OPEN LETTER ON TSUNAMI RECONSTRUCTION TO HEADS OF SAMLL ISLAND DEVELOPING STATES

Environmental Panorama
Gland - Switzerland
January of 2005

 

Your Excellencies,

13/01/2005 - WWF, the global conservation organization, has a mission to ensure that human societies live in harmony with nature.
The recent Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami are a reminder of the vulnerability of coastal communities and small island nations in the face of unexpected natural disasters and of the tragic human and social costs, as well as ecological and economic impacts of such events.

WWF extends our deepest sympathies to those who have lost families and friends and to those who are now in the process of rebuilding their lives. Clearly the priority today is on providing humanitarian relief. As the reconstruction phase begins, we should draw on the lessons to be learned from this event.

WWF takes to heart Mauritius Prime Minister Paul Berenger’s call at the opening ceremony to integrate environmental resilience in sustainable development strategies in the face of increasingly destructive impacts of global warming, sea level rise, and tropical storms.

Natural disasters cannot be prevented. However there may be ways to minimize the threat such disasters pose to coastal communities and to mitigate the social and ecological vulnerability of high-risk areas. Education programmes and early warning systems will significantly reduce the number of human casualties. However, it will only be through the continued enhancement of natural protection features and careful coastal and land-use planning that the economic and social costs of such disasters can be kept to a minimum.

Tropical coastal and island ecosystems have sophisticated natural protective mechanisms to help them survive the surging waters of tsunamis and extreme weather. Coral reefs are natural breakwaters, providing a physical barrier that allows waves to dissipate the bulk of their destructive energy before reaching the shore. Mangroves act as natural shock absorbers, again soaking up destructive wave energy and reducing coastal erosion. Systems of marshes, tidal inlets and mangrove channels allow a means for such waters to drain quickly. Lessons from violent storms across the world’s oceans clearly point to the value of maintaining intact natural ecosystems as a means of mitigating the social and ecological costs of natural disasters.

However, in many regions there has been extensive conversion of coastal habitats due to industry, urban development, coastal migration, aquaculture, agriculture, and tourism development. Although difficult to quantify, their protective value indicates large incentives for Governments to take a precautionary approach in retaining these protective habitats as a means of minimizing the social, economic, and ecological costs of natural disasters.

With an urgent need to rebuild communities, livelihoods and infrastructure across many islands in the Indian Ocean, and the likelihood of more frequent and intense storms increasing with global warming, now is the time to incorporate the various roles and long-term value of intact coastal habitats in planning and reconstruction efforts.

We, thus, encourage SIDS Governments to adopt integrated coastal management approaches that have risk assessments, protection and (where required) rehabilitation of natural ecosystems and disaster mitigation as a high priority. This will minimize the economic impact of future natural disasters and would provide valuable lessons and a model for other countries.

Please refer to our website (www.panda.org/coral) for recommendations on actions and policies for a “green reconstruction” in the aftermath of the tsunami, and future coastal development management policies, planning and implementation.

WWF is poised to hear from the Mauritius International Meeting, SIDS Governments, communities, and local partners how our expertise and resource base can be most effectively and collaboratively mobilized toward the needs created by such devastating natural forces, and the opportunities to work together in developing and implementing short and longer term mitigation strategies.

Yours sincerely,

Dr Claude Martin, Director General
WWF International

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International (http://www.wwf.org)
Press consultantship

 
 
 
 

 

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