Global Warming
High Tide in Tuvalu
In the tropical Pacific, climate change
threatens to create a real-life Atlantis.
by Tom Price
Sierra Club Magazine
July/August 2003 Edition
To explain global warming in stark detail, all
Tito Tapungao has to do is show a visitor around the grounds of his
school. Dressed in his sailor’s pressed whites, the chief executive
officer of the Tuvalu Maritime Training Institute points out a small
brick cabin built by missionaries in 1903. Now, a century later, annual
high tides rise halfway up the bedposts. Last year, those same tides
washed away a massive stone-and-steel breakwater just months after
Tapungao’s students built it.
Soon the entire nation of Tuvalu, a chain of nine coral islands totaling
just ten square miles, may suffer a similar fate. If the best guesses of
scientists hold true, this diminutive country 400 miles north of Fiji
will become a casualty of climate change. Last year was the
second-warmest on record, according to the United Nations’ World
Meteorological Organization. And an exhaustive report issued by the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change anticipates that temperatures
will climb 2.5 to 10.4 degrees Fahrenheit by century’s end, raising sea
levels as much as 2.8 feet as warmer water expands and glacial ice
continues to melt.
That may not sound like a lot, but with Tuvalu’s average elevation only
a half dozen feet above sea level, and its capital atoll of Funafuti
already a sliver of land–400 yards at its widest and tapering in places
to scarcely 10 yards–it won’t take much to wreak havoc. (Other low-lying
nations in the same neighborhood, including Kiribati, Niue, and the
Marshall Islands, are in similar straits.) Of greater immediate concern,
the changing climate is also bringing higher tides and fiercer, more
frequent storms that are already eroding burial grounds and washing out
crops. Within the lifetime of some of today’s residents, these surges
will likely turn Tuvalu into an uninhabitable collection of rocks.
Environmental disasters have already forced some 25 million people from
their homes worldwide, but this would be the first time an entire nation
was left homeless. "I feel sad and angry at the same time," says Paani
Laupepa, Tuvalu’s assistant secretary for the environment. "Sad that
eventually we will have to move, and angry because this is not of our
own doing, but because of the doings of others who don’t care, who are
looking after their own needs and not at the bigger picture."
To emphasize his point, Laupepa recounts a recent planning meeting for
adopting the Kyoto climate-change protocol. "The head of the Saudi
delegation stood up and said, ‘If we ratify Kyoto, and industrial
countries cut back their emissions, it means they will buy less oil,
which translates into $400 billion lost for us.’ It’s crazy–they’re
thinking about their status as leaders, we are thinking about our very
existence!"
That existence, threats or no, still can seem idyllic. Tuvalu is mostly
shorefront, rich with coconut trees and empty white-sand beaches. With
half the national population of 11,000, Funafuti is relatively dense–and
improbably awash in SUVs on its recently paved and electrically lit
streets–but nights here are still slow and quiet. The silence is
occasionally broken by lilting, rolling voices practicing for fatele,
the catchall name for dancing and singing competitions that break out at
the least excuse. Each evening, dozens of families meet to swim, bathe,
and gossip in the bathtub-warm water along the lagoon’s arc. On the
hottest nights, people leave their crowded houses and spread out thick
woven mats to sleep on the broad airport runway. It’s the largest open
space on the island, and dawn can find over a hundred souls resting
under the sky.
The tarmac doesn’t see much other use. Not counting journalists and aid
workers, Tuvalu gets just a few dozen visitors per year, and has only
one true tourist destination: the Funafuti Conservation Area.
Established in 1995, it set six islets off-limits to any fishing, in
hopes of preserving stocks. Divers, however, are welcome, and those who
venture this far will likely be rewarded with a glimpse of angel and
butterfly fishes darting around the coral, the menacing profile of a
blacktip shark, or a rare green turtle retreating into the shadows. But
Conservation Officer Semese Alefaio–host, skipper, diver, and chief of
anything else that needs doing here–sees trouble in paradise.
Since 1998, Alefaio has noticed coral bleaching, often a sign of warming
waters. Local fishermen report spotting species like the milkfish, which
is rarely found near such small islands. Other signs of the changing
climate are less subtle. Alefaio points out the ragged scar of what used
to be the sixth islet in the conservation area: Tepuka Savilivili. "Keli,"
one of several cyclones that are slamming into these islands with
increased frequency, blew all of the islet’s vegetation out to sea in
1997. Stripped of its coconut and pandanus trees, soil, and sand, today
it’s merely a navigational hazard.
The rest of Tuvalu won’t disappear all at once, and so its people live
with global warming much the same way Californians deal with
earthquakes: They plan, they make accommodations, and then they go on
with their lives. After months of uncommon drought, the rains have
brought a burst of frangipani blooms that flood the air with sweetness
and now decorate the hair of fatele choirs. Meanwhile an all-nation
soccer tournament is under way. Open grass is so scarce the field drapes
over the road and runway a bit, and loose balls sometimes end up in the
ocean, but the friendly competition is still vigorous, albeit with an
island twist: Players never steal the ball so aggressively that their
opponent goes down. Falling on the coral under the scrubby grass would
hurt, and anyway it’s a small place to live with someone you’ve crossed.
It’s also a hard place to convey a message of impending doom, as the
Reverend Kitiona Tausi knows well. "I don’t think there is a better
place," he says simply. "This is paradise. It’s very peaceful, you have
food, as much as you like, and during the night you sleep with open
doors and no fear. We don’t have the problems they have in other
countries." At the time we spoke, just two people occupied the nation’s
jails; most infractions involve motor scooters, and the few police keep
their guns locked up and unloaded. A recent U.S. State Department report
ranked Tuvalu highly in respect for human rights, access to education,
and civil liberties.
Nonetheless, Tausi is concerned about the dangers facing Tuvalu that are
not so easily seen. And as general secretary of the Tuvaluan Christian
Church, to which 97 percent of residents claim adherence, he is taking a
stand on global warming. (So are U.S. clergy: The Evangelical
Environmental Network preaches that "pollution that causes the threat of
global warming violates the Great Commandments, the Golden Rule, and the
biblical call to care for ‘the least of these.’") Tausi leads workshops
in concert with Laupepa’s office to help locals understand how climate
change might affect them. "We are stewards of God’s creation, but we
have not been faithful to him," Tausi says. "The industrialized nations,
they have been too greedy, consuming what should be left for our future
generations and forgetful of those who fall victim to their activities.
We have disobeyed God, we have not cared for the earth."
In response to such messages, Tuvaluans vacillate between calm and
concern. "I read in my little Bible, there’s a promise God made that
there will be no more flood," says Hosea Kaitu, a former sailor and, at
79, one of the country’s oldest residents. "I believe in my Bible, but I
see the tide getting higher and higher each year, so I also believe what
the scientists predict–we must get prepared, get some higher ground to
live on."
That ground will have to be somewhere else. While optimistically talking
about long-term plans to convert the entire nation to renewable energy,
get rid of those polluting SUVs, and become an ecotourism destination,
Laupepa acknowledges they’re looking into the idea of buying another
island. Meanwhile, 75 Tuvaluans are being relocated to New Zealand each
year.
But they won’t be going without a fight. Tuvalu is considering plans to
sue the United States and Australia (the single-largest and largest
per-capita emitters, respectively, of greenhouse gases) in the
International Court of Justice in The Hague for their failure to ratify
the Kyoto Protocol. The proposed argument–that the two nations’
emissions form an unfair restraint of trade, since they are in effect
putting the country of Tuvalu out of business–would set a new precedent
in international law. For good measure, Tuvalu would follow up by suing
large American polluters like ExxonMobil in U.S. courts.
"This sort of action is an emerging field, but it’s a good time to be
trying creative solutions for a problem like climate change," says David
Hunter, senior attorney at the Center for International Environmental
Law in Washington, D.C. Still, he acknowledges, since the United States
has questioned the jurisdiction of the International Court of Justice
over domestic matters, it would not necessarily consider an eventual
ruling binding. That hasn’t stopped other countries from suing the
United States over its death-penalty laws and other disputes. "It’s
going to take a country that has a lot at stake to press the issue,"
Hunter says. "And Tuvalu doesn’t have a lot of other ways of getting
itself noticed."
The legal action would not be easy–or cheap–for a country with an annual
gross domestic product of only $12.2 million. (In 2000, Tuvalu leased
its Internet domain name ".tv" for a promised $50 million in royalties,
but the dot-com money has been slow to materialize.) And residents are
not united behind the idea, perhaps in part because the aggressive
strategy also runs counter to the Tuvaluan way of getting along with
your neighbor.
Traditionally, disputes are settled through long discussions in the
Kaupule, or community council, which functions along with modern courts.
To vote for a representative to the (all-male) meeting requires reaching
"family" status, explains current island pule, or council president,
Siasi Finiki. Some 50 extended families have the requisite pair of
pulaka, or taro, pits, and 200 coconut trees to qualify. Carefully
tended over many years and harvested after a decade, the bulbous pulaka
roots are an important status symbol. Yet even this age-old social
arbiter is feeling the effects of the rising ocean. "There is a change
now in the sea," says Finiki, who worries for his children and
grandchildren. Gesturing to his beloved pulaka pits, he notes, "It is
not growing too well now, some salt water is getting inside."
Noticing subtle changes like these requires a long perspective,
something sorely lacking when Australia declared, after nine years of
monitoring, that no increase in sea level could be found on Tuvalu. Such
a claim contradicted longer-term records from the region that indicate
an average rise of 1 to 1.7 centimeters per decade over the 20th
century. Regardless, it’s the extreme "king" tides of February and March
that will likely do the most damage, pushing life here beyond the
tipping point. Always the highest of the year, some six years ago the
king tides went to a new level, bubbling up through the ground to
inundate broad swaths of land. Last August they appeared again, flooding
the islands without warning.
However it’s measured, change is coming to these islands–to their
climate, and their culture. Like most Tuvaluans, Finiki now plants his
pulaka in waterproof tin cans. "I fear for the young people," Finiki
says. "The West is too strong." Still, it’s tools from the
West–education, media attention, and litigation–that may offer his
people their only chance of survival, on Tuvalu or elsewhere.
Brightening, Finiki talks about the new house he’s building down the
road for his extended family. Like all new construction in Tuvalu these
days, it’s going up on stilts.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tom Price, a freelance environmental journalist, lives in Salt Lake
City, Utah.
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