Pacific island nations have pleaded with wealthy countries
to help their people migrate and find work if they are forced to flee their
homelands because of the consequences of climate change. A coalition of
low-lying island nations said moving people because of rising sea levels,
storms and ruined agriculture was a last resort. People living on coral atolls
in the Pacific are considered particularly vulnerable to a sea level that is
rising by 1.2cm a year, four times faster than the global average. Coastal
erosion, tainted water supplies and failing crops have prompted communities to
move inland or to other islands.
In a joint statement after a summit in Kiribati the Pacific
nations – Fiji, Kiribati, Tuvalu and Tokelau – said they were “gravely
concerned over the lack of effective international response to climate change”
that posed “major existential challenges” to their populations and cultures.
They repeated calls for an international body to be set up
to coordinate population movement caused by climate change. The creation of
such a body was included in an early draft of a UN agreement to be negotiated
at climate talks in Paris in December but the idea was dropped last week.
Australia opposed it. Anote Tong, the president of Kiribati, recently calling
Australia “very selfish” for its continued commitment to coalmining. The chief
executive of Greenpeace Australia, David Ritter, said Australia should do more
given its clout in the region.
“Australia is the richest, largest country in the region, so
to sit back and say we are doing enough is pathetic really. People in the
Pacific are very polite but privately the view of Australia is very clear: this
is a country not doing enough. There’s a view that Australia is putting coal
ahead of people. At the moment, if you are forced out of your home due to
inundation you simply become stateless. There’s no mechanism to ensure that
these people won’t fall through the cracks. When you go to Kiribati and see
people trying to repair sandbagged seawalls, you can see why this is a live
issue for them.”
There is no body that oversees the orderly movement of
people because of climate change impacts. The UN refugee convention applies
only to those fleeing persecution, with little appetite among the richest
nations to expand its definition to include “climate refugees” – amid
predictions that up to 250 million people may be displaced worldwide by 2050.
Peter Christian, the president of Micronesia, told a UN
gathering in New York earlier this month:
“We must become more cohesive in our actions to bring a
useful conclusion to help mitigate the threat of sinking islands and prevent
the potential genocide of Oceanic peoples and cultures.”
The countries called for funding for health and education
programs, and aid to raise buildings above predicted sea level increases and
safeguard water supplies from saltwater intrusion. Wealthy nations should
“prepare our people for ‘migration with dignity’, capable of contributing to
other nations’ economies and development processes as skilled migrant workers”,
the Pacific leaders said.
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