Apr 03 2010
Global Warming And Sinking of Maldives
The fact that Maldives will meet its watery grave in about a century is not surprising, considering that the highest point on this island nation is just 2.4 meters or 7.8 feet above sea level. More importantly, its average height is just 1.5 meters above sea level, which means that a rise of just 1.5 meters in the ocean level will submerge 80 percent of the island. But how will the water rise to such an extent? If this question was asked a few decades ago, it would not have held the importance it does today. Even elementary school kids have a rough idea of the various effects of global warming. The alarming rise in the amount of greenhouse gases is just making the earth warmer. The basics of geography suggest that as water is heated, it expands, and therefore, as the ocean bodies are getting warmer, they are expanding and encroaching the coastal areas. This warming is not just expanding the water bodies, but it’s also melting the ice reserves. The melted ice is eventually drained in the oceans which again leads to a rise in the water level. When we talk about melting ice, we mean the polar ice caps as well as the glaciers at high altitudes. In fact, the melting glaciers of the Himalayan range have time and again brought flash floods in the Indian subcontinent, which illustrates the intensity of the grievous situation we may have to face in the near future. When the ocean levels rise, the coastal areas and the islands will get submerged first, but the submerging will not just be limited to the coastlines. Eventually, with growing global warming, the encroachment of water will only continue. Read more on the effects of melting ice glaciers.
The government of Maldives has acknowledged the threat and has started working on the mission to save their land from the encroaching sea, but with a gross domestic product (GDP) of $1.713 billion (according to the report by International Monetary Fund, as of 2008), there is nothing much this island nation can do against the herculean water body. At the United Nations Earth Summit in 1992, then the President of Maldives, Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, said, “I stand before you as a representative of endangered people. We are told that as a result of global warming and sea-level rise, my country, the Maldives, may sometime during the next century, disappear from the face of the Earth.” Since then, Maldives has been trying its best to counter the forces of nature. Consolidating the population to the larger and safer islands and raising some areas artificially, are just temporary solutions which won’t hold ground for long.
Global Warming and Sinking Islands
It would be sheer stupidity on our behalf to assume that only Maldives is in danger, there are several other areas around the world which will have to face the brunt of global warming, but Maldives will be the first, or one of the first, pieces of land we will lose. According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), a United Nation’s body which evaluates the risk of climate change caused by human activities, the sea level is projected to rise between 3.5 to 35 inches by the end of this century. If this happens, islands like Tuvalu, Fiji and Nauru in the Pacific Ocean, the Lakshwadeeps, Mauritius and Seychelles in the Indian Ocean and Haiti, Malta and Surinam in the Atlantic Ocean, will be submerged by the sea. Even the low lying plains of Bangladesh, as well as the reclaimed areas like the Mumbai metropolitan in India, East Coast Park in Singapore and San Francisco Bay in the United States will also be affected to a great extent. When it comes to the amount of carbon emissions, Maldives may feature at the bottom of the list, but the threat of submerging is the greatest for this tiny archipelago. Read more on global warming causes and effects.
Kyoto Protocol
Maldives was one of the first countries to sign the Kyoto Protocol, a treaty constituted to reduce the worldwide carbon dioxide emissions in order to curb the menace of global warming. According to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), 183 governments had signed and ratified, i.e. formally declared the agreement to the Kyoto Protocol by February 2009, which excludes the United States of America, which has signed but not yet ratified the treaty. The Maldives, along with the Alliance of Small Island States, a 42-member group of small islands, has been trying to convince the United States, which is responsible for a significant part of the world’s carbon dioxide emissions, to sign the treaty. But these efforts haven’t yielded any positives as of now. The then US Vice President, Al Gore, had taken a noteworthy step by signing the treaty but it was never brought to the senate for ratification. In the United States Of America, ratification refers to a formal declaration of agreement to a treaty after getting approval by the senate. The positive though, was that a few states from the US came up with the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI) as a pact to reduce greenhouse emissions. The biggest problem in the global warming debate is the difference of opinion between the developed and the developing nations. Developed nations demand broad cuts in emission from all the countries, while the rest feel that industrialized countries should take the larger share of the burden.
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