While rich nations tinker with policies that may shave their carbon dioxide
emissions, low-lying South Pacific nations like Kiribati are sinking beneath the
waves.
Kiribati, an archipelago of 33 coral atolls barely 6ft above sea level, is
vanishing as global warming causes the oceans to rise.
Yesterday its president, Anote Tong, warned Australia and New Zealand - the two
developed countries in the region - to prepare for a mass exodus within the next
decade.
Speaking at the annual South Pacific Forum in Fiji, Mr Tong said that rising sea
levels would create countless environmental refugees.
"If we are talking about our island states submerging in ten years' time, we
simply have to find somewhere else to go," he said.
Environmentalists have warned that the effects of global warming, caused by a
build-up of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, will include thermal expansion
and a meltdown of glaciers.
That could lead to seas rising by up to 23ft, and would be devastating for
countries such as Bangladesh, India, Vietnam and China.
However, the tiny nations of the Pacific, where some of the world's lowest-lying
islands are situated, would be the first to be swamped.
Those considered particularly vulnerable, as well as Kiribati, are Vanuatu, the
Marshall Islands, Tuvalu, and parts of Papua New Guinea.
In Vanuatu, an entire coastal village on the island of Tegua is being forced to
move to higher ground, its huts flooded by surging seas.
In Kiribati, too, a former British colony known as the Gilbert Islands, people
are having to take drastic action.
The archipelago, strung across two million square miles of the Pacific, is home
to 92,500 people.
Most of them live on the densely populated main atoll, Tarawa, a
horseshoe-shaped chain of islets surrounding a central lagoon.
The beaches on Tarawa, which is pancake flat and barely 500 yards wide, are so
eroded that sand has been imported from Australia.
Dozens of families have been forced to move, dismantling their wooden huts piece
by piece and reassembling them further back from the water.
Now the population is being squeezed into an ever narrower strip of land between
the lagoon and the Pacific.
Environmentalists have predicted that the effects of rising sea levels will be
borne disproportionately by the world's most impoverished countries, which make
a negligible contribution to global warming and are least well equipped to
adapt.
A report this month by the CSIRO, Australia's government scientific organisation,
forecast that global warming in the Asia-Pacific region could see seas rise by
up to 19 inches by 2070.
It warned of a flood of environmental refugees, pointing to increased levels of
migration already from some affected South Pacific countries.
About 17,000 islanders applied for residence in New Zealand in the past two
years, it said, compared with 4,000 in 2003.
In one nation, Micronesia, according to the report, the sea level has risen
21.4mm every year since 2001.
In the event of mass emigration, however, islanders may not find it easy to find
a new home.
While New Zealand has been generous so far, and already has a sizeable Pacific
population, accepting large numbers of refugees could risk a political backlash.
In Australia, the government has refused to commit itself to taking refugees.
Responding to the CSIRO report, the Environment Minister, Ian Campbell, said the
focus should on helping islanders to stay in their home countries.
He added that Australia "has always stood by our Pacific neighbours in times of
need and that will never change".