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This Community In Alaska Is Relocating Because Of Climate Change | ThinkProgress
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This Community In Alaska Is Relocating Because Of Climate Change
by Jess Colarossi Oct 6, 2015 12:41pm
About 500 miles west of Anchorage, the Yup'ik Eskimo community has begun the elaborate process
of relocating their village nine miles away from its current location. The community has become a
news centerpiece in recent years, commonly being referred to as "the sinking village."
Thedevastating effects of the world's changing climate are predominately evident in Newtok, and it
is being considered as a possible national model for moving entire communities that are facing the
effects of climate change.
The State of Alaska is currently seeking a portion of a nearly $1 billion National Disaster Resilience
Competition (NDRC) grant which helps to move and assist threatened villages and adapt to the
threats posed by climate change. In the NDRC proposal released Friday, Alaska State officials are
proposing $62.6 million of the NDRC grant money be used for relocating 62 families from Newtok to
new homes in a town called Mertarvik. They are also seeking funding $162.4 million in relief for for
three other vulnerable areas -- Emmonak, Galena and Teller. Newtok is the only community that has
begun a physical move thus far.
A 2011 state report quoted a Traditional Council member saying, "This will be our final move.
Mertarvik is going to be a lifetime permanent location, higher ground with rock underneath."
Though Newtok is the furthest along in the relocation process compared to other communities
planning to follow their steps, it is still might not be far enough. Even the highest point in the village
-- a school that sits perched atop 20-foot pilings -- could be underwater by 2017. It has been
estimated that homes may not be able to move to the new location until 2018 or possibly later given
the number of bureaucratic and economic setbacks.
Sitting on a permafrost, which has been rapidly melting due to rising temperatures, Newtok
residents reported that 50 to 75 feet of land each year are being washed away. The village is also
encircled by The Ninglick river, which has essentially been eating the land out from under the
village. Alaska is warming at a rate two to three times faster than the rest of the United States and
the average winter temperature has risen 6.3 degrees over the past 50 years, leaving very little time
to spare.
The Government Accountability Office estimated that 31 villages in Alaska are in imminent danger
from erosion and rising sea level caused by climate change. During Obama's landmark visit to Alaska
last month -- making him the first U.S. President to travel above of the Arctic Circle -- he traveled to
two other communities both facing major threats from climate change, Kotzebue and Kivalian.
The national resilience competition will not be easy, with other devastated areas such as Hurricane
Sandy victims and New Orleans also vying for relief. Funds will be granted to the most impacted,
distressed, and needy eligible communities. Alaska is one of 40 finalists for the grant money. The
public is invited to participate in the development for the second phase of the NDRC application for
the state until October 17, with final submissions for competition due October 27. The village is also
trying to obtain funding through the U.S. Federal Emergency Management Agency.
Mertarvik, the new location for Newtok, currently has six houses built. Further plans include two
intersecting airport runways, a wind farm, a water plant, a small boat harbor and a community
garden.
This is not the first time a community has been displaced due to the impacts of climate change. Last
year a small town on Taro Island, the capital of Choiseul Province in the Solomon Islands, became
the first town in the Pacific Islands to plan to relocate their entire population of about 1,000
residents. Other island communities, such as Kiribati, one of the Pacific's lowest-lying island nations,
have also acknowledged that the relocation of their people may be inevitable.
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