Climate change may displace millions in Mekong Delta
Monday, 13 July 2009
Climate change impacts
will force the displacement and migration of large populations in Vietnam,
particularly the Mekong Delta, international
experts reckon.
A report jointly written by
experts from the United Nations, CARE International, and the Earth Institute of
Columbia University estimates more than 14 million residents in the Cuu Long
River Delta could lose their rice fields if sea levels were to rise by two
meters.
In Vietnam, the Cuu Long, as the MekongRiver
is known, flows through the southwestern region before it joins the sea.
The impact of flooding is a
major contributing factor to migration and displacement in the delta, according
to the report.
Actually locals in the
Mekong Delta have few choices to sustain their rural livelihoods in the face of
flooding. And together with mounting debt following disasters and higher
consumer prices, they have to make the decision to migrate.
The report predicts that in
the future, one out of every 10 residents of the Mekong Delta may face
displacement because of rising sea levels.
Many of the delta residents
have already undertaken seasonal migration to urban centers during the flooding
season, it says.
The delta, which is home to
22 percent of the country’s population, produces half the nation’s rice output,
60 percent of seafood, 80 percent of fruit crops and accounts for 90 percent of
total national rice exports, the report notes.
Titled “In Search of
Shelter: Mapping the Effects of Climate Change on Human Migration and
Displacement” the report says Mekong Delta residents are used to living with
flood cycles, but “within certain bounds.”
To a significant extent, the
livelihoods of most delta residents depend on the flooding season that renders
the Mekong Delta fertile by depositing rich silt before it flows into the
sea.
Mekong Delta residents
differentiate between “nice floods” – those between half a meter and three
meters deep and considered normal; and those that are between three and four
meters deep that are called “ugly.”
The latter type of
floods that “challenge the resilience capacities of affected people and often
have harrowing effects on livelihoods” have increased in magnitude and
frequency in recent decades, the report says.
Imperative measures
The report expresses concern
that efforts to reduce carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions have been “too little,
too late,” causing global emissions to rise at much steeper rates while safe
levels of atmospheric greenhouse gases may be far lower than previously thought.
It notes that an
international agreement to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to safe levels by
the end of this year is a must.
A failure to this will
“commit future generations to a much more dangerous world in which climate
change-related migration and displacement, on a truly massive scale, is
unavoidable.”
They call for substantial
investment in increasing people’s resilience to climate change, especially
among the poorest people. This would include “in situ adaptation measures” like
“water-wise irrigation systems” and “low/no-till agricultural practices.”
Adaptation funding should
reach the people that need it the most, the report says.
Policy makers will have to
“recognize and facilitate the role that migration will inevitably play in
individual, household and national adaptation strategies,” it says.
It notes that the Vietnamese
government’s “living with floods” program that is currently resettling people
living in vulnerable zones along the river banks in the An Giang Province is
commendable in its intent, but could have several adverse impacts.
The program targets the
relocation of 20,000 landless and poor households to safer areas by 2020.
The families will be allowed
to take up a five year interest free loan to purchase a housing plot and basic
house frame.
However the report says such
kind of relocation may lead to “cultural degradation and the residents to lose
their livelihoods as well as employment networks.
The report anticipates that
the scope and scale of people moving by mid-century due to impacts of climate
change “could vastly exceed anything that has occurred before.”
It finds that climate change
induced disasters “continue to be a major driver of shorter-term displacement
and migration” after economic and political factors.
Domino effect
Glaciers are retreating and
shrinking at alarming rates, and thus provide a one-time “dividend” of water
release to downstream regions, affecting rural agriculture and urban areas
located in river deltas.
Once the glaciers disappear
and no longer release water during the summer months, it is likely that
hundreds more of water retention dams will be constructed on major rivers
worldwide including the Mekong, Ganges, Yangtze, and Yellow Rivers.
These will have significant
impacts on downstream regimes and deltas, resulting in the displacement of
thousands to millions of people.
The MekongRiver
including its tributaries alone is carrying 80 hydropower dams that retain
silt, causing erosion, and weaken the river flow to the downstream areas.
They will cause broader
impacts on food security in this highly populous region.
Yet governments along the
river are trying to exploit its hydropower generating capacity over the coming
decades. The river flows through China,
Myanmar, Thailand, Laos,
and Cambodia before ending
its journey in Vietnam.
A series of 11 dams being
built by Thailand, Laos and Cambodia
on the MekongRiver
are weakening the river flow through Vietnam and worsening salinization
in the country’s main food growing region.
Then, due to the lack of
freshwater, people are exploiting as much groundwater as they can, depleting
the source and setting the stage for a large scale collapse.
Changes of tides as well as
of flow will make the river no longer ideal for fish, which has so far been a
rich source of income for many of the delta locals, the report says.
It notes that the recently
completed Three Gorges Dam on the Yangtze, the world’s largest hydroelectric
installation, has already displaced one to two million people.