Sinking Islands, Drowned Logic; Climate Change and Community-Based Adaptation Discourses in Solomon Islands
Abstract
:1. Introduction
“As if we were enticed by a dream, the rising sea level is a reality unjustly struck at the very core of my people’s sanity. It denies our dignity to live just as it destroyed our vulnerable homes and left us homeless. Once my people were warriors, now we’re but a displaced uprooted people. Along our beautiful Lau lagoon, human made islands are washed, destroyed to their cores, uninhabited, deserted and ruined by Mother Nature. Unlike the frigate birds in the sky forced by the high tide and return when the tide is low, my people are uprooted and flogged unjustly by the effects of climate change and never to return to where they once lived. (…) In the midst of climate change, a time death is what we see every day in the suffering of people and victims living without hope for the future, who among us is prepared to offer the uprooted and displaced people a place to live?”
“The people of Lau have experienced unusually high tides on several occasions. High tides have washed through the villages, destroying kitchens that are built directly on the ground of the islands; flooding houses; and carrying refuse from the toilets that surround the islands. Some islanders are now attempting to relocate to the mainland but most wish to remain on their islands.”
“Sea level rise is a major external threat that impacts (…) communities throughout the Solomon Islands. It is one of the biggest challenges in both the short- and long-term and is forcing the communities to consider measures as drastic as relocating to the mainland in Malaita.”
2. Background: The Saltwater People of Malaita
2.1. The Lau
2.2. The Langalanga
3. Methodology
4. Results: Content Analysis
“At the heart of the climate change concern is the looming disappearance of our tiny atolls in the region underwater. Communities living on these low-lying atolls have little hope because of the threat being posed by the rising tide (…) The last thing we want to see happen is our islands turning into a watery grave.”[45]
“Every year there is some sort of an event whether it be prolonged dry season which throws all our crops of whack, a cyclone that we could only prepare for for 24 h, increased rainfall and flooding that surprised us in the night, killing our children and robbing us of our homes. This is our normal.”[46]
“Seasonal crops that (the saltwater people) relied on for survival such as yam and pana are adversely affected. (…) Fruit trees are no longer bearing fruit and the coastal swamps that used to host their swamp taro patches are devastated by saltwater intrusion killing their crops in the process. Coastal wells and streams that the island residents depended on for survival are either dried up due to extreme temperatures or suffer as a result of saltwater intrusion.”[47]
“The rise in sea levels and erratic weather patterns make these islanders no longer safe in (their) homes so intimate with the sea. As a result, the residents have no choice but to flee the ever-deteriorating impacts that climate change has brought on their island environments.”[47]
“There are huge sums of money injected into programs supporting implementation of the national climate change strategies by Solomon Islands Climate Change program (at least 10 million Solomon dollar) but no one knows or sees the effect of it…”
“In 2011, then Minister for Environment John Moffat Fugui announced Fanalei and its nearby sister island of Walande would be amongst the first atolls and islands the government was looking at implementing relocation programs over the next two years. The relocation, he said, will be funded under a 30 million dollar European grant. Six years on, the residents of Fanalei said they are yet to see or receive any funding assistance from the national government.”[49]
“The rising sea is now under some of our houses, it’s only a matter of time before these houses collapse. Soon, we will have to relocate. There’s no question about that. But who will fund our relocation? That’s the question we’ve kept asking. Relocation is not cheap, it’s like starting life all over again. So we need the government to assist us build new homes.”
“For years they have built seawalls around the island, with no direct support from the government. Most have also refused to relocate to the mainland, not wanting to leave their ocean life behind. ‘We are the salt-water people and we have a very close bond to the beach and island environment,’ said Erastus David Mafane, an elder living in the island of Kwai. ‘Relocating to the mainland might be a better idea for others, but not us.’”
5. Discussion
5.1. Sea-Level Rise
“The islands are all built up to a height sufficient to keep out high spring-tides, and the only danger of flooding is in December and January, when the very high tides which then occur may be banked up in the lagoons by a strong north-east wind. At such times it is not uncommon for the water to come into the houses, but this is part of the life and nobody minds.”(emphasis added)
5.2. Extreme Weather Events
“The islands of Kwai and Ngongosila are feeling the effects of increasingly severe weather and rising tides. (…) Elders say they were once triple their current size. (…) ‘Kwai Island during our childhood days is a very beautiful place. There are huge trees in the island, where we also did gardening,’ said Janet Logafe Billy, 70, who was born on Kwai and left for the mainland after getting married. Today, the island is transformed, (she) says. The big banyan trees by the shores are gone, which has resulted in soil erosion.”[62]
5.3. Saltwater Intrusion
5.4. Higher Seawater Temperatures
“The sea is very hot sometimes and it is not pleasant. Older people have not seen it like this before. The world is changing, everything is changing. Before you just go down to the shore and might take fish and see a lot of seashells, crabs and the beauty of the sea; everything. Good temperature. There are birds all around the beach, very white beach. Now seabirds’ coastal homes are being destroyed, and dead fish are washing up on shore. We don’t expect it, and it’s new to us. We have never seen those things happening.”
5.5. Changing Rainfall Patterns
“The weather is abnormal, it’s not really following the pattern as we have seen before. (…) I feel scared about it. And even our children too are often scared. Because it’s beyond our reach, what we are going to do about it. It’s out of the way we can control it.”
5.6. Climate Change Adaptation Projects
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Themes | Frequency | Percentage (%) |
---|---|---|
1. Sea-level rise | 34 | 47 |
2. Extreme weather events (tropical cyclones) | 18 | 24 |
3. Saltwater intrusion | 10 | 14 |
4. Higher sea water temperatures | 3 | 4 |
5. Changing rainfall patterns | 8 | 11 |
6. Climate change adaptation measures | 44 | 60 |
Project Title | Implementing Agency | Donor | Timeframe | Aim | Budget (USD) | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Coping with Climate Change in the Pacific Island Region (CCCPIR) | SPC, GIZ, SPREP and USP | BMZ | 2009–2015 | Strengthen the capacities of Pacific Island Countries and regional organizations to cope with the anticipated effects of climate change affecting communities across the region. | 20,000,000 | https://www.spc.int/cccpir |
Pacific Adaptation to Climate Change (PACC) | MAL and SPREP | UNDP, AUSAID, GEF | 2009–2014 | Reduce climate vulnerability by demonstrating best-practice adaptation in three key climate-sensitive areas: coastal zone management, food security and food production, and water resources management | 5555,000 (national allocation) | https://www.adaptation-undp.org/sites/default/files/downloads/pacc_cb_sol.pdf |
Mangrove Ecosystems for Climate Change Adaptation and Livelihoods (MESCAL) | IUCN | BMU | 2010–2013 | Address the key challenges of mangrove management to increase the resilience of the people to climate change and improve livelihoods in five Pacific Island Countries | 3100,000 | https://www.iucn.org/downloads/mescal_midterm.pdf |
Malaita Community Resilience and Livelihoods Project | World Vision | ANCP | 2010–2014 | Enhance community resilience to mitigate the effects of natural disasters on food and livelihood security in 15 communities in Malaita Province | https://www.wvi.org/sites/default/files/HEA%20Fact%20Sheet%20Solomon%20Islands%20-%20Final%20-%20updated%20April%202013.pdf | |
Strongem Waka lo Community fo Kaikai (SWOCK) | MAL and MECDM | UNDP | 2011–2015 | Promote community-based climate change adaptation activities that enhance food security and livelihood resilience in pilot communities on the artificial islands of Malaita | 5533,500 | https://www.adaptation-undp.org/projects/af-solomon-islands |
Solomon Islands Climate Assistance Program (SICAP) | MECDM | EU | 2011–2014 | Reduce vulnerability of communities living on low-lying atolls, artificially built islands, and other low-lying coastal areas in Solomon Islands | 3170,000 | https://www.gcca.eu/programmes/solomon-islands-climate-assistance-programme |
Climate Change and Food Security | SPC | USAID | 2012–2014 | Evaluate and implement innovative techniques and management approaches to increasing the climate change resilience of terrestrial food production systems for communities in Fiji, Kiribati, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Tonga, and Vanuatu | 4000,000 | http://ccprojects.gsd.spc.int/documents/root_docs/SPC%20USAID%20Project%20Overview.pdf |
Coastal Community Adaptation Project (C-CAP) | DAI | USAID | 2012–2017 | Improve small-scale community infrastructure and building local capacity for disaster prevention and preparedness in the Pacific | 18,370,000 | https://pdf.usaid.gov/pdf_docs/PA00MSXM.pdf |
Community Resilience to Climate and Disaster Risk Project (CRISP) | MECDM | World Bank/GEF | 2014–2020 | Increase the capacity of selected rural communities to manage natural hazards and climate change risks | 9130,000 | https://projects.worldbank.org/en/projects-operations/project-detail/P112613 |
Solomon Islands Water Sector Adaptation Project (SIWSAP) | MECDM and MMERE | UNDP | 2014–2019 | Improving the resilience of water resources to the impacts of climate change in order to improve health, sanitation, and quality of life, and sustain livelihoods in target vulnerable areas | 6850,000 | https://www.adaptation-undp.org/projects/ldcf-solomon-islands-water-sector-adaptation-siwsap |
Pacific Ecosystems-based Adaptation to Climate Change (PEBACC) | SPREP | BMU | 2014–2019 | Explore and promote ecosystem-based adaptation options for adapting to climate change | 5575,000 | https://www.international-climate-initiative.com/fileadmin/Dokumente/2015/PEBACC_Factsheet.pdf |
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van der Ploeg, J.; Sukulu, M.; Govan, H.; Minter, T.; Eriksson, H. Sinking Islands, Drowned Logic; Climate Change and Community-Based Adaptation Discourses in Solomon Islands. Sustainability 2020, 12, 7225. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12177225
van der Ploeg J, Sukulu M, Govan H, Minter T, Eriksson H. Sinking Islands, Drowned Logic; Climate Change and Community-Based Adaptation Discourses in Solomon Islands. Sustainability. 2020; 12(17):7225. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12177225
Chicago/Turabian Stylevan der Ploeg, Jan, Meshach Sukulu, Hugh Govan, Tessa Minter, and Hampus Eriksson. 2020. "Sinking Islands, Drowned Logic; Climate Change and Community-Based Adaptation Discourses in Solomon Islands" Sustainability 12, no. 17: 7225. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12177225
APA Stylevan der Ploeg, J., Sukulu, M., Govan, H., Minter, T., & Eriksson, H. (2020). Sinking Islands, Drowned Logic; Climate Change and Community-Based Adaptation Discourses in Solomon Islands. Sustainability, 12(17), 7225. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12177225