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New islands could solve Bangladesh land crisis: experts

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https://www.outlookindia.com/newssc...-solve-bangladesh-land-crisis-experts/1188156

14 November 2017 Last Updated at 5:52 pm
New islands could solve Bangladesh land crisis: experts


Dhaka, Nov 14: Dozens of new islands have emerged from the waters around Bangladesh over the last decade, providing a possible solution to the existential threat that rising sea levels pose to the low-lying coastal nation.

The government said yesterday that 29 islands with a combined area of 125,370 acres (507 sq kms) had emerged from the Bay of Bengal since 2007.


Every year Himalayan rivers carry an estimated one billion tonnes of silts and deposit them in the Bay of Bengal off the coast of Bangladesh, forming islands in the shallow waters.

Many of these islands, known as chars in Bangladesh, are already inhabited and experts told AFP they could mitigate the threat posed by global warming.

"Every year Bangladesh has new land emerging and new land being devoured by rivers and sea," said Maminul Haque Sarker, head of the Center for Environment and Geographic Information Services.

He said studies by the Dhaka research centre had shown a net gain of territory of around 12-14 sq kms.


Most of the new land is near the estuary of the Meghna river, which is the confluence of the main tributaries of the two main Himalayan rivers of the Ganges and the Brahmaputra.

One of the islands has controversially been earmarked as a possible temporary base for the hundreds of thousands of Rohingya refugees from Myanmar currently living in squalid -- mostly makeshift -- camps in southern Bangladesh.

The United Nations says 615,000 refugees from the Muslim minority have crossed into Bangladesh from its Buddhist neighbour since late August.

The influx has overwhelmed existing facilities in the densely populated country, and authorities have struggled to find alternative land to house them.

A recent World Bank study projected that 40 per cent of productive land in southern Bangladesh would be submerged by the year 2080 due to a rise in sea levels.

A decade ago the influential Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) said a one-metre (three-foot) rise in sea levels would flood 17 per cent of Bangladesh and create 20 million refugees by 2050.

Local scientists, however, criticised the study for failing to take into account the silt islands, which are highly fertile.


Water expert Zahirul Haque Khan told AFP dams could be set up to trap the vast amounts of sediment that flows from Bangladesh's rivers into the sea every year.

"Bangladesh can gain hundreds of square kilometres of new land by trapping silt through cross dams and engineering interventions," said Khan, director of Institute of Water Modelling in Dhaka.
 
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We now just need technical advise from the Dutch experts,as they are the architects of this technology.
True. I'm not sure why there haven't been any govt approach so far to the Dutches on issues related to this. I guess mitigating affects of climate change and benefit from it wherever possible is not a high priority for the govt.
 
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True. I'm not sure why there haven't been any govt approach so far to the Dutches on issues related to this. I guess mitigating affects of climate change and benefit from it wherever possible is not a high priority for the govt.
We now just need technical advise from the Dutch experts,as they are the architects of this technology.
Netherlands is collaborating with the Bangladesh government to formulate an ambitious delta plan.
it was your post @Banglar Bir :D
https://defence.pk/pdf/threads/how-bangladesh-is-solving-its-water-crisis.527675/
 
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http://www.dhakatribune.com/bangladesh/2017/11/14/experts-new-islands-solve-bangladesh-land-crisis/
Experts: New islands could solve Bangladesh land crisis
  • AFP
  • Published at 06:00 PM November 14, 2017

Buffalos are seen in the Thengar Char island in the Bay of Bengal, Bangladesh, February 2, 2017Reuters


Every year Himalayan rivers carry an estimated one billion tones of silts and deposit them in the Bay of Bengal off the coast of Bangladesh, forming islands in the shallow waters

Dozens of new islands have emerged from the waters around Bangladesh over the last decade, providing a possible solution to the existential threat that rising sea levels pose to the low-lying coastal nation.

The government said Monday that 29 islands with a combined area of 125,370 acres (507 square kilometres) had emerged from the Bay of Bengal since 2007.

Every year Himalayan rivers carry an estimated one billion tones of silts and deposit them in the Bay of Bengal off the coast of Bangladesh, forming islands in the shallow waters.

Many of these islands, known as chars in Bangladesh, are already inhabited and experts told AFP they could mitigate the threat posed by global warming.

“Every year Bangladesh has new land emerging and new land being devoured by rivers and sea,” said Maminul Haque Sarker, head of the Center for Environment and Geographic Information Services.

He said studies by the Dhaka research centre had shown a net gain of territory of around 12-14 square kilometres.

Most of the new land is near the estuary of the Meghna river, which is the confluence of the main tributaries of the two main Himalayan rivers of the Ganges and the Brahmaputra.

One of the islands has controversially been earmarked as a possible temporary base for the hundreds of thousands of Rohingya refugees from Myanmar currently living in squalid — mostly makeshift — camps in southern Bangladesh.

The United Nations says 615,000 refugees from the Muslim minority have crossed into Bangladesh from its Buddhist neighbour since late August.

The influx has overwhelmed existing facilities in the densely populated country, and authorities have struggled to find alternative land to house them.

A recent World Bank study projected that 40% of productive land in southern Bangladesh would be submerged by the year 2080 due to a rise in sea levels.

A decade ago the influential Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) said a one-metre (three-foot) rise in sea levels would flood 17% of Bangladesh and create 20 million refugees by 2050.

Local scientists, however, criticized the study for failing to take into account the silt islands, which are highly fertile.

Water expert Zahirul Haque Khan told AFP dams could be set up to trap the vast amounts of sediment that flows from Bangladesh’s rivers into the sea every year.

“Bangladesh can gain hundreds of square kilometres of new land by trapping silt through cross dams and engineering interventions,” said Khan, director of Institute of Water Modelling in Dhaka.
 
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Ooooooh reeeallly.....F*cking hilarious...... chars come and go... it's an eternal cycle.... they are part of the solution but hardly a manifestation of climate change..... it's funny how the media thinks they have discovered something amazing
 
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Haters say Bangladesh will be under water by this and that year :pop::pop::pop:

You need to demand more land from India. Partition didn't take into account that a large portion of your country would end up as Atlantis in a good few years.
 
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You need to demand more land from India. Partition didn't take into account that a large portion of your country would end up as Atlantis in a good few years.
By the time our land ends up as Atlantis, India and Pakistan will have nuked each other out of existence.
 
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By the time our land ends up as Atlantis, India and Pakistan will have nuked each other out of existence.

Highly unlikely. There's more of an Indo-Pak war here on PDF than anywhere else. The rising sea levels across you is a reality though
 
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Highly unlikely. There's more of an Indo-Pak war here on PDF than anywhere else. The rising sea levels across you is a reality though

And I gather you have actually seen this 'reality' from the ground in Bangladesh, as opposed to sashaying around PDF and leaving choice comments as a hydraulics and bathymetry expert? :-)
 
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By the time our land ends up as Atlantis, India and Pakistan will have nuked each other out of existence.


Facts on the ground proves otherwise.

BD is a delta..... flooding is a fact of life and a boon for us.... it's our lot and we are well prepared for the situation.

Climate change is a reality and sea levels will rise. But here is the thing when sea levels rise sediments proportionately is pushed back in delta areas due to pressure differtials. It's basic science.

We will manage. Bay of Bengal is shallow and sediment deposition creates natural boundaries.

We should not underestimate sea levels rises but let's keep things and basic science in mind and not lose our common sense by believing the hyperbole.

The areas most at risk is low lying non delta landmass around the world.
 
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Facts on the ground proves otherwise.
BD is a delta..... flooding is a fact of life and a boon for us.... it's our lot and we are well prepared for the situation.
Climate change is a reality and sea levels will rise. But here is the thing when sea levels rise sediments proportionately is pushed back in delta areas due to pressure differentials. It's basic science.
We will manage. Bay of Bengal is shallow and sediment deposition creates natural boundaries.
We should not underestimate sea levels rises but let's keep things and basic science in mind and not lose our common sense by believing the hyperbole.
The areas most at risk is low lying non delta landmass around the world.
Bangladesh is the product of the sediment deposition from the Himalayan range,a vast fertile alluvial plain,this gradual process has been ongoing for the past millenniums. Our country being one of the top as a Gangetic delta.
To preserve or coastal landmass and low lying areas from the scourge of Global warming, necessary dykes ,etc needs to be undertaken urgently along with numerous afforestation projects.
 
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http://www.dailymail.co.uk/wires/af...nds-solve-Bangladesh-land-crisis-experts.html

New islands could solve Bangladesh land crisis: experts
By Afp

Published: 12:01 GMT, 14 November 2017 | Updated: 12:01 GMT, 14 November 2017

wire-1719790-1510660875-526_634x421.jpg

+1

Dozens of new islands have emerged from the waters around Bangladesh over the last decade, providing a possible solution to the existential threat that rising sea levels pose to the low-lying coastal nation

Dozens of new islands have emerged from the waters around Bangladesh over the last decade, providing a possible solution to the existential threat that rising sea levels pose to the low-lying coastal nation.


The government said Monday that 29 islands with a combined area of 125,370 acres (507 square kilometres) had emerged from the Bay of Bengal since 2007.


Every year Himalayan rivers carry an estimated one billion tonnes of silts and deposit them in the Bay of Bengal off the coast of Bangladesh, forming islands in the shallow waters.


Many of these islands, known as chars in Bangladesh, are already inhabited and experts told AFP they could mitigate the threat posed by global warming.

"Every year Bangladesh has new land emerging and new land being devoured by rivers and sea," said Maminul Haque Sarker, head of the Center for Environment and Geographic Information Services.

He said studies by the Dhaka research centre had shown a net gain of territory of around 12-14 square kilometres.

Most of the new land is near the estuary of the Meghna river, which is the confluence of the main tributaries of the two main Himalayan rivers of the Ganges and the Brahmaputra.

One of the islands has controversially been earmarked as a possible temporary base for the hundreds of thousands of Rohingya refugees from Myanmar currently living in squalid -- mostly makeshift -- camps in southern Bangladesh.

The United Nations says 615,000 refugees from the Muslim minority have crossed into Bangladesh from its Buddhist neighbour since late August.

The influx has overwhelmed existing facilities in the densely populated country, and authorities have struggled to find alternative land to house them.

A recent World Bank study projected that 40 percent of productive land in southern Bangladesh would be submerged by the year 2080 due to a rise in sea levels.

A decade ago the influential Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) said a one-metre (three-foot) rise in sea levels would flood 17 per cent of Bangladesh and create 20 million refugees by 2050.

Local scientists, however, criticised the study for failing to take into account the silt islands, which are highly fertile.

Water expert Zahirul Haque Khan told AFP dams could be set up to trap the vast amounts of sediment that flows from Bangladesh's rivers into the sea every year.


"Bangladesh can gain hundreds of square kilometres of new land by trapping silt through cross dams and engineering interventions," said Khan, director of Institute of Water Modelling in Dhaka.
 
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