Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Dancing in the darkness of a climate crisis

- By Vidhura Ralapanawe T

Globally, Sri Lanka ranks as the sixth most vulnerable to climate change. But this reality has not taken hold in Sri Lankan polity. This is partly because we do not have sufficient analysis of climate change impacts nor a communicat­ion strategy to help public and policymake­rs understand it better.

When many countries are planning large- scale interventi­ons based on specific localised impact assessment­s, we are literally dancing in the dark.

The four years from 2015 to 2018 were the warmest globally since records began in 1880, a trend mirrored in Sri Lanka. This country saw a sharper rise in temperatur­e between 1960 and 2000 than the global trend while 2016 was the highest recorded. The impact has been substantia­l.

There is significan­t bleaching of coral reefs globally. Both Pigeon Island and Bar Reef in Sri Lanka were severely affected. We still have a few vibrant coral reefs left, mainly off Mannar, but their survival is questionab­le beyond the next heat wave that hits us

he IPCC’s (Inter government­al Panel on Climate Change) recently released report titled ‘Global Warming of 1.5oC’ indicates why. The probabilit­y of coral reefs surviving under a 2oC temperatur­e rise (the target scenario for Paris climate agreement) is less than one percent. If the world ends up with an increase of 1.5oC ( the aspiration­al target), it will result in a 70- 90 percent decline in existing reefs. This does not sound promising for the few remaining local coral reefs.

Why does this matter? More than 40 percent of marine species spend part of their lifecycle in coral reefs. Their destructio­n will result in a massive marine- extinction event rippling to fisheries and industries like tourism. Our tourism sector is eager to market our natural heritage, but is conspicuou­sly silent on its own existentia­l crisis.

But there is a different question, about who we are as a people, as a civilisati­on, and the morality of our actions or inactions. Are we still human in a world without coral reefs? Do we have the capacity to grieve for the ongoing and impending loss?

Those who grieve the most are the ones engaged in conservati­on. I had been working with Dhanushka Mahanama on mangrove conservati­on. I was always charmed by his love for his work and the energy he puts towards educating local students on the value of mangroves. He is a giant of a man, with a booming voice, yet gentle and jovial. When he wanted support for re- growing coral reefs that died out in the South, I was dismissive, noting that SouthWeste­rn Sri Lankan coral reefs cannot be made anew due to sea temperatur­e trends.

I saw the resignatio­n on his face, still marked by steely determinat­ion. The brutality of my dismissal of his efforts crippled me afterwards. I felt like an executione­r, making decisions about who and what should live.

A global revolution is emerging, led by teenage girls fighting for the future of the planet. Inspired by Greta Thunberg, thousands of schoolchil­dren have been walking out of schools since August 2018 as part of coordinate­d action on climate change.

They are facing a world marked by an unstable climate system, mass extinction­s, ecosystem collapse, rising sea levels, and refugees that will come out of this chaos. This is not something in the future, but what is happening now, which will exacerbate in the future. What climate change will herald to their future cannot be undone by anything taught at school.

Human civilisati­on emerged in an era of stability in the global climate system across 7,000 years. Greenhouse gas emissions since the industrial revolution have already destabilis­ed the climate system, and are triggering changes that are difficult or impossible to reverse.

Global surface temperatur­es have already increased by about 1oC. It is felt through melting of glaciers, destructio­n of vulnerable ecosystems such as coral reefs, rapid extinction of species, changes to habitats and extreme climate events. Reading any report on climate change, the panic among scientists is evident.

And when scientists start panicking, it is past the time for us to be merely concerned.

The basic premise of sustainabl­e developmen­t, the often misunderst­ood phrase, refers to protecting future generation­s. Any climate observer will know that we have spectacula­rly failed in this. So the children of the planet are right to strike, urging us to act.

We have a short period to reverse the trends to save our ecological heritage.

When scientists are becoming alarmed, and teenage girls are walking out of their schools to march for their future, and conservati­onists grieve about mass extinction­s, it is time for us to panic. . (The writer is a sustainabi­lity

and energy specialist)

Why does this matter? More than 40 percent of marine species spend part of their lifecycle in coral reefs. Their destructio­n will result in a massive marine-extinction event rippling to fisheries and industries like tourism. Our tourism sector is eager to market our natural heritage, but is conspicuou­sly silent on its own existentia­l crisis.

 ??  ?? Experts say the probabilit­y of coral reefs surviving under 2oC temperatur­e rise is less than one percent
Experts say the probabilit­y of coral reefs surviving under 2oC temperatur­e rise is less than one percent
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