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View Full Version : Is the Bahamas next?


seer
06-05-08, - 09:35 AM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20080605/sc_afp/nzealandkiribaticlimateenvironment_080605041611

Thu Jun 5, 12:16 AM ET

WELLINGTON (AFP) - The president of the low-lying Pacific atoll nation of Kiribati said Thursday his country may already be doomed because of climate change.

President Anote Tong said communities had already been resettled and crops destroyed by seawater in some parts of the country, made up of 33 coral atolls straddling the equator.

Although scientists are still debating the extent of rising sea levels and their cause, Tong told a press conference marking World Environment Day that changes were obvious in his country of 92,000 people.

"I am not a scientist but what I know is that things are happening we did not experience in the past," Tong said.

"We may be beyond redemption, we may be at the point of no return where the emissions in the atmosphere will carry on to contribute to climate change to produce a sea-level change that in time our small low-lying islands will be submerged," he said.

"Villages that have been there over the decades, maybe a century, and now they have to be relocated.

"Where they have been living over the past few decades is no longer there, it is being eroded."

At international meetings others had argued that measures to combat climate change would hurt their countries' economic development.

"In frustration, I said, 'No, it's not an issue of economic growth, it's an issue of human survival.'"

Under the worst-case scenario, Kiribati would be submerged by the end of this century and its people would have to be resettled in other countries, he said.

Sam Duncombe
06-05-08, - 10:16 AM
"When the results are examined at the country level, one notes very significant differences within the region. As is starkly revealed in Figure 1a, The Bahamas would experience the largest percentage of impacted land: Even with a 1m SLR, approximately 11% of the land area of The Bahamas would be impacted. This percentage reaches in excess of 60% under a 5m SLR scenario. Cuba and Belize would also experience significant impacts, albeit at a much reduced scale when compared with The Bahamas."
pg 12
World Bank Report on Climate Change
Thursday, June 5th, 2008
http://reearth.org/?p=542

fasttract
06-05-08, - 11:29 AM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20080605/sc_afp/nzealandkiribaticlimateenvironment_080605041611

Thu Jun 5, 12:16 AM ET

WELLINGTON (AFP) - The president of the low-lying Pacific atoll nation of Kiribati said Thursday his country may already be doomed because of climate change.

President Anote Tong said communities had already been resettled and crops destroyed by seawater in some parts of the country, made up of 33 coral atolls straddling the equator.

Although scientists are still debating the extent of rising sea levels and their cause, Tong told a press conference marking World Environment Day that changes were obvious in his country of 92,000 people.

"I am not a scientist but what I know is that things are happening we did not experience in the past," Tong said.

"We may be beyond redemption, we may be at the point of no return where the emissions in the atmosphere will carry on to contribute to climate change to produce a sea-level change that in time our small low-lying islands will be submerged," he said.

"Villages that have been there over the decades, maybe a century, and now they have to be relocated.

"Where they have been living over the past few decades is no longer there, it is being eroded."

At international meetings others had argued that measures to combat climate change would hurt their countries' economic development.

"In frustration, I said, 'No, it's not an issue of economic growth, it's an issue of human survival.'"

Under the worst-case scenario, Kiribati would be submerged by the end of this century and its people would have to be resettled in other countries, he said.

wow we are next if things do change.

foxhillgal
06-08-08, - 02:46 PM
"When the results are examined at the country level, one notes very significant differences within the region. As is starkly revealed in Figure 1a, The Bahamas would experience the largest percentage of impacted land: Even with a 1m SLR, approximately 11% of the land area of The Bahamas would be impacted. This percentage reaches in excess of 60% under a 5m SLR scenario. Cuba and Belize would also experience significant impacts, albeit at a much reduced scale when compared with The Bahamas."
pg 12
World Bank Report on Climate Change
Thursday, June 5th, 2008
http://reearth.org/?p=542

dem pesky facts again..............................shhh, doon disturb we sleep.:taped2:

hiphopanonymous
06-09-08, - 10:55 AM
"When the results are examined at the country level, one notes very significant differences within the region. As is starkly revealed in Figure 1a, The Bahamas would experience the largest percentage of impacted land: Even with a 1m SLR, approximately 11% of the land area of The Bahamas would be impacted. This percentage reaches in excess of 60% under a 5m SLR scenario. Cuba and Belize would also experience significant impacts, albeit at a much reduced scale when compared with The Bahamas."
pg 12
World Bank Report on Climate Change
Thursday, June 5th, 2008
http://reearth.org/?p=542

That doesn't sound good.
Let's just ignore it and hope the problem goes away.