17.2.9. Human Welfare
17.2.9.1. Settlement and Infrastructure
In most small island states (including high islands such as Seychelles, Reunion,
and Fiji), narrow coastal plains provide attractive locations for settlement
and a variety of infrastructure to support economic and social needs. Most of
the population, settlements, and economic activities are concentrated in areas
where competition for space is acute and where fragile ecosystems, aquatic and
terrestrial, coexist. In most Caribbean islands, for example, more than 50%
of the population live within 2 km of the coast. On atolls, most of the important
infrastructure and population clusters often are less than 100 m from the shoreline.
As the shortage of coastal space becomes increasingly acute in many small islands,
land reclamation often is practiced as a solution to this need. Ironically,
this practice exposes these islands to greater risk by attracting more settlement
and infrastructure to already highly vulnerable locations.
As elsewhere, coastal development in most small islands has been undertaken
in the past without taking climate change and sea-level projections into consideration.
With currently projected rates of sea-level rise and flooding, coupled with
the possibility of more intense and frequent extreme events such as cyclones
(hurricanes) and associated storm surge, critical infrastructure such as social
services, airports, port facilities, roads, coastal protection structures, tourism
facilities, and vital utilities will be at severe risk. Furthermore, the capacity
of most small island states to respond effectively to these threats is limited
by their low adaptive capacity, which results from a combination of factorsincluding
physical size (little opportunity to retreat), limited access to capital and
technology, and a shortage of human resource skills.
In some countries, particularly the low islands and micro-atolls, resettlement
within national boundaries may have to be considered as the only viable option.
However, implementation of this strategy could become extremely complicated,
especially for densely populated coastal lowlands such as in the Federated States
of Micronesia (950 persons km-2), Majuro, Marshall Islands (2,188
persons km-2) and Male, Republic of Maldives (35,000 persons km-2).
In extreme circumstances, it may even become necessary to abandon some atolls
altogether (Nurse et al., 1998). Such an option would be socially and
culturally disruptive and would require access to substantial resourceswhich
most of these countries may be unable to afford.
17.2.9.2. Human Health
Increased instability of weather patterns and large interannual variability
in climate enhanced by ENSO forcing and GHG-induced climate change have catalyzed
a new focus on possible health consequences in a changing climate (Epstein,
1997; Epstein et al., 1997; Hales et al., 1997; Woodward et
al., 1998). Many tropical islands are now experiencing high incidences of
vector- and water-borne diseases that are attributed to changes in temperature
and rainfall regimes, which may be linked to events such as ENSO, droughts,
and floods. In the Pacific, there is growing evidence that outbreaks of dengue
are becoming more frequent and appear to be strongly correlated with the ENSO
phenomenon (Hales et al., 1997, 1999a). Many of the small island states
lie in the tropical zone, where the climate is suitable for the transmission
of tropical diseases such as malaria, dengue, filariasis, and schistosomiasis.
Some of the small island states, such as the Bahamas, Kiribati, the Marshall
Islands, and the Maldives, are a mere 3-4 m above mean sea level, which predisposes
them to inundation with seawater and, as a consequence, salinization of freshwater
supplies and flooding from sea-level rise. Furthermore, low-lying islands are
particularly vulnerable to storms and cyclones; these also can adversely affect
public water supplies. Vector-borne diseases such as malaria and dengue are
particularly sensitive to warming and flooding. Filariasis and schistosomiasis
are less sensitive to short-term seasonal climatic changes, but the epidemiology
of these diseases could change with long-term effects of climate change. Water-borne
diseases such as shigella, cryptosporidium, giardia, and amoebiasis could increase
as a result of disruption of sewage and water systems by flooding (see Chapter
9).
It is also projected that, with temperature and rainfall changes, some vectors
could extend their range, so there is likely to be wider transmission of some
diseases (McMichael, 1996). For example, malariawhich previously tended
to be confined largely to the western and central Pacific regionnow appears
to be extending east as far as Fiji. It also is worth noting that the interior
uplands of many islands, which now are virtually free of vectors (e.g., Aedes
aegypti mosquito) that transmit malaria, dengue, and other tropical illnessescould
become favorable breeding sites in a changing climate (disease-specific details
appear in Chapter 9).
In some regionsfor example, the Pacificit has been noted that extreme
weather events appear to be occurring at a higher frequency than elsewhere (Timmerman
et al., 1997). As a consequence, physical injuries arising from these events
can be expected to increase.
It is well-established that vulnerability to such health risks will vary according
to factors such as availability of quality health care, the present health status
of the population, and availability of technical and other resources (McMichael,
1993; WHO, 1996). Unfortunately, health care facilities and related infrastructure
in many small island states and other developing countries often are inadequate.
Hence, the resilience of such states and their capacity to respond effectively
to (or mitigate) increasing health threats posed by climate change is likely
to be low.
A range of adaptation strategies for reducing the severity of possible climate
change-related health threats has been proposed, and many of these measures
may be successfully pursued in the small island states. Such measures include,
inter alia, implementation of effective health education programs, preventive
maintenance and improvement of health care facilities, cost-effective sewerage
and solid waste management practices, and disaster preparedness plans (McMichael,
1996).
Adoption of efficient early warning systems also would be beneficial in vulnerable
small islands (Stern and Easterling, 1999). This process would involve monitoring
of health-risk indicators by improving the forecasting of conditions that are
favorable to the outbreak of climate-sensitive diseases such as dengue, cholera,
and malaria (Patz et al., 1996; IPCC, 1998; Epstein, 1999). Where large
populations exist, as in urban areas, simple, low-cost measures could be implemented
to control the vectors of dengue and other diseases, where a risk of transmission
exists. At the individual level, insecticide-treated bed nets could provide
protection against vectors of malaria and filariasis. Simple technology, such
as the use of sari cloth to filter drinking water, reduces the risk of cholera
transmission at the household level. Although some measures for adapting to
climate change can be deferred, early implementation of preventive strategies
could reduce current and future health "costs."
17.2.10. Other Economic and Sociocultural Impacts
Climate change could have direct and indirect impacts on other economic and
social sectors in some small islands. The insurance industry is one sector that
is highly sensitive to the magnitude and frequency of various hazards, including
climate-related phenomena such as tropical storms and floods. Because insurance
premiums are based on assessment of risk of occurrence of a particular event,
any indication of an increase in the frequency or intensity of phenomena such
as tropical cyclones and floods is likely to trigger an increase in the cost
of insurance. Within the past decade, insurance costs in the Caribbean have
increased significantly, following the passage of a series of severe hurricanes
that caused widespread socioeconomic dislocation, injury, and loss of life.
Claims were so high that some reinsurance companies withdrew from the market;
others imposed higher deductibles, separate conditions for windstorms, and a
premium structure to minimize the risk of underinsurance (Murray, 1993; Saunders,
1993). Even in cases in which these systems did not make landfall in the insular
Caribbean itselfas with Hurricane Andrew, which devastated southern Florida
in the United Statesan increase in insurance premiums in the islands subsequently
occurred.
Certain traditional island assets (goods and services) also will be at risk
from climate change and sea-level rise. These assets include subsistence and
traditional technologies (skills and knowledge), community structure, and coastal
villages and settlements. Sea-level rise and climate changes, coupled with environmental
changes, have destroyed some very important and unique cultural and spiritual
sites, coastal protected areas, and traditional heritage sites in the Federated
States of Micronesia, Tuvalu, the Marshall Islands, Niue, and Kiribati and continue
to threaten others (Kaluwin and Smith, 1997).
Although some of these assets fall into the category of nonmarket goods and
services, they are still considered to be of vital importance in small island
states. In Tuvalu, for instance (as in other Pacific atoll states), strong traditional
ties to land and sea constitute a vital component of local cosmology (Sem et
al., 1996). Some of these values and traditions are compatible with modern
conservation and environmental practices; therefore, priority action is needed
in the following areas: research into traditional knowledge and practices of
conservation and environment controlwhich have sustained these societies
for generations, even in the face of hazards, risk, and uncertainty; inventorying
of traditional, heritage, and other cultural sites; encouragement of practices
that marry use of modern science and technology with traditional wisdom; and
more effective transmission of traditional knowledge to younger generations.
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