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Climate talks mean life or death for island states
Written by Administrator   
Thursday, 06 September 2012 11:48
So while climate change delegates haggle over deadlines, binding targets and finance, some of the world's poorest states are warning that rising sea levels and storms will sweep them away unless the world agrees to tackle global warning. "We will be one of the first countries to go under water," said Foua Toloa, a senior politician on Tokelau, an island half-way between Hawaii and New Zealand that is no more than five meters above sea-level.

"We are a small and fragile nation very susceptible to environment and climate developments."

Grenada's Foreign Minister Karl Hood, chairman of the 43-nation Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS), whose members are in the frontline of climate change, was even more blunt:

"If we don't act now, some of us will die."

Many low lying nations can already calculate the cost of rising greenhouse gas emissions in lives lost, economies shattered and landscapes transformed.

"By 2025, rising sea levels could lead to the displacement of at least 10 percent of the population", Comores Vice President Fouad Mohadji told delegates at climate change talks in the South African port city of Durban.

Sea waters could destroy 29 percent of the road network, 30 percent of the hotel infrastructure on which the islands' tourism industry relies, 70 percent of ports and airports, at a cost of $1 billion dollars.

"That is more than twice the country's gross domestic product," he said.

TIME FOR ACTION

Delegates from almost 200 countries have until late on Friday to decide whether to commit to signing up to an internationally binding climate deal by 2015 at the latest.

The European Union is calling for a legally binding global deal to be reached by 2015 and implemented by 2020, but Fiji's Environment Minister Samu Saumutua says that would be too late to reverse rising sea levels that threaten to submerge its islands.

"Cyclones now occur any time of the year, we have fresh floods, in the coastal areas the fresh water supply is now inundated with salt water," he said. "We are desperately looking at how we are going to deal with the situation at home."

It is not only islands that are suffering.

Herman Rosa Chavez, El Salvador's environment minister, said a tropical depression that swept across Central America two months ago flooded 10 percent of his country, causing losses of $840 million -- some four percent of GDP.

"We went from being impacted by one extreme weather event per decade in the 1960s and 1970s, to nine in the last 10 years," he said, illustrating the accelerating pace of climate change.

Several delegates accused the global economic powers of ignoring science and putting in peril the very survival of states which contribute little to the millions of tons of carbon spewed into the atmosphere each year, but which are most directly affected by the resulting climate change.

"Some people have a vested interest not to make any progress in these negotiations," said Tosi Mpanu-Mpanu, the head of the Africa group.
 
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