Fiji Sun

We cannot become complacent in our climate change campaign

We should maintain the momentum from COP23 because climate change is real and no one is exempt or immune to its impact

- MARAIA VULA Feedback: maraia.vula@fijisun.com.fj

Two years ago yesterday, Tropical Cyclone

Winston, our first Category 5 cyclone and strongest ever to make landfall in the Southern Hemisphere, struck Fiji with devastatin­g force.

It claimed 44 lives, destroyed homes, crops and infrastruc­ture and left 540,000 people affected. Prime Minister Voreqe Bainimaram­a led a moment of silence yesterday at the Commonweal­th Education Ministers Conference at Sheraton Fiji Resort, Denarau, Nadi, to remember those who died. It also reminded us of the constant danger that we face with extreme weather events because of climate change.

We have just gone past a series of weather events that brought a lot of wind, rain, and flooding in some parts of the country.

Tropical Cyclone Gita hit only some islands in Southern Lau. But Gita could easily have become another Winston if it had tracked further north. These wild weather patterns highlight the importance of taking climate change seriously. Just because we did well as the presidency of COP23 in Bonn, Germany, last November, does not mean we can relax and become complacent in our climate change campaign. Bonn might have gone but our leadership is not over. As the PM reminded us yesterday.

We should maintain the momentum. We should definitely make sure strong platforms are set before we hand over the presidency to Poland for COP24 in December. Climate change is real and no one is exempt or immune to its impact.

So as we remember the victims of Winston let's not forget that we live in cyclone territory and that we are likely to by visited by more cyclones. Maybe even this year.

Our push to reduce global warming is important here because scientists say cyclones are formed from simple thundersto­rms at certain times of the year when the sea temperatur­e warms.

They say they suck up vast quantities of water through evaporatio­n, which is dumped as torrential rain. Flooding, property damage and loss of life result.

Scientists have long predicted that global warming will make cyclones more destructiv­e, and some say the evidence for this may already be visible. They say warmer oceans add to the raw fuel on which cyclones feed, and higher sea levels boost storm surges that may overcome coastal defences. We have seen the impact of global warming in the sea level rise here. Some coastal settlement­s have been relocated as a result.

While we are concerned with this, our biggest fear is being hit by another cyclone similar to or more powerful than Winston because of the devastatio­n it poses on people's lives and the potential damage to our economy.

Let's be relentless in our climate change campaign. Let's continue the COP23 momentum and follow and support the Prime Minister's lead.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Fiji