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India-Pakistan
Maldives Considers Buying Dry Land if Seas Rise
2008-11-11
The president-elect of the Maldives, a nation of 1,200 low islands in the Indian Ocean, is planning to establish an investment fund with some of its earnings from tourism so it can buy a haven for its citizens should global warming raise sea levels at a dangerous pace, according to several news reports.

Mohamed Nasheed, a former political prisoner who will be sworn in Tuesday as the countryÂ’s first democratically elected president, named Sri Lanka and India as possible spots for a refuge, according to the BBC.

Mr. Nasheed’s spokesman, Ibrahim Hussein Zaki, said that the new government had to take action. “Global warming and environmental issues are issues of major concern to the Maldivian people,” he said on the BBC’s “World Today” program. “We are just about three feet above sea level. So any sea level rise could have a devastating effect on the people of the Maldives and their very survival.”

The Maldives, south of India, is known as a tourist destination and has received much news coverage as a place that is likely to be overwhelmed by the effects of climate change.

In its latest report, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change of the United Nations projected that sea levels worldwide could rise up to two feet by 2100 as ice sheets eroded and warming seawater expanded. And the panel and independent climate specialists said centuries of rising seas could follow if warming persisted.

The country was one of the founding members of the Alliance of Small Island States, which since 1992 has pressed the worldÂ’s industrialized countries to reduce emissions of heat-trapping gases linked to rising temperatures.

The Maldives is particularly vulnerable to flooding because its population has surged to nearly 400,000 from 200,000 in 20 years. Malé, the crowded one-square-mile capital, is ringed by sea walls, built with assistance from Japan. Many of the islands were submerged as the waves of the 2004 Asian tsunami surged by.
Posted by:Steve White

#9  Learn to tread water. Or stop believing everything you read. Either works for me.
Posted by: mojo   2008-11-11 23:03  

#8  Redneck Jim---

I did not see waterworld pic, but I suggested putting one of our schools on a barge in NW Alaska, that was subjected to storm surges in the Chukchi Sea.

Doubling population in 20 years, ya say? That's 3.5% per year population increase. Well, what do you do on a low altitude set of small islands besides fish and barbeque?
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2008-11-11 18:48  

#7  i understand there is a mountain resort available in montana, cheep like.
Posted by: USN, Ret.   2008-11-11 15:35  

#6  AP, I see you've seen "Waterworld" good pic, but not possible.
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2008-11-11 14:25  

#5  Buying a barge would make more sense.
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2008-11-11 13:29  

#4  Go ahead and buy some moutain that won't flood, go live above the snow line (Where it's safe) and freeze your nuts off waiting for the flood that never comes.

Idiots.
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2008-11-11 12:38  

#3  That was the first thing I thought.

Someone's in SKIM heaven with that "fund". But then most of the forced "green" stuff is fraud too.
Posted by: Bright Pebbles   2008-11-11 10:49  

#2  So an ex-con wants to establish a MASSIVE fund that wont be used for a long, long time and will be no-doubt overseen by him.
Not bad work if you can get it.
Posted by: bigjim-ky   2008-11-11 07:10  

#1  Not for sale sorry :)
Posted by: Oztralian   2008-11-11 04:04  

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