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Islanders must walk the climate change talk
M/Variety
Tue, 12 May 2009
Majuro, Marshall Islands ----- Pacific islanders didn’t cause the climate change that
could see their nations engulfed by sea level rise, but they need to start changing their
own behavior if they want help from industrialized nations, a Micronesian conservation
leader says, reports Marianas Variety.
“It’s about sincerity,” said Pohnpei-based Willy Kostka, who heads the Micronesia
Conservation Trust.
The Trust is coordinating funding to implement the “Micronesia Challenge,” a multi-
country project to establish conservation management over 30 percent of coastal marine
areas and 20 percent of land in Palau, Federated States of Micronesia, Marshall Islands,
Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands.
Mr Kostka was in Majuro earlier last week for a regional climate change meeting.
“If Marshall Islands, Federated States of Micronesia and Palau were as big as industrial
countries,” Mr Kostka said looking out over a parking lot in Majuro filled with SUVs and
four wheel drive pickup trucks, “we’d be among the worst polluters.”
Mr Kostka said islanders should take the first steps to mitigating climate change impacts
on these low-lying islands, starting with governments investing money in climate-proof
infrastructure.
“If we’re serious (about mitigating climate change impacts), we need to start adapting
and building infrastructure that is climate proof,” he said.
“There is no way to raise international donor money for major climate change-proof
infrastructure.”
But the Compacts of Free Association between the Micronesian island nations and the
United States require a large portion of U.S. grants be spent on infrastructure.
“Plans should be developed for climate proofing of infrastructure and the governments
should spend Compact money on it,” he said. Then they can go to Japan or other donors
to request additional funding needed to complete projects, Kostka said.
One of Micronesia’s leading conservation officials, he believes leaders need to set their
sights on their home. “We are so focused at the international level (on climate change),”
he said. “But if we evaluate how we’re doing at home, we’ll see that we are still building
the way we’ve been doing it for the last 50 years. And we have four wheel drive vehicles

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on flat islands and are telling others to fix their greenhouse gas emissions.”
Many anticipated climate change problems related to erosion, saltwater flooding and
severe storms could be avoided “if we rethink development. We can get all the money we
want, but if we still build by the beach, what good will it do?”
Many atoll nations in the Pacific rise barely one meter above sea level.
In the past two years, conservation officials have begun focusing more on how to
mitigate expected sea level rise impacts on their small islands.
But national budgets of these small island governments show it is business as usual, Mr
Kostka said. “There have been a lot of workshops with talk about what we need to do (to
prepare for a changing climate), but unless government budgets reflects these needs, it is
just talk,” Mr Kostka said.
“We didn’t cause climate change, but we have to deal with it. Complaining isn’t dealing
with it. We need to start protecting ourselves and the way to do that is to do things
differently — the way we build and treat our environment.”
He thinks aggressive climate change action by vulnerable islands will generate increased
support for mitigation efforts from donor countries.
“We can do so much more first,” he said. “If other countries see (island) governments
putting the effort in, it will be hard for them to say ‘no’ to requests for help. We should
fix things within (our countries), so when we go out we are sincere about our cry for help
to the international community.”