Maldives: Nature’s bounty that is vanishing
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Maaveyo , Fonadhoo: Feb 6 2008
Made Popular Feb 6 2008

maleThe Maldives, a country of more than 1,200 small and beautiful islands, has been a British Protectorate, then an independent sultanate, and now a republic nation since 1968. It is like bounty of nature for tourists who come from different parts of the world, but if you see my country through my eyes, you will find it a nation meeting with slow death.

The Maldives is helpless against rising sea level, but not at danger with storms. Storms go up more than 30cm and it is safe to live on the land about 40m above high tide. Most of the people in Maldives live on land within two meters of sea level and the entire country is within just four meters of sea level.

The beautiful nation blessed with nature’s paradise and pale, white sands and mountains are likely to be gone under sea because of environmental catastrophe. The rising level of sea is because of global warming. Different travel companies portray the islands as a tropical paradise, but you could feel the impact and signs of climate change in the coastal regions all across the islands. The government has also expressed concerns over the rising of sea level up to 0.9cm every year.

We know it better that more than 80 percent of 1,200 islands in Maldives have no lands more than one meter above the sea level. This is not a fear but the fact that within 100 years from now the Maldives could become uninhabitable for human being. More than 360,000 citizens living in 1200 islands would be forced to leave the country that would go under sea level. Our survival in Maldives has gone truly at stake. We minnows are facing a mammoth risk of life and death.

Maldives are the first country to sign the Kyoto Protocol to set targets for reducing emissions of greenhouse gases in developed countries. Let me tell you about Male, capital of Maldives, which is surrounded by a 3m-high wall to save it from high tide and rising sea level. It took 14 years to build the wall at a cost of $63m. Japan government paid 99 percent of the total cost to build the wall. But, is this the solution to save a beautiful country from tidal surge. The wall might protect just one of the 200 inhabited islands in Maldives and what about the protection of other islands. Making wall to protect the island from tide surge is ok, but what about the rising sea level? How would the government protect the country from the longer-term threat?

Kandholhudhoo is a highly populated island located in the northern part of island. More than 60 percent of residents have decided to leave the place in the next 15 years and the rest of 40 percent of the people would do the same for sure to save them from sea death. They face the same fate every fortnight when tidal surges flood their homes every fortnight. The fishermen are not using the ‘Nakiy’ (a centuries-old weather guide based on stellar constellations) because it has been irrelevant due to climate change.

Country’s weather forecast has become very tough job for weather officials because weather is becoming volatile and less predictable day by day. We cannot take guidance from the alignment of the stars now. The government is trying to take precautionary measures to save the nation from the worst consequences of climate change but future generations will have to face an undecided fate for sure. In recent past, the government encouraged forestation to stop beach erosion and protect country’s coral reefs, but all these steps are tiny against the broader impact of global warming in the whole region.

We are learning in our school and colleges about the importance of environmental catastrophe. The government has tightened norms to allow the building of all new resorts after taking permission from government. The government allows building resorts on only 20% of the islands. But is it a real prevention of the problem in Maldives?

Is this only the problem of Maldives when the ultimate fate of the country lies in the hands of people in power in India, China, Russia and the United States? I request you that if you have never been in Maldives come and see the beautiful country before it’s death.

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1 Stars
Swati
Amritsar, India
Minnows like Maldives would face the impact of global warming before developed countries.
1 Stars
Mohamed
Male, Maldives
Integrated Coastal Zone Management conducted a study and research in Maldives on such threat and said no such threat of flood would come in next 100 years.There is no sign of any on-going sea level rise anywhere in Maldives.
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Devika
Port Louis, Mauritius
Leave the debate here and visit the country first. It is fantastic place to spend holidays, most of its land are covered with rich tropical greenery. The country is divided in two parts - inhabited islands used for residence and the uninhabited islands for tourism. The tourists spend their time on isolated past of the island without any disturbance from locals.
1 Stars
Craig
Pretoria, South Africa
It is baseless fears, some 2500 years ago the sea level of Indian ocean was 0.1-0.2 m low than today's sea level.
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Evi
Jakarta, Indonesia
The Maldives are a small country with a fragile environment. The bad effects of global warming on the Maldives could create a dangerous condition and environmental hazards within the country. It would threaten the tourism sector, the backbone of country's economy.
1 Stars
Zeenath
Male, Maldives
The high tides of 1987 and Tsunami of 2004 were the little indication of the effect of climate change in the country. Much of the country's economic activities depends upon tourism near beautiful beaches and scenery. The rising sea level would affect country's progress and the whole country later on.
1 Stars
Zeenath
Male, Maldives
Different islands of the Maldives are very much sensitive to rising sea-levels. We all know that nation's highest point is only 2m above sea level. The Climate change is behind the increased rate of ice melting on glaciers and polar ice caps causing the rise in sea levels. Forget the scientists and research scholars, of course we are living on islands likely to meet slow death.
1 Stars
Mohamed
Male, Maldives
The rising sea level is threatening every human, plant, and animal existing in the country. We humans could relocate ourselves at last but how could we prevent great bio-diversity and species loss.
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Giridesh
Port Louis, Mauritius
Emission of greenhouses gases from different other countries lead to the increase of global temperature. The rising temperature is causing increase in sea level. The rising sea level directly threatens the existence of several other island country such as the Maldives and diverse plants and existing animals living on such islands.
1 Stars
Chandni
Allahabad, India
Climate Change, Global Warming, uneven temperature, and rising sea levels have caused life-threatening danger to Maldives, we all are in the queue and would face the similar fate one by one.
1 Stars
Sujeeshwa
Colombo, Sri Lanka
Maldives is all set to be turned into a chain of sinking islands. Its residents will become refugees in the neighboring countries like India, Sri Lanka, and other countries.
1 Stars
Golf
Bangkok, Thailand
Developed countries, responsible for global warming, should grant a peace of land withing their sovereign nations to adjust people of Maldives...
1 Stars
Indika
Colombo, Sri Lanka
Yes you are right, the people of Maldives should seek compensation from polluting 'developed' countries for the loss of their own country. They can go to International Court of Justice against countries emitting greenhouse gases since long. They are the real killers.
1 Stars
Avadhut
Calicut, India
It seems, by the time the world would take the threat seriously, the Maldives would go under sea.
1 Stars
Carey
Washington, United States
The clock is ticking, Maumoon Abdul Gayoom has told the world several times for 20 years that his country is ready to become the first victim of climate change. A UN climate panel has given a clear indication that the sea level is likely to rise by up to 2 ft by 2100 because of global warming. God save people of Maldives.
1 Stars
Derick
Pretoria, South Africa
More than 900 islands are no higher than 4 ft above than sea-level. Maldives would become completely uninhabitable in coming 90 years. Is there any solution?? Go fast if any..
1 Stars
Alex
Beverly Hills, United States
This is not a piece of threat for small island countries like Maldives. Bigger countries are equally worried about rising sea levels. More than half of the world's population lives on coastal regions. Eleven of the world's 15 largest cities are on the coast or estuaries. They all are living with the similar threat. In past one century, the sea level has gone up between 10 and 20 cm. Its not only Maldives but three fourth of the world population is under the similar threat.
1 Stars
Mohamed
Male, Maldives
here are some consequences people would face before finally meeting death because of rising sea level - regular flood on coastal region, frequent storm damages, eroding shorelines, salt water contamination of fresh water, flooding of wetlands and barrier islands, the increase in the salinity of estuaries. It would kill habitants before the land goes under sea bed.
1 Stars
Alex
Mexico City, Mexico
The United states is doing enough to protect its own coastal region to save it from rising sea level if any. The government has about 20,000 km of coastline and 32,000 km of coastal wetlands. The US will have to spend $156 billion to save it from the threat of rising sea level up to one meter. How many countries in the world have such balance to spend on such threats?
1 Stars
Yash
Gwalior, India
Why only Maldives, If the current climate change threat continues, big cities like London, Bangkok and New York will meet with the same result by ending up below sea level. It would displace millions of people and causing huge financial damages to these countries too.
1 Stars
Jiri
Nicosia, Cyprus
Building higher sea walls to protect the cities is a complete impractical idea and a waste of funds. This is nature's answer to humans who always did wrong behavior with nature for their own development.
1 Stars
Sweta
Gwalior, India
This is the high time for us to Switch to renewable energy sources and reducing greenhouse gas emissiion. This is the single way to save the planet from such disaster.
1 Stars
Phiriyaphong
Bangkok, Thailand
Salt water contamination is the biggest threat of rising sea level. It will contaminate surface water and ground fresh water supplies also. The resources of fresh water are already under threat and the rising sea level would worsen the situation. Countries like Thailand, Israel, China, Vietnam and some other island countries are already facing the shortage of fresh water and the salt water contamination.
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Dolly
Kathmandu, Nepal
Global warming is threat to the world and likes of Maldives will be first to be submerged. This is more due to reluctance to block the use of the green house gases. There are no hard and fast rules to curb the pollution only the pledges. Kyoto Protocol, Gaa8 summit last year wherein the countries just looked concerned but did nothing substantial to put this menace off shows how much the world is concerned. But this is the need of the time to do something substantial or we will have no time to cry over the spilt milk.
1 Stars
Iain
Liverpool, United Kingdom
Here are top 100 effects of global warming.
1 Stars
Ayushi
Calicut, India
the blame game is more denting the world with pollution and the desire to exploit the time limit as long as possible is the another aspect that governs the sheer reluctance of the world powers to curb the threat of environment decay. US wants India and china to curb the emission of Green house gasses while the developing nations calls it for the developed nations to give more concession to them…and this goes on and on. The result is no action in the end and the rising sea level. But they forgot that the aftermath will be equal for all and these pollutants know no boundaries when the havoc comes with this. Something that we witnessed in 2007 when it rained heavily in US, UK, china, India…and the latest havoc is in china where snowstorm have damaged the life as a whole. You want more… just wait you will have it…
1 Stars
Richard
London, United Kingdom
Why is so difficult to move on from the carbon economy? With the technological resources at humanity’s disposal, it seems it should be an easy thing to change to more eco-friendly sources of energy like solar, hydrogen, wind and so on, then why fixing on the conventional ones. The progress made in developing alternative sources of energy has added many new technologies to reap the fruits of. The threat of a global climatic meltdown will make us act – sooner the better as there is no other habitable planet nearby, you know!
1 Stars
Hasibul
Dhaka, Bangladesh
Global warming will have major impact on the planet much faster than we would have thought. Be ready to face it.
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Vivian
Perth, Australia
too grave the issue with destructive aftermaths and the world powers are doing nothing else than adding false arguments for doing nothing. They pretend to be cautious, too concerned, and too busy but doing nothing…and nothing comes out of nothing and this will reduce world in nothing…at the end there will be nothing if nothing will be done now….
1 Stars
Krista
Miami, United States
hey!!! You people from the third world countries, why blame everything on US, You ppl reduce you population first and rest will follow…
1 Stars
Luke
Sydney, Australia
Several reports and studies have openly stated that global warming is directly impacting on species living on earth. The rising sea levels, the melting of icecaps, and uneven climatic changes are just the indication that the greatest environmental challenge of the 21st century is just knocking the door.
1 Stars
Zeenath
Male, Maldives
Stop fighting and think about Maldives.
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Sanyog
Chennai, India
this is for those who blame developing nations for the pollution: do they know that the only source of energy that doesn’t omit carbon waste is nuclear power. And nuclear power is the monopoly of those who have already got it. they don’t allow others to use it for the peaceful purposes even. They will put all the blame on the developing nations and will ask them to reduce the pollutants. This is sheer hypocrisy…they have shown it with Iran and India by putting the sanctions and threatening Iran with strike in case it continues to pursue the nuclear advancement. In absence of nuclear technology and sans any help to enrich it, what is the option that we are left with???
1 Stars
Zia
Jakarta, Indonesia
Possibility of damage from rising sea level is very diverse. Buildings and roads near sea coast to the sea could be flooded and suffered damage from hurricanes and tropical storms. The damages caused by major hurricanes to dense populated areas will be more severe in coming days.
1 Stars
Dante
Manila, Philippines
Hey Krista..You just start closing heave industries emitting greenhouse gases in your country, we will take care of our population growth.
1 Stars
Thomas
Wellington, New Zealand
this issue makes me angered and frustrated and particularly by most peoples' complacency and decadence when the question of climate change arises. Ppl don’t want to change their lifestyle even still they are very concerned about the issue. They want things right and that too with no or least bothering on their part. The industrialized world simply must make changes today and governments must force this to happen: better to have a 'Nanny State' than no state at all...
1 Stars
Tiffany
Shanghai, China
You Americans stop burning coal to produce largest portion of electricity in your country. Everyone knows You Americans are infamous for wasting more energy than people of any other nation. rather abusing others implement tips in your country to lessen global warming.