Original report from Phnom Penh
20 October 2009
Global climate change will have a serious impact on Cambodia’s economy and society, the UN’s resident coordinator in Phnom Penh warned Tuesday.
Speaking on the second day of a climate change conference in Phnom Penh, Douglas Broderick said farmers in remote areas would be especially hard hit.
“Changes in rainfall patterns can have devastating effects on livelihoods, as 80 percent of farmers grow just one crop of rice per year,” Broderick said. “This has the potential to impact greatly on the economy, but also has implications for food security and poverty reduction as a whole.”
Cambodia’s economy is heavily dependent on its agriculture, and its coastal areas, which benefit from tourism, can also be affected by global warming.
For example, Broderick said, coastal degradation in Koh Kong province can push people beyond their limits to cope. Meanwhile, climate change might also put pressure on Cambodia as communities migrate from the Mekong River system or river ecosystems suffer.
Environment Minister Mok Maret, who is also chairman of the National Climate Change Committee, said on Tuesday that the government has already taken steps in response to climate change.
Prime Minister Hun Sen on Monday called on rich nations to provide assistance to poor countries like Cambodia to effectively address climate change.
Broderick warned that failure to deal with climate change impacts could undermine the nation’s “millennium development goals,” causing problems in the economy and in social development.
Speaking on the second day of a climate change conference in Phnom Penh, Douglas Broderick said farmers in remote areas would be especially hard hit.
“Changes in rainfall patterns can have devastating effects on livelihoods, as 80 percent of farmers grow just one crop of rice per year,” Broderick said. “This has the potential to impact greatly on the economy, but also has implications for food security and poverty reduction as a whole.”
Cambodia’s economy is heavily dependent on its agriculture, and its coastal areas, which benefit from tourism, can also be affected by global warming.
For example, Broderick said, coastal degradation in Koh Kong province can push people beyond their limits to cope. Meanwhile, climate change might also put pressure on Cambodia as communities migrate from the Mekong River system or river ecosystems suffer.
Environment Minister Mok Maret, who is also chairman of the National Climate Change Committee, said on Tuesday that the government has already taken steps in response to climate change.
Prime Minister Hun Sen on Monday called on rich nations to provide assistance to poor countries like Cambodia to effectively address climate change.
Broderick warned that failure to deal with climate change impacts could undermine the nation’s “millennium development goals,” causing problems in the economy and in social development.
2 comments:
Big country like: US,Russia,China,India, European are responsible for these climate change...
On the wake of Ketsana storm that left Cambodia devastated, PM Hun Sen called on the Internatinal communities for help. Oh! IRONY, he used to criticize in harsh words those same Organizations. After all the PM is not as tough as he wants you to believe. He must stop the deforestation which is partly responsable of the disaster
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