change. For a coral atoll nation, sea level rise and more severe weather events loom as a growing threat to our entire population. The threat is real and serious, and is of no difference to a slow and insidious form of terrorism against us." -Saufatu Sopoanga, Prime Minister of Tuvalu, at the 58th Session of the United Nations General Assembly New York, 24th September 2003

 

The canary is dying. The first to go is going. The small island nation of Tuvalu is asking for help from the rest of the world as it sinks beneath the ocean due to global warming. Flood damage caused by rising sea levels and saline intrusion into drinking water are already wide-spread.

 

The plea came during an environmental conference in South Korea.

 

Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus endorsed Tuvalu's message, saying rising temperatures are also "a matter of life and death" for low-lying nations like his own Bangladesh.

 

"For many people around the world this is an issue of concern but for us it's an issue of life and death," he said, urging global lifestyle changes to reduce greenhouse gases.

 

No one should shrug their shoulders when they hear the people of Tuvalu talking about their homeland being washed away by rising tides and higher sea levels. Tuvalu is a Member State of the United Nations, and under the Organization's Charter, deserved the same level of attention as every other Member State.

 

But, of course, it won't get it.

 

Tuvalu's former assistant environment minister Paani Laupepa, now assistant secretary for foreign affairs commented two years ago to photographer Gary Braasch in an article in Grist, "President Bush goes to war to protect his country, and talks of national security, but the security of my people is threatened by global warming. How can you tell the American people that the way they live -- having

three cars, using so much energy -- is endangering lots of small countries down the track?"

 

One wonders where the children shown in the accompanying photo will spend their adult years.

 

One wonders how many people give a damn.

 

The following is from Reuters (UK).

 

 

Tuvalu about to disappear into the ocean

 

The tiny Pacific island state of Tuvalu on Thursday urged the rest of

the world to do more to combat global warming before it sinks beneath

the ocean.

 

The group of atolls and reefs, home to some 10,000 people, is barely

two meters on average above sea-level and one study predicted at the

current rate the ocean is rising could disappear in the next 30 to 50

years.

 

"We keep thinking that the time will never come. The alternative is

to turn ourselves into fish and live under water," Tuvalu Deputy

Prime Tavau Teii told Reuters in the South Korean capital where he

was attending a conference on the environment.

 

"All countries must make an effort to reduce their emissions before

it is too late for countries like Tuvalu," he said, calling the

country one of the most vulnerable in the world to man-made climate

change.

 

He reeled off a list of threats to the country, one of whose few

export earnings comes from its Internet country suffix which it can

sell to anyone wanting their Website site to end with .tv.

 

Coral reefs are being damaged by the warming ocean and so threatening

fish stocks -- the main source of protein.

 

The sea is increasingly invading underground fresh water supplies,

creating problems for farmers, while drought constantly threatened to

limit drinking water.

 

Annual spring tides appear to be getting higher each year, eroding

the coastline. As the coral reefs die, that protection goes and the

risk only increases.

 

And the mounting ferocity of cyclones from a warmer ocean also

brought greater risks, he said, noting another island state in the

area had been buffeted by waves three years ago that crashed over its

30 meter cliffs.

 

"We'll try and maintain our own way of living on the island as long

as we can. If the time comes we should leave the islands, there is no

other choice but to leave."

 

Teii said his government had received indications from New Zealand it

was prepared to take in people from the islands. About 2,000 of its

population already live there.

 

But Australia, the other major economy in the region, had only given

vague commitments.

 

"Australia was very reluctant to make a commitment even though they

have been approached in a diplomatic way."

 

 

 

-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=

This is the Global e-Forum on Climate Change and Global Warming.


This email group was founded and is managed by Conserve Africa Foundation, London, UK http://www.conserveafrica.org.uk/

 

PLEASE MAKE A DONATION:

 

https://secure.efundraising.org.uk/tailored/donation.asp?charity=93139

Comments (0)

You don't have permission to comment on this page.