Climate Change Imperils the Existence of Island Countries

May 12, 2011
By Beth Buczynski

Rising sea levels caused by climate change imperil the future of many small, low-lying island nations, which could be at risk of one day disappearing into the ocean.

The legal implications for those nations will, for the first time, be examined at an international academic conference at Columbia Law School from May 23-25, sponsored by the Law School’s Center for Climate Change and the Republic of the Marshall Islands.

“The consensus is that the Marshall Islands and other low-lying nations could become uninhabitable in a matter of decades,” said Michael Gerrard, Director of the Center for Climate Change Law and the Andrew Sabin Professor of Professional Practice.

Last year, the Marshall Islands reached out to Gerrard, the former head of the American Bar Association’s Section of Environment, Energy and Resources, about how to grapple with these issues.

As the specter of this problem becomes more pronounced, there is virtually no legal precedent for how to deal with such a situation under international law. The conference will examine some of the legal options. Among the issues to be discussed:

  • Preservation of marine rights and defining resources and borders when a nation disappears.
  • Resettlement and migration as a new refugee population is created and whether larger countries can be obligated to take in displaced persons.
  • Whether a nation can preserve its statehood and sovereignty if it physically ceases to exist.
  • Who pays for these enormous undertakings?
  • How nations can adapt to rising sea levels and prolong the habitability of affected islands.

A 2007 report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change projected that sea levels would rise an average of five millimeters per year this century, although the rise is expected to be higher in parts of the Pacific. Some island nations are particularly vulnerable as most of their land lies at most only a few feet above sea level.

The 43-member Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS) put out a declaration last year that said “climate change poses the most serious threat to our survival and viability, and…it undermines our efforts to achieve sustainable development goals and threatens our very existence.”

Once an idyllic paradise, the small island nation of Kiribati is also being destroyed by the negative effects of climate change. Rising sea levels are swallowing up these tiny islands, poisoning the native trees and agricultural crops.

Desperate to put a human face on this tragedy, renowned photographer Jon Lewis recently traveled to Kiribati to photograph both the people and the slow disappearance of their country.

Upon returning from his trip, Lewis asked Amata and Marek Papaj, the brother and sister musicians of the Polish duo Slav, to compose a song that would capture the quiet desperation of the photos.

This powerful slideshow is the result:

Slav was very saddened after watching the slides that their music would accompany, so they decided to sell the song and use the money to help the people of Kiribati.

The song, “Nakomai Buokira” can be purchased HERE for just $1. The proceeds benefit the Edmund Rice Center which has an extensive program to help the people of Kiribati cope with rising sea levels.

Top Image Credit: Flickr – mrlins

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