24/7 Space News
WATER WORLD
Pacific climate pioneer still fears for island nation's future
Pacific climate pioneer still fears for island nation's future
By Laura CHUNG
Sydney (AFP) July 24, 2025

A founding father of the Pacific climate movement on Thursday welcomed an international court's decision on global warming but said he fears for the future of his almost 30 grandchildren on low-lying Kiribati.

Kiribati, a climate-threatened archipelago that is home to some 130,000 people, sits barely two metres (6.5 feet) above sea level, has little freshwater, no rivers and limited fertile land.

The International Court of Justice in The Hague declared Wednesday that states are obliged under international law to tackle climate change.

"There was a time when it really got me very depressed because of the realisation that there is not much that we can do about it," former Kiribati president Anote Tong, who led the remote nation for 12 years until 2016, told AFP.

"I've heard people about talking about climate grief, and perhaps that is what climate grief is all about: realising that you have no future, and understanding that my grandchildren, I've got a lot of grandchildren, I don't know what is going to happen to them."

"Previously, I spoke as a leader, now I speak as a grandfather on the climate issue."

Tong welcomed the "wonderful achievement" of the international court decision but warned it risked overshadowing the voices of those at the forefront of climate change.

"This is a human rights issue. It's not a legal issue," he said. "There is always a danger that we're not focusing on justice, but more on the legal aspects of the issue."

- 'How do we survive?' -

The UN's climate expert panel warned rising sea levels and coastal erosion could render some Pacific nations, including Kiribati, uninhabitable by 2060.

Tong, 73, said that during his lifetime, extreme weather events had increasingly destroyed crops and fresh water sources.

The climate leader said corals lie just off his property.

"I used to play with my kids when the tide was at its highest. Now, you can never do that because the waves are too strong," he said.

"That's definitely a change. The question is that, can our islands withstand the change?"

Tong said he feared a window of opportunity has passed.

He blamed the international community, including polluting countries and global bodies, which he said had "failed at every turn" to address climate change and ignored the plight of smaller island states.

"Our future is not assured," he said. "I've all but given up, but I can never afford to give up."

"We're still fighting the fight. The real question is: how do we survive? How do our grandchildren survive?"

Cook Islands wages war on 'plague' of hungry starfish
Rarotonga, Cook Islands (AFP) July 24, 2025 - Divers clutch wooden spears as they plunge beneath the waves, hunting hordes of hungry starfish destroying the coral reefs around the Cook Islands.

These makeshift tools are their best weapons in the war against crown-of-thorns starfish, a coral-munching species eating through tropical reefs already weakened by climate change.

The Cook Islands, a South Pacific nation of about 17,000 people, is in the grips of a years-long outbreak, says marine biologist Teina Rongo.

"It can completely kill off the entire reef, right around the island," said Rongo, who organises volunteers protecting the reefs fringing the isle of Rarotonga.

"I think there seems to be a Pacific-wide outbreak at the moment, because we're hearing other countries are facing similar challenges."

A single crown-of-thorns adult can eat more than 10 square metres (110 square feet) of reef each year, squeezing its stomach through its mouth to coat coral in digestive juices.

They pose a major threat to Australia's Great Barrier Reef, where scientists have developed robots that hunt down the prickly invertebrates and inject them with poison.

"At the moment, you basically kill them by injection," said researcher Sven Uthicke, from the Australian Institute of Marine Science.

"It could be vinegar, it could be lime juice or ox bile.

"Others are building chemical attraction traps. It's all very promising -- but it's in the development stage."

Rongo finds it quickest to pry the feasting starfish loose using a wooden stick cut from the dense timber of the Pacific Ironwood tree.

"Basically, we use a stick with a hook at the end," he said.

"We've made some modifications over time because we were getting pricked by these starfish. It's painful."

Named for their hundreds of venomous spikes, crown-of-thorns starfish have as many as 21 fleshy arms and can grow larger than a car tyre.

They are typically found in such low numbers that they are not considered a problem.

But sporadically populations explode in a feeding frenzy that rapidly strips the life from reefs.

- 'Plague proportions ' -

They spawn in "plague proportions", according to the Australian Institute of Marine Science, and are a major driver of coral loss.

From the Red Sea to the Pacific Ocean, crown-of-thorns outbreaks appear to be becoming both more frequent and more severe.

"Some argue that the crown-of-thorns has become chronic in the last few decades," said Rongo, talking about the reefs of the South Pacific.

Scientists suspect these outbreaks are triggered by a mix of factors, including nutrients leached into the sea from agriculture and fluctuations in natural predators.

But the damage they can cause is getting worse as reefs are weakened by climate change-fuelled coral bleaching and ocean acidification.

"This is why it's important for us to help the reef," says Rongo.

Scuba divers scour the Cook Islands' reefs for hard-to-spot starfish wedged into dimly lit crevices.

Once peeled off the coral, the starfish are pierced with a thick rope so they can be dragged back up to a waiting boat.

The day's haul is dumped into a plastic chest before the starfish are lugged ashore to be counted, measured and mulched for garden fertiliser.

They are known as "taramea" in Cook Islands Maori, which loosely translates to "spiky thing".

The volunteer divers working with Rongo and his environmental group Korero O Te Orau -- or Knowledge of the Land, Sky and Sea -- remove thousands of starfish every year.

Rongo is spurred by the devastation from the nation's last major infestation in the 1990s.

"I was part of that eradication effort.

"We were too late when we did decide to do something about it. It went on and ended up killing the reef."

Related Links
Water News - Science, Technology and Politics

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters
Tweet

RELATED CONTENT
The following news reports may link to other Space Media Network websites.
WATER WORLD
More than 80% of Tuvalu seeks Australian climate visa
Sydney (AFP) July 23, 2025
More than 80 percent of Pacific nation Tuvalu's population is seeking a landmark climate visa to live in Australia as rising seas lap at its shores, official figures showed Wednesday. Australia is offering visas to Tuvalu citizens each year under a climate migration deal Canberra has billed as "the first agreement of its kind anywhere in the world". "We received extremely high levels of interest in the ballot with 8,750 registrations, which includes family members of primary registrants," t ... read more

WATER WORLD
Jensen Huang, AI visionary in a leather jacket

Club Med taps ex-Carrefour executive as new CEO

New twist in EU-China patents standoff at WTO

ISS update: Crew-11 enters quarantine three weeks before launch

WATER WORLD
Lunar soil shows promise for in-situ oxygen and fuel production

SpaceX scrubs launch of 2 SES mPOWER satellites

Electrolyzer experiment from SwRI and UTSA to fly in low gravity test mission

Rocket Lab partners with Bollinger Shipyards to transform Neutron sea recovery platform

WATER WORLD
ExoMars completes successful Earth test of record breaking parachutes

Ancient river systems reveal Mars was wetter than we thought

Chinese researchers craft high fidelity Mars soil simulant to support future missions

Largest piece of Mars on Earth sells for $5.3M in Sotheby's auction

WATER WORLD
Six Chinese universities to launch new low altitude space major this fall

International deep space alliance launched in Hefei China

China launches international association to boost global access to deep space research

Chinese Long March Rockets Make International Debut at Paris Air Show

WATER WORLD
Eutelsat strikes global satellite internet deal with UK govt

Globalstar selects SpaceX to launch final replacement satellites

UK invests $191 mn in European satellite firm Eutelsat

AST SpaceMobile adds 100 million in non dilutive funding to support manufacturing expansion

WATER WORLD
Urgent need for 'global approach' on AI regulation: UN tech chief

Amazon shuts down Shanghai AI lab: source

New copper alloy delivers shape memory performance at extreme cold

Microsoft halts China-based tech support for Pentagon systems

WATER WORLD
Alien life clues may emerge from deep sea volcanic vents on Earth

One billion years of protein evolution reveals surprising design flexibility

NASA Research Shows Path Toward Protocells on Titan

Astronomers observe birth of a solar system for first time

WATER WORLD
Fossil object 2023 KQ14 challenges Planet Nine theory with unique distant orbit

UH Researchers Help Solve Uranus Heat Mystery

Unexpected Dust Patterns Found on Uranus Moons Confound Scientists

SwRI study shows Europa's icy surface constantly reshaping

Subscribe Free To Our Daily Newsletters




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2024 - Space Media Network. All websites are published in Australia and are solely subject to Australian law and governed by Fair Use principals for news reporting and research purposes. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA news reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. All articles labeled "by Staff Writers" include reports supplied to Space Media Network by industry news wires, PR agencies, corporate press officers and the like. Such articles are individually curated and edited by Space Media Network staff on the basis of the report's information value to our industry and professional readership. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) Statement Our advertisers use various cookies and the like to deliver the best ad banner available at one time. All network advertising suppliers have GDPR policies (Legitimate Interest) that conform with EU regulations for data collection. By using our websites you consent to cookie based advertising. If you do not agree with this then you must stop using the websites from May 25, 2018. Privacy Statement. Additional information can be found here at About Us.