Should international law recognize 'climate change refugees'?
When the rain stops falling to water your crops, or tides rise so high the sea fills your basement, it may be time to move on. A New Zealand court may be about to decide whether climate change can make a person ... a refugee.
The Hungry Tide is a documentary about the tiny Pacific island nation of Kiribati where water is now where houses used to be. Rising ocean levels have also helped contaminate drinking water, killed crops and -- for some residents -- made Kiribati a better place to leave than live.* See photos below
That's why one Kiribati man is asking a New Zealand court to declare him the world's first "climate change refugee" Iaone Teitiota emigrated to New Zealand and has applied for environmental asylum.
Michael Kidd is Mr Teitiota's lawyer in New Zealand. He says Kiribati is no longer a safe place for his client to live. Mr. Teitiota isn't the kind of refugee the United Nations had in mind when it drafted the refugee convention. Still, Michael Kidd says he has a case -- and there may be many more cases to come.
The New Zealand High Court has reserved its decision on Mr. Teitiota's case.
We've often described ourselves as the frontline country to the problem of climate change, because we will be the first ones to fall. If nothing is done, we will no longer exist.Anote Tong, President of
Like Anote Tong, Maria Tiimon Chi-Fang is deeply concerned about the fate of her home country. She's from Kiribati, but now lives in Sydney, Australia where she works as an outreach officer for the Pacific Calling Partnership ... a group trying to raise awareness about climate change in the Pacific.
Robert McLeman believes climate change will soon have significant effects on populations around the world. He's an associate professor at Wilfrid Laurier University in Waterloo and author of the forthcoming book Climate and Human Migration. Robert McLeman was in Waterloo, Ontario.
This segment was produced by The Current's Josh Bloch and Vanessa Greco