Climate Change Indicated in Forced Migration of 1.7 Million from Mekong Delta
8
June, 2018
Global
sea level rise caused by fossil fuel burning is an issue that is
creating worsening impacts to cities, nations, and civilization
itself. And according to recent reports out of Vietnam, 1.7
million people have migrated from the low-lying Mekong Delta region
over the past decade.
Primary causes included climate change and poverty.
(Sea
level rise now threatens all low-lying regions with increased
flooding, loss of crops, and, in some cases, forced migration. Recent
reports indicate that hundreds of thousands have already left the
Mekong delta as a result.)
Rising
oceans have forced
Vietnam to erect a system of dykes of up to 4 meters in height in
an increasingly complex system of coastal defense barriers. These
barriers have saved lands from inundation as the ocean off the
low-lying Mekong Delta continues to rise year-after-year. However,
the dykes have not prevented salt water from moving further and
further up the Mekong River. And during recent years, this salt water
has inundated soils used for rice production.
Such
salt water inundation has wiped out crops for many farmers. For
example, in the Soc Trang region, the
farmers of Thang Dong saw their crops completely wiped out during
2013 as
salt water seeped into the soil and killed off food-producing plants.
In low-lying near coastal regions, the story has been much the same
for Mekong farmers. And with less reliable crops come increasing
poverty.
(Salt
water increases in soils as seas rise. The Mekong Delta is just one
of many low-lying regions under threat by human caused climate change
and its related sea level rise. Image source: Vietnam
Times.)
When
crop production is no longer tenable due to climate change impacts,
many farming families have been forced to move on. A majority cite
poverty as the root cause. But 14.5 percent are more aware — noting
that climate change was what ultimately forced them to leave.
The
Delta regions of the world are among the most agriculturally
productive on Earth. But, as with Mekong, all such regions face ocean
flooding and salt water invasion. As a result, a key aspect of global
food production is under threat. A factor that
has recently weighed in high average global food prices and an
increase in the number of under-nourished people by 38 million last
year.
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