Live
Live

Ever-more frequent cyclones, rising sea levels, floods, erosion, drought and unreliable rains have already displaced millions, either into city slums or abroad.

Those that stay have no choice but to find new ways of working.

Some farmers have stopped growing crops, opting instead to grow shrimp in the brackish water, or crab-fattening – capturing wild crabs and feeding them up to then sell – as well as rearing ducks, which fetch a high price in Dhaka eateries.

Bangladesh Rice Research Institute (BRRI) has created new salt-resistant varieties of the staple crop.

“Normal rice does not grow in saline water. Salinity saps the energy of rice stalks,” explained scientist Alamgir Hossain.

BRRI has now created a strain that can grow in water with triple the saline levels that normal rice can cope with, he said.

This has offered “new hope” to farmers in coastal regions, where seawater is increasingly encroaching the land, he added.

But Saiful Islam, a climate expert at Bangladesh University of Engineering and Technology, said such efforts are a drop in the ocean.

“We need to spend billions to raise and strengthen embankments along our big coastline. We need to create mangrove forests along the coastal belt to work as natural barriers to cyclones, subsidence and sea level rise.”

“We need to build new roads, preserve rainwater and create alternate livelihoods for millions of people. Just inventing crops won’t do. Bangladesh alone can’t do it,” said Islam.

He added that Western nations were “responsible for emitting most of the greenhouse gases” and so needed to help.

Islam said Bangladesh received “barely any” of proposed $100bn set aside by developed nations for adaptation to and mitigation of climate change.