Iran Daily

Climate change is triggering a migrant crisis in Vietnam

- By Alex Chapman and Van Pham Dang Tri*

The Vietnamese Mekong Delta is one of Earth’s most agricultur­ally productive regions and is of global importance for its exports of rice, shrimp, and fruit. The 18m inhabitant­s of this low-lying river delta are also some of the world’s most vulnerable to climate change. Over the last ten years around 1.7 million people have migrated out of its vast expanse of ¿elds, rivers and canals while only 700,000 have arrived, theconvers­ation.com wrote.

On a global level migration to urban areas remains as high as ever: One person in every 200 moves from rural areas to the city every year. Against this backdrop it is dif¿cult to attribute migration to individual causes, not least because it can be challengin­g to ¿nd people who have left a region in order to ask why they went and because every local context is unique. But the high net rate of migration away from Mekong Delta provinces is more than double the national average, and even higher in its most climate-vulnerable areas. This implies that there is something else probably climate-related — going on here.

In 2013 we visited An Thạnh Đông commune in Sóc Trăng Province aiming to collect survey data on agricultur­al yields. We soon realized that virtually no farmers of An Thạnh Đông had any yields to report. The commune had lost its entire sugarcane crop after unexpected­ly high levels of salt water seeped into the soil and killed the plants. Those without a safety net were living in poverty. Over the following weeks hundreds of smallholde­rs, many of whom had farmed the delta for generation­s, would tell us that things were changing and their livelihood­s would soon be untenable.

In 2015-2016 disaster struck with the worst drought in a century. This caused salt water to intrude over 80km inland and destroyed at least 160,000ha of crops. In Kiên Giang (pop. 1.7m), one of the worst affected provinces, the local net migration rate jumped and in the year that followed around one resident in every 100 left.

One relatively low pro¿le article by Vietnamese academics may be a vital piece of the puzzle. The study, by Oanh Le Thi Kim and Truong Le Minh of Van Lang University, suggested that climate change is the dominant factor in the decisions of 14.5 percent of migrants leaving the Mekong Delta. If this ¿gure is correct, climate change is forcing 24,000 people to leave the region every year. And it’s worth pointing out the largest factor in individual decisions to leave the Delta was found to be the desire to escape poverty. As climate change has a growing and complex relationsh­ip with poverty, 14.5 percent may even be an underestim­ate.

There are a host of climate-linked drivers behind migration in the Delta. Some homes have quite literally fallen into the sea as the coast has eroded in the Southweste­rn portion of the delta — in some places 100m of coastal belt has been lost in a year. Hundreds of thousands of households are affected by the intrusion of salt water as the sea rises and only some are able to switch their livelihood­s to salt-water tolerant commoditie­s. Others have been affected by the increased incidence of drought, a trend which can be attributed in part to climate change, but also to upstream dam constructi­on.

Government­s and communitie­s in developing countries around the world have already begun taking action to manage climate change impacts through adaptation. Our recent research in Vietnam Àags a warning about how this is being done. We show that a further group of people are being forced to migrate from the Mekong due to decisions originally taken to protect them from the climate. Thousands of kilometers of dykes, many over four meters high, now criss-cross the delta. They were built principall­y to protect people and crops from Àooding, but those same dykes have fundamenta­lly altered the ecosystem. The poor and the landless can no longer ¿nd ¿sh to eat and sell, and the dykes prevent free nutrients being carried onto paddies by the Àood.

All this demonstrat­es that climate change threatens to exacerbate the existing trends of economic migration. One large scale study of migration in deltas has found that climate factors such as extreme Àoods, cyclones, erosion and land degradatio­n play a role in making natural resource-based livelihood­s more tenuous, further encouragin­g inhabitant­s to migrate.

* Alex Chapman is research fellow in human geography in the University of Southampto­n.

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