Canaries of Climate Change: the Plight of Pacific Island Nations

August 8, 2014

Jean-Michel watches a delicate crinoid sea star on the vulnerable reefs of Papua New Guinea © Carrie Vonderhaar, Ocean Futures Society

Ten million people of the Pacific Island Nations are calling – and we have yet to answer their plea. Like the canary in the coalmine, thousands of drowning islands in the Pacific are telling us that something dangerous is happening. As ocean levels continue to rise higher onto their low-lying lands, millions of people are facing a reality that threatens their homes, their families, their economies and their entire way of life. It is a reality they aren’t even responsible for – the very real effects of climate change.

As June turned to July forty-one nations came together in New Caledonia for Oceania 21, a three-day summit on Sustainable Development in Pacific Island Nations. Presidents, prime ministers, government officials, scientists, concerned residents and I – along with them, stood in solidarity to address the future of their nations and the epic battle they will all face as climate change continues splashing up their doorsteps.

It was truly one of the most emotional experiences I’ve ever encountered. Sitting alongside these nation’s leaders, I felt the intensity and urgency of their voices as they spoke about the prospects of their country and future of their people – a future not hundreds of years away, but one that is rapidly approaching and taking a turn for the worse.

Mutualisms like the anemone fish and its host persevere as the oceans become warmer and more acidic. © Carrie Vonderhaar, Ocean Futures Society

In the short term, sea level rise will lead to the destruction of infrastructure, roads, buildings, and crops. It threatens the food security and availability of freshwater for entire nations, as higher sea levels and more powerful storms will lead to contamination of these precious resources. In the long run, they will see entire island disappear, drowned under the rising tides of the sea. They will no longer have homes – they will be the refugees of climate change.

Rising ocean levels, increasing intensity of storms and swells, longer droughts – less predicable, and far more dangerous weather are the tell-tale signs of climate change that scientists have been warning us about for decades. Oceania 21 called upon world leaders to listen to their stories, their plans, and their plea for change. Among the nation’s present were representatives from China, the United States, and the European Union, the top countries with the highest carbon dioxide emissions in the world. Although the entirety of the Pacific island nations contribute less than 0.1% of the global carbon dioxide emissions, they are leading by example through vowing to completely reduce their dependence on the carbon emitting fossil fuels that threatens so many of their lives.

Fabien and Celine Cousteau observe a reef-building table coral, whose future is threatened by warmer and more acidic ocean waters. © Carrie Vonderhaar, Ocean Futures Society

Tokelau, the smallest country in the world, is also leading the world as the first nation to implement 100 percent renewable solar energy. Following their footsteps, countries like Fiji and Tonga are in the progress of converting completely to renewable energy, while the Cook Islands, Niue and Tuvalu, plan for 100 percent renewable energy by the year 2020. Many of the Pacific Island nations acknowledge the imperative need for sustainable energy development, yet so many lack access to these resources, and will continue to suffer as the effects of climate change surge forward.

While their human presence may be small – a mere 10 million out of 7 billion people inhabiting this earth, the nations of the south Pacific represent not only the resources of their land, but also the resources of the largest body of water that bathes our planet.

The Pacific Ocean spans 180 million square kilometers – half of the entire ocean that covers our earth. Each one of the 200 high rising islands and 2,500 low lying islands and atolls that make up the south Pacific island nations are surrounded by 200 nautical miles of exclusive economic zones (EEZ), giving them jurisdiction of 27 million square kilometers of our oceans resources.

Marine protected areas will give sea life a chance to recover from decades of overfishing. © Carrie Vonderhaar, Ocean Futures Society

So what have they done with this authority? Kiribati, a small Pacific island nation with roughly 800 square kilometers of land – and 3.4 million square kilometers of ocean, created one of the world’s first marine sanctuaries in 2006, setting aside over 400,000 square kilometers called the Phoenix Islands Protected Area (PIPA). Kirbati is one of the first nations that will fall victim to the devastating effects of our shifting global climate – already, they have had to purchase land in Fiji in the near future event that they must relocate their entire population.

Following Kiribati’s initiative for marine conservation, countries like Fiji and Palau have set aside vast areas of the ocean to protect and in 2012, the Cook Islands set aside 1.1 million square kilometers, establishing the largest marine reserve in the world of its time. Recently, New Caledonia added another 1.4 million square kilometers of marine protection. Together, these sanctuaries will allow our life-giving oceans the chance to recover from decades of overfishing, exploitation, and negligent abuse.

Nations of the Pacific islands have long endured an intimate relationship with the sea. For as long as their ancestors have lived on their lands, the people of the south Pacific have survived on the abundance of life carried by the ocean currents. As modern technology has brought with it advances in fishing, petroleum extraction, and commercial exploitation, the ocean has suffered. Still to this day, millions depend on the ocean for the food they eat every night and the means by which they survive.

Jean-Michel speaks with the young future leaders of tomorrow at Oceania 21 Conference in New Caledonia. © Nicolas Imbert

We must speak up and spread the word about the plight of the Pacific island nations. The people who call these islands home deserve one unified voice so loud that it demands the world to listen. Their solution is our unity, and the power of our collective voices to call on world leaders for real changes in the fight for their future. Most importantly – we must also take action. We need to reduce our use of fossil fuels, demand that our decision makers support renewable energy and that we share the reality of climate change with others. Island nations in the South Pacific may seem remote but our future is connected to their future because we all share the same home – our water planet.

The ocean gives us life. When we protect the oceans – we protect ourselves.

Warm regards,

JMCSignature_1.jpg

Jean-Michel Cousteau
President, Ocean Futures Society
with Jaclyn Mandoske

First Photo: Jean-Michel watches a delicate crinoid sea star on the vulnerable reefs of Papua New Guinea. © Carrie Vonderhaar, Ocean Futures Society

Second Photo: Mutualisms like the anemone fish and its host persevere as the oceans become warmer and more acidic. © Carrie Vonderhaar, Ocean Futures Society

Third Photo:Fabien and Celine Cousteau observe a reef-building table coral, whose future is threatened by warmer and more acidic ocean waters. © Carrie Vonderhaar, Ocean Futures Society

Fourth Photo: Marine protected areas will give sea life a chance to recover from decades of overfishing. © Carrie Vonderhaar, Ocean Futures Society

Fifth Photo: Jean-Michel speaks with the young future leaders of tomorrow at Oceania 21 Conference in New Caledonia. © Nicolas Imbert