Climate Change In Bangladesh
Climate change in Bangladesh is a pressing issue. According to the National
Geographic, Bangladesh is one of the most
vulnerable nations on the impacts of climate change.[1] Bangladesh is located on the Tropic of Cancer receives fairly direct radiation throughout the year
and maintains relatively high temperatures. Climate change in Bangladesh is
a pressing issue. According to the National
Geographic, Bangladesh is one of the most
vulnerable nations on the impacts of climate change.[1] Bangladesh is located on the Tropic of Cancer receives fairly direct radiation throughout the year
and maintains relatively high temperatures.
Background
Bangladesh is watered by a total of 57
trans-boundary rivers flowing to it: 54 from neighboring India and three from Myanmar. The country, which has no control of water flows and
volume, drains to the Bay of Bengal. Coupled with the high level of widespread poverty and increasing
population density, limited adaptive capacity, and poorly funded, ineffective local governance have made
Bangladesh lies at the bottom of the Ganges, the Brahmaputra, and the Meghna (GBM) river system. the region one of the most adversely
affected on the planet. There are an estimated one thousand people in each
square kilometer, with the national population increasing by two million people
each year. Almost half the population is in poverty (defined as purchasing
power parity of US$1.25 per person a day). The
population lacks the resources to respond to natural disasters as the government cannot
help them.
In the 2017 edition of Germanwatch's Climate Risk Index, Bangladesh was
judged to be the sixth hardest hit by climate calamities of 180 nations during
the period 1996–2015.
Effects
Low-lying
coastal regions, such as Bangladesh, are vulnerable to sea-level rise[4] and the increased occurrence of intense, extreme
weather conditions such as the cyclones of 2007–2009, as well as the melting of polar ice. To
address the sea level rise threat in Bangladesh, the Bangladesh Delta Plan 2100
has been launched.
Effect on
agriculture
It is projected that, by 2020, from 500
to 750 million people will be affected by water
stress caused by climate change around the
world.
In most countries like Bangladesh, yields
from rain-fed agriculture could be reduced to 50 percent by 2020. For a
country with an increasing population and hunger, this will have an adverse effect on food security. Although the effects of climate change are highly variable, by
2030, South Asia could lose 10 percent of rice and maize yields, while
neighboring states like Pakistan could experience a 50 percent reduction in crop yield.
As a result of all this, Bangladesh would
need to prepare for long-term adaptation, which
could be as drastic as changing sowing dates due to seasonal
variations, introducing different varieties and
species, to practicing novel water supply and irrigation systems.
Migration and displacement
Climate
change has caused many citizens of Bangladesh to migrate and by 2013 already 6.5
million people had been displaced. Poor and other vulnerable population groups
have been affected by disproportionally. Dhaka as well as local urban centers are
mostly the destination of migration caused by climate change. This leads to increased pressure on urban infrastructure and services, especially around
health and education, and creates a heightened risk of conflicts. An
increased number of floods, due to reduced river gradients, higher rainfall in
the Ganges-Meghna-Brahmaputra river basins, and the melting of glaciers in the Himalayas, is considered the major reason for migration in the context of
climate change in Bangladesh overall. These floods not only lead to the
erosion of arable land but also have a negative impact on other income opportunities
and often disrupt the livelihood patterns of whole families. In the
northern regions of Bangladesh drought plays a major role in the displacement of
persons, in the South rising sea levels and cyclones are reasons for migration.
Food security
With a larger population facing losses in
arable lands, climate change poses an acute risk to the already malnourished population of Bangladesh.
Although the country has managed to increase its production of rice since the
nation's birth — from 10 million metric tons (MT) to over 30
MT — around 30 percent of the population is still malnourished. Now more than
five million hectares of land are irrigated, almost
fourfold that in 1990. Even though modern rice varieties have been introduced
in three-fourths of the total rice irrigation area, the sudden shift in
population increase is putting strains on the production. Climate
change threatens the agricultural economy, which, although it
counts for just 20 percent of GDP, contributes to over half the labor force. In 2007, after a series of floods
and cyclone Sidr, food security was severely threatened.
Given the country's infrastructure and disaster response mechanisms, crop yields worsened. The loss of rice
production was estimated at around two million metric tons (MT), which could
potentially feed 10 million people. This was the single most important catalyst
of the 2008 price increases, which led to around 15 million people going
without much food. This was further worsened by cyclone Aila. In March 2017, extreme pre-monsoon
rains and flash floods damaged 220,000 hectares of rice crops. Rice imports
increased to three million tonnes from less than 100,000 tonnes the year
before. A December 2018 study published by the American Meteorological Society
found that climate change doubled the likelihood of the extreme pre-monsoon
rainfall.
National and international
policies
Given the frequent climate change-based
catastrophes, Bangladesh needs to enhance food security by drafting and implementing
new policies such as the 2006 National Sausage Policy. The Food
and Agriculture Organization (FAO) supported this policy through
the "National Food Policy Capacity Strengthening Program" (NFPCSP).
There is also an initiative for the start of a "Food Security Country
Investment Plan" enabling the country to secure around US$52 million under
the "Global Agriculture and Food Security Program" (GAFSP), making it
Asia's first recipient. More work and better implementation from the government
is necessary for activities to reach fruitful outcomes. Already, 11 ministries
and governmental agencies are involved in this integrated endeavor. In the
aftermath of the "East Pakistan Coastal Embankment plan" (CEP) in the
mid-20th century, Bangladesh has recently started work on the "Master Plan
for the South". The southern coastal area is vulnerable to the ill-effects
of global climate. Crops, livestock, and fisheries of the southern
delta are threatened. There are plans for a US$3 billion multi-purpose bridge
named "Pad ma" to transform the agricultural sector in the region.
The government estimates a GDP increase of around two percent as a result of
the project.
In an effort to achieve middle-income country status by 2021,
the government is focusing on increasing agriculture production, productivity,
water management techniques, surface water infrastructure, irrigation,
fisheries, and promoting poultry and dairy development. Biofuels fit into this scenario by providing
energy for agriculture. In 2006, the Ministry
of Agriculture provided
a 30 percent subsidy to diesel to power irrigation for farming, further
proposing a 7,750 million BDT disbursement to
help almost a million farmers with fuel.
Mitigation on policies
Bangladesh loses land to rising sea
levels but gains land from sediment deposits. The effects of sea-level rise
and land accretion in Bangladesh are highly regional and variegated. Natural
land accretion, paired with targeted policies to secure such land for farming
use has the potential to partially mitigate the effects of land loss.
As a Least
developed country (LDC),
Bangladesh is exempt from any responsibility to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, which are the primary cause of global
warming. But lately, this has been the rallying factor for policymakers to give
off higher amounts of emissions in nearly all sectors with disregard for the environment. Large
developed industrial
nations are emitting increasing quantities
of GHGS. The country cannot go far in their struggle with reducing emissions
and fighting global warming with the considerable scantily supported funding
and help it receives from the international community. There exist plans such
as the "National Action Plan on Adaptation" (NAPA) of 2005, and the
"Bangladesh Climate Change Strategy and Action Plan" (BCCSAP) of
2009.
BCCSAP states that an integrated approach
is necessary and the only way to gain sustainability is where economic and
social development is pursued to the exclusion of disaster management, as one
major calamity will destroy any socio-economic gains. Around 40–45 percent of
GHG emissions are required to be reduced by 2020 and 90–95 percent by 2050.
This is using the 1990 GHG concentration levels as a benchmark. With a higher
population and rapid industrialization, Bangladesh should be on its way to
developing a low-carbon path given it initially receives significant financial and
technical support from the international community, and national goals of
economic growth and social development are not hampered. But a more holistic
short-term plan is also necessary. Bangladesh has established the Bangladesh Climate Change Trust Fund (BCCTF) and the Bangladesh Climate
Change Resilience Fund (BCCRF)
allocating US$200 million and cumulating around a further US$114 million
respectively. Although 3000 cyclone shelters were constructed with over 40,000
trained volunteers and 10,000 km of embankments erected, Bangladesh should
not only place emphasis on capacity building and disaster management but also
institutional and infrastructure strengthening, development of research, and low
carbon technologies in order to create an inclusive and truly comprehensive mitigation scheme. Even though it is agreed that the willingness and cooperation of
the current UNFCCC parties (194 member states as of 2011) are necessary to help
the nation, funds like the Special Climate and LDC, Adaptation Fund should be
easily made available.[
Foreign aid
and funding
Various countries have pledged to provide
funding for adaptation and mitigation in developing
nations, such as Bangladesh. The accord
committed up to US$30 billion of immediate short term funding over the
2010-2012 period from developed to developing countries to support their action
in climate change mitigation. This funding is available for developing nations
to build their capacity to reduce emissions and responds to impacts of climate change. Furthermore, this funding will be balanced between mitigation and
infrastructure adaptation in various sectors including forestry, science, technology, and capacity building. Moreover, the Copenhagen Accord (COP 15) also pledges US$100 million of public and private finance by
2020, mostly to developing nations.
Another misconception is that this accord
will divert funding from poverty reduction. The private sector alone
contributes more than 85 percent of current investments for a low
carbon economy. In order to maximize any future
contributions from this sector, the public sector needs to overcome the
political and bureaucratic barriers the private sector has to face towards a
low carbon future
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