TWO and a half years ago I sat barricaded inside my home in Fiji, listening to a ferocious wind travelling at an average speed of 230 kilometres an hour. Over the howl of the wind I could hear trees crashing down outside. I didn’t know how long the storm was going to last. I didn’t know where the next tree would fall.
When the wind finally eased, I ventured outside to see if my neighbours were OK, to see if their houses were still standing. I’ll never forget that feeling.
Cyclone Winston was the biggest cyclone ever to make landfall in the Southern Hemisphere. The devastating storm left 44 people dead, and 350,000 people, almost 40% of Fiji’s population, were affected. Total damage and losses from Winston are estimated at $1.42 billion – equivalent to nearly a third of Fiji’s GDP.
Anyone who’s been watching the news recently knows that Cyclone Winston wasn’t a one off. Already this year we’ve witnessed killer storms raging around the world from the Philippines to the USA, wreaking death and destruction.
This Monday marks a seminal moment in efforts to tackle climate change. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change will produce its first major report in four years which will outline what’s going to happen if the world allows average temperatures to increase by more than 1.5 degrees centigrade.
Here in the Pacific Islands, we don’t need climate scientists to tell us what the impacts of climate change will be. We’re already experiencing them. We’re no longer talking about the future; people are already fighting for their lives against disasters intensified by climate change.
Most of us who are being battered by climate change are based in some of the world’s poorest countries. At Oxfam, we understand well the ruthless inequality of climate change: poor communities are five times more likely to be displaced by extreme weather than rich ones.
For us, rising seas, combined with more intense storms, are increasing coastal erosion and inundation. By one estimate, in the long term, sea-level rise resulting from 2 degrees of warming could submerge land across the world that is currently home to 280 million people. The world’s atoll nations face a truly existential threat from sea-level rise; for us, our lives and our very way of life, is in the balance.
Take the situation my fellow Pacific Islanders in Kiribati face as an example. Kiribati is a large ocean state comprised of 32 atolls and one raised coral island, spread across more than a million square miles of the central Pacific Ocean, and with a population of approximately 110,000.
Almost the entire land area of Kiribati, including the whole of the main population centre of South Tarawa, lies less than three metres above sea level. Kiribati is considered one of the most vulnerable countries on earth to the impacts of climate change.
The nation’s people, the I-Kiribati, fear not only the loss of their livelihoods and security but also the impact of displacement on their culture, identity, sovereignty and deep connection to their land and sea.
Tinaai Teaua, a member of Kiribati Climate Action Network, told Oxfam: “Land is very important. We can’t leave. We don’t want to leave. This is our home and this is our land. We should stay here. But the problem is getting closer and closer. My message to the world [is] to look at us. What our culture is like. How we are so proud of being I-Kiribati. The main message is to limit warming to 1.5 degrees. That was already agreed, but now they have to live up to their words.”
The case of Kiribati highlights the need for stronger international action to minimise the impacts of climate change and to provide greater support to vulnerable communities. The loss of homes, livelihoods and ancestral lands through displacement epitomises the human cost and the grave injustice of climate change.
Tomorrow’s IPCC report is expected to echo the existing consensus that if global warming is to be limited to 1.5 degrees then concerted, bold, global action is required. Some of the world’s poorest and low emitting countries are now leading the climate fight – including Fiji and the Marshall Islands, who recently committed to reduce their emissions to net zero by 2050. It’s time for all rich countries to follow suit and show how they’ll clean up their emissions and reduce their net greenhouse gas emission to net zero within a generation. No excuses.
Scotland may be nearly 10,000 miles away from Fiji, but decisions taken in capitals like Edinburgh will be felt by all of us around the world.
As MSPs consider the Scottish Government’s proposed new climate change law, they must ask themselves whether or not it’s ambitious enough to address the grave challenge we’re facing.
We all have a stake in Scotland’s climate change law: and those of us on the front line know that anything short of a legally binding target to reduce Scotland’s greenhouse gas emissions to net zero by 2050 will be wholly insufficient.
It’s the laws and targets set by rich countries which will determine the future of the world’s poorest people. Countries like Scotland have a moral obligation to lead the way.
How many more “once-in-a-lifetime” storms will it take before our leaders face up to what’s going on and act? For too long, too many countries have talked a good game when it comes to climate change, but failed to deliver concrete action.
The Scottish Government has a chance to change that. It’s an opportunity which it must take.
As many of us know all too well: climate change is eating away shores and flooding homes. It’s simply unconscionable to leave poor communities alone to deal with disasters they did not create.
The way that Scotland, and the rest of the international community, responds to climate change is a litmus test for our humanity. It’s a test we can’t afford to fail.
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