Subscribe to daily environment news





 

Click for news Click for pictures
National Tree Day

Planet Ark Home


Bangladesh Urges South Asia to Act on Environment
Mail this story to a friend | Printer friendly version

INDIA: April 4, 2007


NEW DELHI - South Asian leaders must act immediately against the threat of rising sea levels and river salinity due to global warming, which endangers millions of poor people in the region, a top Bangladesh official said on Tuesday.


"Bangladesh urges immediate collective action and stronger regional cooperation for the conservation and utilisation of our shared environment," Fakhruddin Ahmed, chief adviser to the Bangladesh government, said at a summit of South Asian leaders.

Low-lying Bangladesh, with more than 140 million people, is one of the world's most densely populated nations. It is also one of the most ill-prepared to face global warming and very likely to be among the nations worst affected, experts say.

Millions of people live along the largely flat delta bound by the Bay of Bengal to the south. As sea levels rise and storms increase in number and severity, vast areas of land could be swallowed by the sea.

Rising sea levels due to global warming and an alarming intrusion of salinity into the region's river channels were all impending threats that needed to be addressed, said Ahmed.

"The lives and livelihood of our peoples are adversely affected because of these looming environmental crises," he told delegates from eight nations at the opening of the 14th summit of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation, or SAARC.

A draft of a United Nations report due on Friday has warned that rising temperatures will result in a drop in crop yields and increase the risk of hunger in Asia.

Global warming could melt most Himalayan glaciers by the 2030s, affecting hundreds of millions of people, it says, adding that between 120 million and 1.2 billion people are likely to experience more water shortages by the 2020s.


REUTERS NEWS SERVICE

Reuters



© 2008 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters.
top

 
TODAY'S
ENVIRONMENT
NEWS

CHINA:
Warmer Climate to Dry Up Peatlands - Study

FRANCE:
EU Car Loan Call Puts Spotlight on CO2 Costs

INTERNATIONAL:
UN Says Credit Crisis Could Enable "Green Growth"

LUXEMBOURG:
Green Alarm as EU Ministers Mull Climate Opt-Outs

MEXICO:
Hurricane Norbert Storms Mexico's Baja Peninsula

NORWAY:
Exotic Climate Study Sees Refugees in Antarctica

NORWAY:
"Lost" Deer Rediscovered in Indonesia

RUSSIA:
Quake Kills 13 in Russia's Chechnya Region

SINGAPORE:
Fixed Price Seen a Threat to Australia CO2 Scheme

SPAIN:
Two British Women Drown in Spanish Flash Flood

UK:
Nations to Slash Sulphur in Ship Emissions by 2015

US:
Venture Capital Looks to New Sources of Biofuels

US:
Climate Change May Threaten Biodiversity in Tropics

US:
Environmentalists Slam Bush 'Fox-in-Henhouse' Plan

US:
Alaska Pollock Fishery Near Collapse - Greenpeace

US:
Tropical Storm Nana Forms in Atlantic

US:
Carbon Tax Seen as Best Way to Slow Global Warming



previous day


This site developed by Frontline, and managed by Planet Ark using RPM-NT.

Site designed by Jon Dee @ Planet Ark.

Radiant