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Tuvalu, we hardly knew you

The tiny island nation of Tuvalu is threatened by global warming.

Posted by Chris Schults (Guest Contributor) at 12:49 PM on 12 Jun 2007

Possibly one of the most tragic outcomes that may result from climate change is the extinction of an entire nation's culture and homeland. As the United Nations discussed the threat that global warming poses to the security of nations, Afelee Pita, an ambassador from the tiny Pacific island nation of Tuvalu, was there to represent his country.

Tuvalu may be one of the first nations whose way of life could disappear as a result of the actions (or in this case, the lack of action) of other countries. NPR is covering this story as part of their year-long Climate Connections series. Here's a quote from the piece:

"We face many threats associated with climate change," Pita said to the U.N. "Ocean warming is changing the very nature of our island nation. Slowly our coral reefs are dying through coral bleaching. We are witnessing changes to fish stocks. And we face the increasing threat of more severe cyclones. With the highest (land) point of four meters above sea level, the threat of more cyclones is extremely disturbing."

Listen to the entire story on NPR.org.

And check out a small Grist slideshow of photos taken by Gary Braasch in 2005.

Update [2007-6-12 13:1:43 by Chris Schults]: NPR also has a related piece about the islands of Fiji.

tragedy

The photographs by Gary Braasch are eloquent.  The people of Tuvalu must be living in constant dread: impossible to imagine.

The ethics of this situation, along with similar cases of imperiled islands in the Pacific and Indian Oceans, is unique.  We understand in a general way the climate-related woes that are destroying the way of life of those islanders, and are threatening to overwhelm their island home altogether; and we can agree that human activities involving excessive GHG emissions are the cause.  And similarly, in a general way, we lie under a powerful moral obligation to change our ways, with respect to those emissions.

Nevertheless, it is not easy to see that there is anything that anyone can do right now, to end definitively the threat to Tuvalu.  "Mitigation"?  It is already too late for that, in Tuvalu's case.  "Adaptation"?  E.g., raising the islands three meters?  Building dikes around them?  No, that does not sound at all practical.

It looks like it is going to end with the population before long being transported to New Zealand -- the most enlightened PacRim country, still with a bit of room to spare.

Chickens deserve our true friendship! So do fish! So do other sentient beings! Let us learn to be kind.

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