Poorer Nations Need Urgent Help To Mitigate Impact Of Climate Change, UN Told
New York, Sep 24 2008 9:11PM
The leaders of Nauru and Suriname, two developing nations struggling to protect their vulnerable environments from the
ravages wrought by climate change, issued a call to the General Assembly today for increased assistance to boost their
resilience to the effects of global warming.
Phosphate mining has stripped Nauru of its farmable land, and greenhouse gas emissions are leading to a sea level rise –
one metre in this century by conservative estimates – that will flood the remaining habitable terrain, President Marcus
Stephen told the Assembly’s high-level debate.
“Our people will be literally trapped between the rising sea and an ancient, uninhabitable coral field,” he said.
But Mr. Stephen said that “the cost of rehabilitating 80 per cent of our lands is well beyond our immediate means,”
appealing for support from the United Nations, along with other donors, to help restore Nauru.
Similarly, Runaldo Ronald Venetiaan, President of Suriname, urged increased funding to help the South American nation
maintain its forests.
Due to its low deforestation rates, he said that his country is “forgotten in mechanisms devised to compensate for
deforestation.”
However, he stressed “the importance of new financing mechanisms, since good management of forests and other natural
resources cannot and should not be at the expense of the development of our own peoples, the peoples of countries with
high forest coverage and low deforestation rates.”
ENDS