WAPO – 'Has the era of the climate change refugee begun?'

Story submitted by Barry Brill

The Washington Post’s recent story that New Zealand might admit climate refugees from Tuvalu has no basis in fact.

“Tuvalu has become the epicenter of a landmark refugee ruling that could mark the beginning of a wave of similar cases: On June 4, a family was granted residency by the Immigration and Protection Tribunal in New Zealand after claiming to be threatened by climate change in its home country, Tuvalu.”: [Washington Post (Rick Noack) Aug 7 2014 ]

There are two major problems with this report:

• climate change in Tuvalu played no role in the Tribunal’s decision

• Tuvalu residents are not being threatened by climate change

Sigeo Alesano left Tuvalu with his family in 2007. He over-stayed his New Zealand visitor permit and was declined a work permit in 2011. After his 2012 application for refugee status was dismissed, he appealed to the Immigration and Protection Tribunal whose decision ([2014] NZIPT 501370-371) was handed down on 4 June 2014.

The appeal was based on humanitarian grounds. Mr Alesano did not want his family to be separated from his unwell mother and five sisters, all of whom reside in New Zealand with their families. Both his children were born in New Zealand.

A supplementary ground was that deporting Mr Alesano and his family to Tuvalu could put them “at risk of suffering the adverse impacts of overpopulation, climate change and socio-economic deprivation”. The appellant said that “land on both the lagoon and seaward sides of his home island was inundated with sea-water regularly during monthly king-tides”.

The Tribunal, in turn, was inundated by lawyers with papers and reports about floods of refugees expected from future climate change. As noted by the Washington Post, “the case was closely followed by immigration and environmental lawyers all over the world”.

The result of this gambit? A total damp squib.

The Tribunal neatly sidestepped with –

“[32] As for the climate change issue relied on so heavily, while the Tribunal accepts that exposure to the impacts of natural disasters can, in general terms, be a humanitarian circumstance, nevertheless, the evidence in appeals such as this must establish not simply the existence of a matter of broad humanitarian concern, but that there are exceptional circumstances of a humanitarian nature such that it would be unjust or unduly harsh to deport the particular appellant from New Zealand.

[33] It is not, however, necessary on the facts of this appeal to reach any conclusion on this issue in relation to any of the appellants as the Tribunal is satisfied that by reason of the other factors identified in this case, there are exceptional circumstances of a humanitarian [nature] and that it would be unjust or unduly harsh for the appellants to be deported from New Zealand.”

So much for “the landmark ruling”.

Even if Tuvalu climate effects had figured in the decision, the case would have provided a poor precedent for other countries. Mr Noack quotes Vernon Rive, an Auckland legal academic:

“I don’t see it as delivering any kind of ‘verdict’ on climate change…. The family only succeeded because it claimed “exceptional humanitarian grounds,” which is a wording recognized in New Zealand’s immigration legislation but not by many other governments.”

Mr Noack also cites a report of Norway’s Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre finding that low-income countries bear the major burden of disaster-related displacement. That report contends that the Oceania region saw 129,000 people displaced by natural disasters during 2008-12, but does not find a single case of displacement as a result of climate-change-induced sea level rise in Tuvalu – or in any other Pacific small island state.

Why did this obscure and distant non-event make headlines in Washington (and Toronto and elsewhere)? Clearly, the press is flailing desperately to resuscitate their much-loved disaster story which has long lost momentum with the public.

Tuvalu not drowning

If any future Immigration Tribunal does find it necessary to consider actual conditions in Tuvalu, they will discover that media-boosted fears of drowning islands are little more than fanciful. Just this month, ‘Science’ magazine reported:

“Paul Kench, a geomorphologist who now heads the University of Auckland’s School of Environment in New Zealand, was the first to question the dire forecasts for Kiribati and similar island nations. In 1999, the World Bank asked him to evaluate the economic costs of sea-level rise and climate change to Pacific island nations. Kench, who had been studying how atoll islands evolve over time, says he had assumed that a rising ocean would engulf the islands, which consist of sand perched on reefs. “That’s what everyone thought, and nobody questioned it,” he says. But when he scoured the literature, he could not find a single study to support that scenario.”

Kench found that higher waves raised island elevations by depositing sand produced from broken coral, coralline algae, mollusks, and foraminifera. Reefs can grow 10 to 15 millimeters a year—faster than IPCC projections of sea-level rise “As long as the reef is healthy and generates an abundant supply of sand, there’s no reason a reef island can’t grow and keep up,” Kench argues.

The ‘Science’ article says media images of washed-away villages on Pacific atolls are invariably caused by poor shoreline management. People encroach on active beaches, mine sand for construction, over-use the freshwater lenses, damage coral with dynamite-fishing, and erect poorly designed seawalls .

Kiribati’s President Tong is a vocal member of the Small Island States negotiating group in UN climate talks. In an interview with CNN in June he insisted that global warming meant “total annihilation” for his country as well as Tuvalu, the Maldives and other atolls. He announced that Kiribati had spent $8.7 million to buy 22 square kilometres of land in Fiji as a haven for its displaced citizens.

The purchase was “a publicity stunt” scoffs Teburoro Tito, a former President, noting that the steep Fijian land could accommodate only a few hundred people. It was reminiscent of an earlier propaganda effort when the Maldives held a cabinet meeting under water to dramatize their claims.

Ten years ago, Willis Eschenbach published fully-referenced observational data showing Tuvalu had experienced no acceleration of sea level rise since the high-quality SEAFRAME recording systems were installed by Australia in 1993. http://www.academia.edu/1097977/Tuvalu_not_experiencing_increased_sea_level_rise.

In 2010, Dr Vincent Gray described the SEAFRAME system and showed that no material sea level rise occurred in any of 12 Pacific islands (including Tuvalu) except during the course of cyclones or tsunamis. http://carbon-sense.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/01/sea-levels-gray.pdf

Drowning has not just been deferred as a result of the 17-year ‘hiatus’ in global warming. Satellite images confirm that the observed 15-cm global sea-level rise over the past half-century has had no discernible effect on atolls.

0 0 votes
Article Rating

Discover more from Watts Up With That?

Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.

46 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Tim Obrien
August 12, 2014 9:39 am

In the late ’80s, I escaped the -30F Ohio blizzards and moved to South Florida. In 30 years the temperature here is still the same and the beach is still there with no visible sea rise. Go figure…

August 12, 2014 10:03 am

Crispin in Waterloo but really in Jakarta says:
August 12, 2014 at 7:23 am
@JohnWho
“One day we will all look back at the “good old days” when the climate wasn’t changing.”
Ha ha ha! That’s a good one! And when was this time when ‘the climate wasn’t changing’?

Well, it was, um, uh, oh yeah – “back in the good old days”.
Yeah, that’s it. That’s the ticket!
/grin

Bruce Cobb
August 12, 2014 10:17 am

According to the emotion-laden lie-infested schlockumentary, Climate Refugees, there were 25 million “climate refugees” at the time the movie first aired in 2010, with 50 million predicted by 2011 (how’s that for a hockey stick?).
Apparently, anyone needing to move (even temporarily) due to bad weather is a “climate refugee”.
Because for them, weather does indeed mean climate.

Roy
August 12, 2014 10:32 am

Sigeo Alesano left Tuvalu with his family in 2007. He over-stayed his New Zealand visitor permit and was declined a work permit in 2011. After his 2012 application for refugee status was dismissed, he appealed to the Immigration and Protection Tribunal whose decision ([2014] NZIPT 501370-371) was handed down on 4 June 2014

Not that I doubt the accuracy, but do you have any sources for that. I just hate it when very important, if not critical claims have no source links.

DesertYote
August 12, 2014 11:38 am

Roy says:
August 12, 2014 at 10:32 am
###
How about learning how to do your OWN research? That’s what a REAL scientist does. I just hate it when stupid trolls nit-pick at irrelevant trivialities in a limp wristed effort to denigrate an article.
[Roy is entitled to make that point. We do prefer there to be supporting links for important issues, unfortunately there were not in this case. – mod]

JimS
August 12, 2014 12:18 pm

If global warming was truly a reality, this would stop the flood of climate refugees from Canada to Florida every year. The number of Canadians falling into this category is estimated to be about 500,000. Let me know when this becomes a reality. This is the true test for the existence of “unprecedented” global warming.

August 12, 2014 12:19 pm

What I am looking forward to, is the era of refugees from criminal prosecution wrt CAGW.
I am sure China, Russia and Saudi Arabia will be proud to accept these refugees from justice.

Brian H
August 12, 2014 1:18 pm

IIRC, the UN-designated source countries for climate refugees experienced a large net influx of confused immigrants.

NZ Willy
August 12, 2014 1:26 pm

We had one genuine “climate refugee” application recently but it was turned down:
http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/politics/9444559/Climate-refugee-loses-appeal

Editor
August 12, 2014 2:15 pm

more soylent green! says:
August 12, 2014 at 8:43 am

Every year, thousands of northerners tire of the cold, ice, and snow and permanently relocate to the southwest and the sunbelt. Miami is full of New Yorkers who fled the New England climate.

I moved to New England in 1974 and don’t expect to ever be ready for Florida.
New York is not New England – they have their own climate that makes them crazy enough like ours. Except we have the good sense not to put tomatoes in our clam chowder.

Editor
August 12, 2014 3:24 pm

Well, I’m another who’s gone to Florida. First visited here about 40 years ago. Strange thing is, the beaches are the same, the sea has not risen detectibly, the temperatures and weather are about the same.
@Ric:
Clam Chowder does not contain tomatoes. Tomato soup with clams does. 😉

Editor
August 12, 2014 4:56 pm

As someone pointed out recently (sorry, I can’t remember who), there are coral atolls all over the Pacific. They didn’t all happen by chance to be at exactly sea level. Sea level is where they grow to. Rising sea level in itself is no threat at all.

Eamon Butler
August 12, 2014 5:45 pm

I’m sure most of you here have probably already read this interview with Dr. Morner. He gives a good account of what is happening with sea levels and specifically explains the observations in the Maldives and Tuvalu etc. http://www.climatechangefacts.info/ClimateChangeDocuments/NilsAxelMornerinterview.pdf
Enjoy!
Eamon.

zenrebok
August 12, 2014 6:31 pm

Yeah real smart Tuvalu, migrate from a 3rd world tropical Island, to a 3rd world temperate island.
At least you have tropical weather, and low energy (heating) needs, but don’t let that stop you claiming refugee status.
Welcome to New Zealand, a cooler climate, with very high living costs and a low wage economy to look forward too.
Not too worry, the shrinking middle income earners will be thrilled to give you tax payer provided state house, an unemployment benefit, free health care and free schools.
I mean its not like we’re working longer hours for less (in real terms) for our own benefit, no no, you wander down here, i’m sure I don’t need all those services you’ll exploit,…I mean utilize.
Ever had a serious Kiwi head cold during a New Zealand winter? bring the kids, i’m sure you’ll quickly get the difference between Green Policy and snot.
Although they are practically the same. At least snot can be amusing when properly aimed.
To quote a Kiwi Icon who had to emigrate to Australia to be recognized as a kiwi Icon…
“You don’t know how Lucky you are mate…”

Jeff Alberts
August 12, 2014 6:42 pm

Well, I moved from Northern Virginia to Western Washington. So I went from south to north. Oddly enough, it’s not colder or warmer here, it’s less cold and less warm. Much more moderate climate. I do miss massive thunderstorms, though. Just don’t get them out here.

Eve
August 12, 2014 6:58 pm

WillR, the cllimate is changing. Canada has lost 5.4 C in the winter since 2010. My husband and I are climate refugee’s also, moving from Southern Ontario to the Bahamas for 6 mths of the year. It may be getting too cold in the summer here to come back here for that. Friends from Ontario have moved to Florida and Mexico. Another friend from Calgary moved to Nicaragua. We Canadians are the 21st century climate refugee’s.

pat
August 12, 2014 8:02 pm

and the fake CAGW story continues to spread:
includes video with Ove Hoegh-Guldberg!
12 Aug: TheWeatherNetwork: Cheryl Santa Maria: New Zealand accepts climate change refugees from Tuvalu
According to news agency UPI, this is the first time refugees have blamed climate change on their displacement…
Experts suspect the family was granted special status because they had been living in New Zealand since 2007 and have close ties to the country.
Still, climate change migration expert François Gemenne told the Washington Post that “bilaterial or regional arrangements” may be necessary in the future to ensure the protection of people displaced by climate change…
http://www.theweathernetwork.com/news/articles/new-zealand-accepts-climate-change-refugees-from-tuvalu/33934/

August 13, 2014 7:00 am

hunter says:
Since when, during the era of cliamte hype and fear, has major media let facts stand in the way of a climate doom story?
FIFY

Jim South London
August 13, 2014 1:20 pm

Happy to take refugees from Climate Change.Just don’t mention boat loads headed from Iraq ,Syria ,Sudan Libya and Afghanistan.

Graphite
August 13, 2014 4:01 pm

As a Kiwi, it’s good to see my tax dollars at work — civil servants and lawyers beavering away in the best interests of the nation.
But brother, as a resident of Mangawhai, in what is laughingly referred to as the “winterless north” of this South Pacific rockpile, I would right now give my left testicle for a bit of AGW . . . it’s like Siberia in March here; worst winter in twenty years.
I’ll also endorse zenrebok’s comments and thank Mark and his Cats for this morning’s moment of amusement.

Barry Brill
August 14, 2014 3:41 pm

Roy – As Google would have told you, the Tribunal decision in [2014] NZIPT 501370-371 is at https://forms.justice.govt.nz/search/IPT/Documents/Deportation/pdf/rem_20140604_501370.pdf
NZ Willy points out that the New Zealand Immigration Tribunal recently denied refugee status to another would-be “climate refugee” from Tuvalu’s neighbor, Kiribati. Ioane Teitiota then appealed to the High Court, which ruled that the UN Convention was limited to persons “with a well-founded fear of persecution” – and did not extend to natural disasters or global warming.
The Judge said Teitoa’s attempt to expand the definition of a refugee was optimistic and novel, but not permissible. http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/politics/9444559/Climate-refugee-loses-appeal