Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Swallowed by the sea

You doubt climate change? Come to this island — but hurry, before it disappears.

- Nicholas Kristof Nicholas Kristof is a columnist for The New York Times.

AKUTUBDIA, Bangladesh nyone who doubts climate change should come to this lovely lowlying island, lapped by gentle waves and home to about 100,000 people.

But come quickly, while it’s still here.

“My house was over there,” said Zainal Abedin, a farmer, pointing to the waves about 100 feet from the shore. “At low tide, we can still see signs of our house.”

Already much of Kutubdia has been swallowed by rising seas, leaving countless families with nothing. Nurul Haque, a farmer who lost all his land to the ocean, told me that he may have to pull his daughter, Munni Akter, 13, out of eighth grade and marry her off to an older man looking for a second or third wife, because he has few financial options left to support her.

“I don’t really want to marry her off, because it’s not good for girls,” he said glumly. “But I’m considerin­g it.” He insisted that if it weren’t for the rising waters and his resulting impoverish­ment, he wouldn’t think of finding a husband for her.

One of the paradoxes of climate change is that the world’s poorest and most vulnerable people — who contribute almost nothing to warming the planet — end up beingmost harmed by it.

Bangladesh is expected to be particular­ly badly hit by rising oceans, because much of the country is only a few feet above sea level.

“Climate change is destroying children’s futures,” noted Justin Forsyth, the deputy executive director of Unicef. “In Bangladesh, tens of millions of children and families are at risk of losing their homes, their land and their livelihood­s from rising sea levels, flooding and increased cyclone intensity.”

Mr. Forsyth said the average Bangladesh­i produces just onetenth of the global average in annual per-capita carbon emissions. In contrast, the United States accounts for more than one-quarter of cumulative carbon emissions since 1850, more than twice as muchas any other country.

If Munni is pulled out of school and married off, she’ll have plenty of company. Unicef data suggest that 22 percent of girls in Bangladesh marry by the age of 15, one of thehighest rates in the world.

“Climate changes appear to be increasing the numbers of girls who are forced to marry ,” a three year academic study in Bangladesh concluded.

A year ago in Madagascar, I met a family ready to marry off a 10-year-old girl, Fombasoa, because of a drought linked to climate change. And there are increasing reports that poverty linked to climate change is leading to child marriage in Malawi, Mozambique­and other countries.

In Kutubdia, climate change is not the only issue. The seas are rising, but in addition, Kutubdia itselfseem­s to be sinking.

The upshot is that the island’s shoreline has retreated by about a kilometer since the 1960s, farmers say. Even when land is mostly dry, occasional high tides or storm surges bring in saltwater that poisons the rice paddies. Thousands of climate refugees have already fled Kutubdia and formed their own neighborho­od in the mainland Bangladesh­i city ofCox’s Bazaar.

A similar injustice is apparent in many poor countries. “Climate change contribute­s to conflict,” noted Neal Keny-Guyer, the CEO of Mercy Corps, the aid group. He observed that a drier climate is widely believed to have caused agricultur­al failures, tensions and migrations that played a role in the Syrian civil war, the Darfur genocide and the civil war in northeaste­rn Nigeria.

Aside from reducing carbon emissions, Mr. Keny-Guyer said, Western countries can do much more to build resilience in poor countries. That can include supporting drought-resistant or saltwater-resistant crops and offering micro-insurance to farmers and herdsmen so that a drought does not devastate them. Mercy Corps is now developing such micro-insurance.

The evidence of climate change is increasing­ly sobering, with the lastfour years also the hottest four years on record since modern record-keepingbeg­an in the 1880s.

We’re also coming to understand that climate change may wreak havoc, changing ocean currents, killing coral reefs and nurturing feedback loops that accelerate the warming. It turns out that 99 percent of green sea turtles hatched in the northern Great Barrier Reef are now female, because their sex is determined by temperatur­e.

Most of the villagers I spoke to both in Madagascar and in Bangladesh had never heard of President Donald Trump. But the outlook for their descendant­s may depend on the actions he takes — andhis withdrawal from the Paris climate accord is an unhelpful surrender of American leadership.

Americans were recently horrified by a viral video of a starving polar bear, which may or may not be linked to climate change. Let’s hope we can be just as indignant about the impact of climate change on children like Munni.

 ?? Thomas Nybo/Redux, for UNICEF ?? Zainal Abedin stands near the spot where remnants of his family home sit underwater on the Bangladesh­i island of Kutubdia.
Thomas Nybo/Redux, for UNICEF Zainal Abedin stands near the spot where remnants of his family home sit underwater on the Bangladesh­i island of Kutubdia.

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