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Climate Witness: Ben Namakin, Kiribati and Micronesia

Posted on 07 May 2007 | en fr es zh nl it ja

Ben Namakin, WWF Climate Witness from Kiribati & Micronesia

Ben Namakin, WWF Climate Witness from Kiribati & Micronesia

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Saltwater intrusion is killing the Pandanus trees, Kiribati.

Serious storm surges have led to the collapse of the Dai Nippon causeway, Kiribati.

My name is Ben Namakin. I am originally from Kiribati, but I currently live in Pohnpei (formerly known as Ponape) in the Federated States of Micronesia (FSM). I work as an environmental educator for the Conservation Society of Pohnpei (CSP), the only local environment non government organisation on the island.

English | 中国 | 日本語 | Italiano | Español | Français | Dutch

At the CSP, I implement The Green Road Show (GRS). This is a very famous, fun and interactive tool that teaches children in elementary schools, high schools, the college, and community members about many issues, including climate change.

The impacts of flooding - coastal erosion, saltwater intrusion, infrastructure destroyed
During my childhood days in Kiribati, we never experienced severe sea flooding. There were storms, but they weren’t that bad. As the sea levels continue to rise in Kiribati, several king tides hit the island. Saltwater intrusion affects the quality of water in wells, floods taro patches, gardens, and puts stress on plants/trees which are very important to the life and culture of an I-Kiribati.

For example, pandanus trees mean a lot to us; they are used for house construction, local medicine, food, traditional clothing, etc., but are dying from saltwater intrusion. Serious storm surges cause coastal erosion, floods grave yards, and in 2006, led to the collapse of the beautiful Dai Nippon causeway. This incident bore huge costs on the people of Kiribati. They had to build new homes with their own finance, and dig up their deceased relatives from their graves and bury them further inland.

While studying for my High School Diploma in Pohnpei in 2001, during my free time, I would hang out with my friends on a small islet name Dekehtik located on the barrier reef couple of miles away from the school. It was my favourite camping, picnicking and snorkeling spot. In 2005, I found to my surprise that Dekehtik Islet had split into two. I went to see for myself, with my own eyes, and there it was, badly destroyed by sea flooding. How sad to see this unexpected, sudden threat on the islanders and the landowners!

Coastal communities flooded during high tide
Visiting the community on the coast of Sokehs, Pohnpei, I learnt that many villagers had built their houses on raised foundations as the sea water was flooding their homes during high tide. They also built walls in front of their houses to prevent flooding during heavy rains. The villagers I spoke to mentioned noticing these changes in the last five years but not in the past.

The civil, economic, social and cultural rights that climate change abuses have strengthened my spirit to stand up for my nation, fight for our rights and to let many people know that we need to do something now to stop global warming.

Spreading the word
I participated at the Youth Summit during the United Nations Conference on Climate Change in 2005. I spoke at the conference plenary session which had more than 10, 000 people to deliver the youth’s message on “Our Climate, Our Challenge, Our Future” .

In 2006, I participated in a Climate Change tour across the United States. Through seminars, I encouraged university students to join the climate change movement. I also worked hard to convince leaders in the USA to improve US policy on clean energy to address climate change, ratify the Kyoto Protocol, and most importantly make decisions that will not affect my people in the Pacific Islands negatively.

Listen to an interview with Ben Namakin. [mp3, 6.67 MB]


 

Scientific review

Reviewed by: Professor Patrick Nunn, Pacific Centre for Environment and Sustainable Development (PACE-SD), University of the South Pacific, Fiji

Ben is a keen witness of what is happening throughout the Pacific Islands region. The sea level is undoubtedly rising, not continuously year after year, but in fits and starts. Extreme events such as storm surges, perhaps associated with tropical cyclones, often play an important role in the types of environmental changes that Ben describes.

Our island environments are fragile and – on a geological time span – they are also transient. Three thousand years ago, no habitable land existed in Kiribati (Banaba excepted) or Tuvalu but the sea-level fall created the foundations on which loosely-consolidated material could accumulate and form into islands. Today the sea-level is rising and so it is no surprise that the very same islands which were created by sea-level fall are now vanishing.

It is almost certain that the geography of many Pacific Island countries will be radically different at the end of the 21st century compared to today. Ben describes the threat that sea-level rise poses to the culture of I-Kiribati. There is no escaping the reality of this process so Pacific Islanders need to find ways to adapt to these changes.

Nunn, P.D. and Mimura, N. 2007. Promoting sustainability on vulnerable island coasts: a case study of the smaller Pacific Islands. In: McFadden, L., Nicholls, R.J. and Penning-Rowsell, E. (eds). Managing Coastal Vulnerability. Amsterdam: Elsevier, pp. 193-221.

» Additional peer review by Prof. John E. Hay, New Zealand [pdf]

All articles are subject to scientific review by a member of the Climate Witness Science Advisory Panel.
 

Comments

Vaine Wichman

November 20, 2009 - 03:38

kia orana ben, from Rarotonga. I'm working with WWF and our Government to develop eventually a conservation plan to protect our biodiversity, i was cruising WWF's information and websites and came across your story in Kiribati. Kiribati holds an important place for me as i worked there from 1989 to 1993 in North Tarawa, for SPC on an integrated rural development project.

i hope all is well with you in FSM and that you have been able to secure funding for your undergraduate studies that i read about in your comments to Prof Hays

Ti a manga bo

Maud de Bohan

April 2, 2009 - 14:31

Dear Ben,
I am a franch journalist, working for a public channel nammed France 5. We are working on a documentary of 52 minuts on Ponhpei and its architectural patrimony. I've begun my researches last week and have some difficulties to find informations from here, in Paris. First, do you know if it's existing a book on Pohnpei and its history. Second, if you still live on Pohnpei, could you help me to find people who could guide us during our journey in Ponape? We need 3 to 4 weeks to film I think, but I don't know right now the place... Last but not least : Would you accept to help us and to be interviewed in the film?
I hope you will have my mail quickly.
Maud
P : (33) 631105960

Des Todd

December 16, 2008 - 04:57

Hi Ben,
Sent you a song "Where we going to go" and video slide show on DVD last week. Hope you have received it.If you have'nt received it go to youtube, click video and type in , where we going to go.
Ben you can use the song if it will help your cause regarding climate change a what it will do to the islands.This is our contribution to help people become aware of global warming.All we ask is the we get the credits for writing the song.
Hope all is well.
Regards,
Des. Todd.

yokoue kouame daniel

September 28, 2008 - 17:40

i am from cote d'ivoire west africa i live natural life and his protection i am a pastor in abidjan .realy happy to visit this site

Ben Namakin, WWF-South Pacific Climate Witness

June 20, 2008 - 03:28

Dear Proffesor Nunn and Hay,

Mr. Nunn - I want to thank you for your review. I just feel bad that I did not get to sit and talk with you personally after your presentation at the Pacific Future Environmental Leaders Forum in Suva (March 2008) which I was attending. I must admit that I was very inspired by your presentation and I totally agree that our gov't leaders need to put in place a long term planning for relocation instead of just looking for the next election.

Hay - Thank you for your review. I must share with you that I have been much interested in the climate proofing project you did in Sokehs and I want to use for my NCSA project on climate change thematic area I am working on for the FSM government. Unfortunately, I don't have a copy of it but I saw it briefly at gov't building and wonder if you could send me one hard copy so I can refer to it for my report. My address is below:

Ben Namakin
Conservation Society of Pohnpei
PO Box 2461
Pohnpei, FM 96941

On a different note, if you know of any undergraduate scholarship I can apply for in this field will appreciate it very much.

Many thanks to both of you and Best wishes,

Ben Namakin

 

 

 

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