Small islands are in danger if we dont act now

climbing global temperatures

threaten the very existence of small

island developing nations

and low-lying coastal regions i

am from a small island climate change

directly affects

me my family and all people who live on

small island nations

indulge me for a moment when you gaze at

this image

what do you think of an exotic island

getaway

the soothing sounds of the ocean or

basking in the tropical sun

a quintessential island vacation now

take a look at this

what do you see a scene of utter

destruction

a wasteland of debris

infrastructure loss the calamity of a

natural disaster

the picture to my right was taken

september 5th

2017 and the picture to my left was

taken september

6 2017 just a mere

24 hours apart but completely

unrecognizable

side by side so what happened

what you just saw was the dangerously

powerful category 5 hurricane named

irma that hit landfill on the sit on the

island of sinmarton

the island that i call home i sat on the

edge of my seat anxiety ridden knowing

that

my mom my dad my grandparents my

seven-year-old little sister

was bunkering down somewhere as the most

powerful

hurricane in the atlantic ocean ripped

my country apart

with wind speeds of 185 miles per hour

the utter annihilation of saint martin

and its neighbors

was the wake-up call for the caribbean

irma was among the most debilitating

storms to ever hit the caribbean region

and as a prime example

of how climate change isn’t an abstract

notion

no climate change is real and climate

change is happening

right now islands are on the front line

of climate change scattered across the

pacific and the atlantic oceans

these fragile culturally diverse island

states are united by common threats to

their climate

rising sea levels changing rainfall

patterns

increasingly intense hurricanes or

cyclones and warming and acidification

of coastal waters

you see while islands are perceived and

romanticized as

tropical vacation destinations little

attention gets paid to the reality of

vulnerability

that the islands are faced with until it

is too late

so what did i do about this and why am i

here

so i drew on this narrative and i wanted

to understand

what makes my island and all small

islands just so

vulnerable why will islands suffer so

disproportionately from the damaging

impacts of climate change

at large this is based off of five main

geophysical characteristics

small islands are small in size they are

insular which means that they are

completely surrounded by water

they are they are located close to the

equator in

tropical and sub-tropical latitudes and

they have fragile environmental

ecosystems

small islands are shaped by forces

outside of their control

and thus any extreme climate event

is felt sooner and more profoundly

exacerbating

any pre-existing economic and political

stresses

that are felt so what does it mean to

have a fragile environmental ecosystem

so loss of biodiversity due to ocean

acidification and coral bleaching

will hurt tourism economies as well as

decrease

natural resilience against coastal

erosion

eighty percent of caribbean reefs are

affected and shorelines

are eroding the beaches the marine life

the flora the fauna they

attract thousands of tourists every year

and help create

jobs imagining islands without their

world famous beaches

is hard to believe but it is an imminent

reality so we are located in the

hurricane belt

low atmospheric pressure and warmer

waters near the equator

increase the likelihood of more intense

and more frequent hurricanes or cyclones

with very strong wind speeds based on

these three variables

increased hurricane damage loss of

tourism revenue

and infrastructure damage the caribbean

region could see as much as

10.7 billion dollars in losses within

the next

five years or as much as 22 billion

by 2050 now let’s break down how small

size

insularity and remoteness affect us so

kirabati

tulavu and the maldives are countries in

the pacific

made up of low-lying atoll islands that

are

just a few meters above sea level

so just one meter of sea level rise can

fully

inundate these islands and make them

completely disappear

off of the map if societies or even

communities are forced to leave because

of these impacts

some nations may very well lose their

sovereignty

as coastal flooding and erosion

increases

the caribbean will be one of the fastest

displaced communities across the globe

a pattern soon to be replicated in other

coastal communities

we saw firsthand how hurricane irma left

barbuda completely

unhabitable with 95 percent of buildings

on the island destroyed

1800 residents were forced to evacuate

and find refuge

in neighboring antigua for the first

time

in 300 years there wasn’t a single

person

on the island of barbuda one of the

first glimpses

of what it means to be a climate refugee

and like the islanders of kiribati the

growing reality of what it might mean

to be a citizen of a landless nation

can you imagine holding a passport to a

country that

no longer physically exists what does

nationhood mean without a

physical tie to the cultural and natural

heritage of the land

that is shaped by its people let that

sink in for a moment

small islands have contributed the least

amount of greenhouse gases but face the

brunt

of damage and losses due to these

extreme climate events

we can’t afford to have been relatively

neglected during international climate

talks

we should be at the front lines of

climate action

so why aren’t we you see climate change

presents both a challenge and an

opportunity

the opportunity is green low emission

climate change resilience strategies

that can reduce

poverty grow local economies in the long

run

and save whole islands from disappearing

the challenge collectively acting and

committing to these goals

as global citizens of the world you see

while we have made strides with

195 current signatories to the paris

agreements

the signatures alone aren’t going to

make any tangible differences

this suggests that while most

governments agree in theory

they have not yet put into practice the

necessary and aggressive

action that is needed to curtail

emissions

and this is exactly what happens on an

individual level

a survey by reuters found that 69

of americans wanted the government to

take aggressive action to combat climate

change

but only one third would be willing to

pay an extra 100

to make it happen what individuals are

saying

is that yes i know there’s a problem but

it’s not my job to resolve it

the reason we seem incapable of coming

together to protect the climate

is known as the tragedy of commons a

shared resource tends to be rapidly

depleting because

no single actor whether it’s a country

or a person

considers how their actions affect other

users

in other words you reap all the benefits

and suffer only part of the costs

and therefore you are tempted to over

exploit the resource

you see individuals and countries alike

are refusing to engage with the simple

solutions because we want to see

big changes that moonshot landing we

want to see

aggressive policies we want to see

widespread adoption of renewable

energies

we want to see a decarbonized climate

change free world

but we’re not willing to do the work it

takes to get there

individuals tend to defer to governments

in big corporates

and countries tend to defer to

multinational organizations

because we’re constantly shifting the

blame

the irony of this is that by waiting for

the big changes

and waiting for someone to take

accountability

the urgency to address climate change

only grows bigger

and it makes the small yet meaningful

changes

harder to implement because we are

simply

running out of time but do not despair

let me enlighten you on a few things

that i’ve learned in this very short

life of mine

humans are not as free thinking as we

often paint ourselves to be

i know you believe you have free will

but social psychologists point out that

free will is a paradox we think

we can make our own decisions but the

truth is

we look to others for guidance about how

we should behave

your everyday likes and dislikes are

primed by genius advertising or some

ai amazon algorithm which is telling you

what you like we have social media

influences

and we are constantly flooded with

stimulus that

impact our decisions subconsciously

every single day

now i may be too simplistic here in my

thinking but this is what i believe

humans are wired the same way people

and leaders alike need a nudge and a few

cues from others to change their

behavior

now i’m not saying this because i’m like

an expert

in social psychology but i’ve seen this

validation with my own eyes

so indulge in my naivety for just a

moment

because i’m standing here before you

today not because my environmental

stewardship was

brought to me by my dream or i woke up

one day and i just decided

that i was going to live life with a

greater purpose no

it came to me when i was picking up

garbage

at mullet bay beach at the international

coastal cleanup

organized by a local environmental ngo

called the pride foundation

that day something changed in me and

something clicked

after i heard someone say it’s not our

job to pick up other people’s trash

and as i was shoving diapers glass

bottles

dilapidated flip-flops into a trash bag

i wondered to myself

why am i picking up so much trash why is

there so much trash here

i looked to my left and i looked to my

right and i saw there were no trash

bins in sight and it became obvious to

me

that we needed more bins so i decided to

get involved with the local ngo that

advocated

for trash free waters and those leaders

became my nudge

and with the platform they gave me i

found myself voicing these concerns to

the island’s parliament

and the dutch royal family about a month

later

i was on the very same beach but this

time i wasn’t picking up trash

i was placing five new trash bins

that year we promoted awareness across

local districts

we had higher turnouts and more youth

involvement

and government participation in fact i

went to

several developing nations in south

america indonesia

singapore rural india and nepal to study

the effects of climate change

i learned the same thing individuals

everywhere were creating these small

nudges that they

that had a ripple effect creating

lasting change in increasing government

action

meet mahar he’s cleaning up mumbai’s

rivers

one cleanup at a time and by now you

know

i love to pick up trash and so while

being a student mentor for a study

abroad program

on climate change policy and resilience

i ended up collaborating with him to do

a joint cleanup

i simply put the date and time of the

cleanup in our whatsapp chat

and the next morning to my surprise i

saw

every single one of my students awake at

the crack of dawn

26 students to be exact ready to clean

up mumbai’s mitti river

now i didn’t save humanity nor did i

change the state of climate change

but i helped make a small difference on

my

island and a river a little bit cleaner

in mumbai sometimes all it takes is one

nudge to have a domino effect

take greta thundberg for example now i’m

not suggesting that we all are going to

be like greta

i hope we do but one thing i’m fairly

certain is that

your everyday choices do matter and each

choice you make

sets the precedent for a ripple effect

and a chain reaction

if everyone went vegetarian just for one

day in the united states

we would save a hundred billion gallons

of water and cut over 1.2

million tons of co2 in the atmosphere

the fashion industry is responsible for

an alarming 10 percent of

all carbon emissions and this is higher

than maritime and airline travel

let me let me put that in perspective to

make the clothes that you are wearing

right now you emit

more co2 than the plane that you would

fly on

today an average person buy 64 new

articles of clothing a year

compared to 12 articles back in the

1990s

wearing one item of clothing for nine

months longer

can reduce your carbon footprint by 30

percent

now the point you see isn’t so much

about quantifying your direct impact

as much as sending a message and leading

by example

and this together can solve the

collective action problem

and we’re seeing it already who would

have thought that a company

would make meat-free burgers and now be

worth

billions of dollars or who would have

thought the world’s largest most

dominant players in the oil industry

would feel threatened by teenagers

striking in the streets

or that climate change would be the

leading conversations

on the u.s presidential stage today we

have

thousands of youths striking in the

streets hands

reaching out voices sounding the alarm

for warming temperatures

fighting for those who are

disproportionately impact

from the drought-ridden villages in

africa to the subsistence farmers in

india

to those flooded in venice city and to

the floridians along the keys

and of course sinking islands in the

pacific and caribbean ocean

climate change is not binary there’s no

debate on whether it is happening or not

happening

the crux of the matter will be how much

climate change will the world

experience and my call to action for you

today is to understand

just how small islands are the looking

glass into the future

if we are not acting now we are

endangering everyone

who is alive and future generations to

come

we are all the victims and the

perpetrators

the more action we take collectively the

more livable our planet earth will be

for ourselves

and for the abundance of life that is to

be lived on earth

thank you

全球气温上升

威胁到小

岛屿发展中国家

和低洼沿海地区的生存

我来自一个小岛屿 气候变化

直接影响到

我 我的家人和所有生活在

小岛屿国家的人

当你凝视这片刻

想象一下,异国情调的海岛

之旅

,海洋的舒缓声音或

沐浴在热带阳光下

,典型的海岛度假

一场

自然灾害

我右边的照片是

2017 年 9 月 5 日拍摄的,我左边的照片是

2017 年 9 月 6 日拍摄的,仅

相隔 24 小时,但并排完全

无法辨认

,所以

你刚才看到的是危险

的 5 级飓风

名叫伊尔玛的人在辛马顿

岛上的垃圾填埋场我称之为家的小岛我坐在

座位的边缘 当大西洋

上最

强大的

飓风以

每小时 185 英里的风速将我的国家

撕裂,圣马丁

和 它的

邻居敲响了

加勒比地区的

警钟 现在岛屿

处于气候变化的前线,分散在

太平洋和大西洋

这些脆弱的文化多样化的岛屿

国家因共同的气候威胁而团结在一起

海平面上升改变降雨

模式

飓风或旋风越来越强烈

,沿海水域变暖和酸化

您会看到岛屿被视为

热带度假胜地并被浪漫化

直到为时已晚

,我才注意到岛屿面临的脆弱性现实,所以我对此做了什么,我为什么在这里,

所以我借鉴了这个故事,我

想了解

是什么让我的岛屿和所有的小岛

岛屿如此

脆弱 为什么岛屿会

在整个

气候变化的破坏性影响中遭受如此

不成比例的影响 这是基于五个主要的

地球物理特征

小岛体积小它们是

孤立的,这意味着它们

完全被水包围

靠近

赤道的

热带和亚热带纬度,

它们的环境

生态系统

脆弱 感受到了如此

脆弱的环境生态系统

意味着什么 o 海洋

酸化和珊瑚白化

将损害旅游业经济并

降低

自然抵御海岸

侵蚀的能力

想象没有

世界著名海滩

的岛屿很难相信,但这是迫在眉睫的

现实,因此我们位于

飓风带

低气压和

赤道附近较温暖的水域

增加了更强烈

和更频繁的飓风或飓风

和强风的可能性 基于

这三个变量的速度

增加飓风破坏

旅游收入损失

和基础设施破坏加勒比

地区在未来五年

内的损失可能高达 107 亿美元,

或到 2050 年高达 220 亿美元

现在让我们分解一下小

岛国 和偏远影响我们所以

kirabati

tulavu 马尔代夫是太平洋上的国家,

由海拔仅几米的低洼环礁岛屿组成,

因此海平面仅上升一米就可以

完全

淹没这些岛屿,

如果社会或

由于这些影响,甚至社区也被迫离开

随着沿海洪水和侵蚀的

加剧,一些国家很可能会失去主权 加勒比地区将成为全球流离失所最快的社区之一,

这种模式很快将在我们亲眼看到的其他

沿海社区中复制

飓风伊尔玛如何使

巴布达完全

无法居住,岛上 95% 的建筑物

被摧毁

1800 名居民被迫撤离

在邻近的安提瓜岛避难,这是 300 年来的第

一次

巴布达岛上没有一个人

第一次

看到成为气候难民意味着什么

,像基里巴斯岛民一样,

日益增长的现实 f

作为一个无土地国家的公民

可能意味着什么 你能想象持有护照去一个

实际上

不再存在的

国家 国家

身份意味着什么 与由其人民塑造的土地的文化和自然遗产没有物理联系

让这一点

沉没一下,

小岛屿贡献了

最少的温室气体,但

由于这些极端气候事件而首当其冲地受到损害和损失,

我们不能承受

在国际气候

谈判中相对忽视

我们应该参加

气候行动的前线

那么我们为什么不看到气候变化

既是挑战也是

机遇 机遇是绿色低排放

气候变化复原力

战略可以减少

贫困 从长远来看发展当地经济

并拯救整个岛屿免于

消失 在我们取得长足进步的同时,作为世界公民,集体行动并

致力于实现这些目标的挑战

巴黎协定目前有 195 个签署国,

单单签署不会

产生任何明显的差异,

这表明虽然大多数

政府在理论上都同意,

但它们尚未实施减少排放所需的

必要和积极

行动,

这是 在个人层面上究竟发生了什么

路透社的一项调查发现,69

名美国人希望政府

采取积极行动应对气候

变化,

但只有三分之一的人

愿意额外支付 100 美元

来实现这一目标

我知道有问题,但

解决它不是我的工作

我们似乎无法

团结起来保护气候的

原因被称为公地悲剧

共享资源往往会迅速

枯竭,因为

无论是一个国家还是一个国家,都没有单一的参与者

人们会

考虑他们的行为如何影响其他

用户

,换句话说,您获得了所有的好处

,而只遭受了一部分的成本 ts

,因此您很想过度

利用资源,

您看到个人和国家

都拒绝采用简单的

解决方案,因为我们希望

看到登月登陆的巨大变化 我们

希望看到

积极的政策 我们希望看到

可再生能源的广泛采用

我们希望看到一个无碳化、无气候

变化的世界,

但我们不愿意为实现这一目标付出努力

具有讽刺意味的是,通过

等待重大变化

并等待有人承担

责任

,解决气候变化的紧迫性

只会变得更大

,这使得小而有意义的

变化

更难实施,因为我们只是

时间不多了,但不 绝望

让我告诉你

一些我在我短暂的生命中学到的东西

像我们经常把自己描绘成那样的自由思考

我知道你相信你有自由意志

但是社会心理学家指出

自由意志是一个悖论我们认为

我们可以做出自己的决定但

事实是

我们会向他人寻求

指导 应该表现出

你每天的好恶是

由天才广告或一些

人工智能亚马逊算法引发的,它告诉你

你喜欢什么

在我的

想法中,但这就是我相信

人类的联系方式,就像人们

和领导者都需要轻推和

其他人的一些提示来改变他们的

行为

现在我不是这样说,因为我就像

社会心理学专家 但是我亲眼看到了这种

验证,

所以暂时沉迷于我的天真,

因为我今天站在你们面前,

不是因为我的环境

管家 ip是

我的梦带给我的,或者我

有一天醒来,我刚决定

要带着

更大的目标过生活

那天,

当地一家环保

非政府组织打电话给骄傲

基金会 想知道

为什么我要捡这么多垃圾 为什么

这里有这么多垃圾

我向左看,向右看

,我发现看

不到垃圾桶,对我来说很明显

我们需要更多垃圾箱 所以我决定

加入当地

倡导无垃圾水域的非政府组织,这些领导人

成为我的推动者

,借助他们给我的平台,我

发现自己

向岛上的议会

和 D 表达了这些担忧 荷兰王室 大约一个月

后,

我在同一个海滩上,但

这次我没有捡垃圾

那年我放置了五个新垃圾箱 我们在当地提高了意识

我们有更高的投票率和更多的青年

参与

和政府参与 事实上,我

了南美洲的几个发展中国家

印度尼西亚

新加坡 农村 印度和尼泊尔

研究气候变化的影响

我学到了同样的事情

世界各地的个人都在创造这些微小的

推动,他们

产生了连锁反应,

在增加政府行动中创造了持久的变化

认识 mahar,他正在清理孟买的

河流,

一次清理一次,现在你

知道

我喜欢捡垃圾,所以在

担任

关于气候变化政策和复原力的留学项目的学生导师时,

我最终与他合作做

了一个 联合清理

我只是将清理的日期和时间

放在我们的whatsapp聊天中

,第二天早上令我惊讶的

我的每个学生都

在黎明时分醒来

26 名学生准备好

清理孟买的米蒂河

现在我没有拯救人类,也没有

改变气候变化的状态,

但我帮助

我的

孟买的岛屿和河流稍微干净一些 有时只需

轻轻一推就能产生多米诺骨牌效应

以 greta thundberg 为例,现在我

并不是说我们

都会像 greta

我希望我们这样做,但我有一件事 可以

肯定的是,

您的日常选择确实很重要,并且

您做出的每一个选择都

开创了连锁反应和连锁反应的先例,

如果每个人都在美国吃一天素食,

我们将节省 1000 亿加仑

的水并减少

大气中超过 120 万吨的二氧化碳

时尚业造成

了令人震惊的 10%

的碳排放量,这

比海运和航空旅行

还要高 你现在穿的衣服

比你今天乘坐的飞机排放的二氧化碳多

一个普通人每年购买 64

件新衣服,

1990 年代 12

件衣服穿一件衣服的

时间延长了 9 个月

将您的碳足迹减少 30

%

现在您看到的重点

不是量化您的直接影响

,而是发送信息和

以身作则

,这可以解决

集体行动问题

,我们已经看到了

曾经认为一家公司

会生产无肉汉堡,现在

价值

数十亿美元,或者谁会

认为世界上最大

的石油行业最具主导地位的参与者

会受到青少年

街头罢工的威胁,

或者气候变化将成为

主导

今天在美国总统舞台上的谈话 我们

成千上万的年轻人在

街上罢工 伸出手

来敲响警告

的声音 g

气温对那些受到

不成比例影响的人产生了不成比例的影响,

从非洲干旱的村庄

到印度自给自足的农民

到威尼斯市被洪水淹没的人,

再到关键地区的佛罗里达人

,当然还有

太平洋和加勒比海的下沉岛屿

气候变化是 不是二元的 没有

关于它是否正在发生的争论

问题的关键

将是世界将经历多少气候变化

,我今天对您的行动呼吁

了解小岛是

未来的镜子

如果我们现在不采取行动,我们就会

危及

所有活着的人和子孙后代,

我们都是受害者和

犯罪者

生活在地球上,

谢谢