Climate Change: Ecosystem-approaches in coastal belts urged

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UNB, Dhaka :
Environmental experts at a symposium here on Sunday stressed introducing ecosystem-based approaches in the country’ s coastal regions to cope with the climate change impacts and make the coastal communities climate-resilient ones.
Coastal communities in many parts of Asia, including Bangladesh, are particularly vulnerable to climate change, with increased severity of extreme wealth events directly affecting their lives and resources, they said.
The experts said healthy coastal ecosystems, including healthy mangrove forests, play a vital role in helping the coastal communities adapt to climate change, and ecosystem-based approaches can make a major contribution to the coastal community resilience.
The Mangroves For the Future (MFF) in collaboration with IUCN project — Ecosystems for Life: A Bangladesh-India Initiative-organised the two-day regional symposium on Coastal Community Resilience at Ruposhi Bangla Hotel in the capital, aiming to obtain
knowledge from other countries in South and Southeast Asia and share lessons and practical solutions for tackling complex coastal issues.
Environment and Forests Minister Anwar Hossain Manju, Environment and Forests Secretary Shafiqur Rahman Patwari, chief conservator of forests Yunus Ali, IUCN country representative Ishtiaq Uddin Ahmad and MFF senior adviser Dr Don Macintosh, spoke at the inaugural session of the symposium.
Anwar Hossain Manju said understanding how people living in coastal communities cope with climate-related hazards and other problems can help the policymakers design more proactive and comprehensive policies to support coastal communities’ resilience in the future.
Emphasising coastal management, he said about two million tonnes of silt falls in the Bay of Bengal each year which may create another Bangladesh-size landmass.
Addressing the first technical session, climate change expert Dr Atiq Rahman said Bangladesh is one of the most vulnerable countries to climate change because the country will face many more extreme events like flood, cyclone, erosion, storm surge, drought and erratic rainfall in the future.
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