It's beginning - America's first climate refugees
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It's beginning - America's first climate refugees http://foes.do/13uBJUU
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/interactive/2013/may/13/newtok-alaska-climate-change-refugees?utm_source=buffer&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=Buffer&utm_content=bufferd6427
The people of Newtok, on the west coast of Alaska and about 400 miles south of the Bering Strait that separates the state from Russia, are living a slow-motion disaster that will end, very possibly within the next five years, with the entire village being washed away.
The Ninglick River coils around Newtok on three sides before emptying into the Bering Sea. It has steadily been eating away at the land, carrying off 100ft or more some years, in a process moving at unusual speed because of climate change. Eventually all of the villagers will have to leave, becoming America's first climate change refugees.
It is not a label or a future embraced by people living in Newtok. Yup'ik Eskimo have been fishing and hunting by the shores of the Bering Sea for centuries and the villagers reject the notion they will now be forced to run in chaos from ancestral lands.
But exile is undeniable. A report by the US Army Corps of Engineers predicted that the highest point in the village the school of Warner's nightmare could be underwater by 2017. There was no possible way to protect the village in place, the report concluded.
(More at the link.)