Climate change threatens
to reverse Viet Nam success by dragging millions back into poverty
Source: Oxfam GB - UK
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Rising sea-levels, more
intense typhoons, higher temperatures and increased flooding and drought threaten to drag millions of Vietnamese people back into poverty, an Oxfam report reveals today. In the
report, Viet Nam: Climate Change, Adaptation and Poor People, Oxfam shows how Viet Nam has led the way to
meet the Millennium Development Goals by 2015 but how the country, identified as among the ten most vulnerable countries in the world to climate change, is set to see this success reversed unless
urgent global action is taken. The report comes ten days before the UN climate change negotiations convene at Poznan, where Oxfam is calling for rich countries to lead the way in
cutting global emissions by at least 80%, and committing to funding so that poor communities like those in Viet Nam can adapt to the devastating effects of climate change. Steve
Price-Thomas, Oxfam’s country director in Viet Nam said: “Viet Nam has been one of the most successful countries in lifting people away from the clutches of poverty but unless urgent
global action is taken, climate change is set to push them back. Rising sea-levels, torrential rain and flooding, land salinisation and drought are already devastating people’s lives and climate
models show that Viet Nam can expect much worse.“It is essential that rich countries at Poznan lead the way in tackling climate change so that poor countries like Viet Nam can better
cope with its impacts and continue to prosper in a low-carbon way.” The report focuses on two provinces: Ben Tre in the south’s low-lying Mekong Delta and the coastal
Quang Tri further north, which is traditionally the most vulnerable to flooding in the country. People are used to living in extreme weather conditions, but all those questioned agreed that weather
patterns had changed over the past 20-30 years, making it harder to make a living and survive. In the Mekong Delta, where enough rice is produced to make Viet Nam the second biggest
rice exporter in the world, some rice farmers cannot grow their crops because the water is too salty, partly as a result of climate change. Salt intrusion is hampering other crop production, making it
harder for people to make a living. Typhoons have become more intense and have tracked further south so that they have become more commonplace in Ben Tre, which was once typhoon-free. Typhoon Durian
in December 2006, claimed 18 lives in the province. A further 700 were injured and a total $200million-worth of damage was caused - equivalent to about two-thirds of the province’s total exports
in 2001-2005. Further north in Quang Tri, unpredictable weather means farmers have less time to grow crops, and seeds can be washed away by the heavier rainfall. Livestock has also
been lost to increased flooding while the hotter dry spells make it even harder for farmers to make a living. Farmer, Ho Si Thuan, 46, who lives in Quang Tri, told Oxfam:
“Twenty years ago, being a farmer seemed extremely easy as the weather was predictable. It wasn’t so hot in the dry season and there was less flooding. Last year, our first crop of rice
was affected by early flooding. We could only harvest 200kg, and it was poor quality so we had to feed it to the pigs. This year, it was very cold and the rice seedlings died.” Work by Oxfam to help poor communities adapt to climate change is already underway. Some farmers are using drought-resistant crops, lifeboats have been provided in some areas and people have been
taught how to swim. Wooden platforms have also been installed in homes for people to escape flood levels and store food away from the rising water. However, the financing challenge
is huge for a developing country like Viet Nam. The government has set aside $750million for protection and the building of dykes between 2010 and 2020. But this figure does not take into account the
impacts of climate change, which will require far more funding. A UN report concluded that the extra money needed to adapt to climate change in poor countries is beyond the capacity of most national
governments (1). Outside funding assistance is required in Viet Nam, and Oxfam believes it is rich countries, who are most responsible for climate change, that should lead the way in committing to
such adaptation funding. Price-Thomas said: “Clearly, climate change is already happening and turning people’s lives upside down in Viet Nam. The futures of millions of
poor people in Viet Nam and around the world depend on the right decisions being taken in Poznan so that we can support people who are living - through no fault of their own - on the frontline of
climate change.”Read the report.For more information, interviews, or images, contact
Lucy Brinicombe, 01865 472192 / 07786 110054 / lbrinicombe@oxfam.org.uk Notes to editors:1) The UN’s Human Development Report 2007/8Viet Nam has
experienced a reduction in poverty from about 58% in 1993 to 18% in 2006, pulling 34 million people above the poverty line through economic growth and sound development policies.Despite
already feeling the impacts of climate change, Viet Nam’s emissions are among the lowest in the world, amounting to just 0.35% of all greenhouse gas global emissions in 2000.Annual
temperatures have risen in Viet Nam by 0.1 degrees C per decade between 1939 and 2000, and between 0.4 and 0.8 degrees C in the country’s three main cities from 1991 to 2000.Wide
regional variations in rainfall have been recorded, but the annual volume has remained largely stable. However, the localised intensity and unpredictability of the rainfall has increased, causing
severe floods.There have been more droughts in the south in recent years, which have tended to last longer.The sea level has risen between 2.5 to 3.0 centimetres per decade in the last
50 years, with regional variations. Viet Nam is one of the top two countries in the world most at risk from a one metre rise in sea level by 2100 and most at risk in East Asia. Typhoons have
become less frequent in the past 40 years but they have intensified and are tracking southwards.El Nino / La Nina weather events have become more intense in the last 50 years, causing more
typhoons, floods and droughts.
More from the Oxfam Press Office at http://www.oxfam.org.uk/news
More from the Oxfam Press Office at http://www.oxfam.org.uk/news
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