Current:Home > NewsPanamanian tribe to be relocated from coastal island due to climate change: "There's no other option" -MoneyStream
Panamanian tribe to be relocated from coastal island due to climate change: "There's no other option"
View
Date:2025-04-17 13:23:48
For hundreds of years, the ocean has protected the Guna Yala culture on Cardi Sugdub, or Crab Island, located off the coast of Panama.
On the island, every square inch is occupied by about a thousand members of the Guna Yala tribe. There are no cars or motorcycles, people dress in traditional attire, and residents still speak their native tongue. Generations ago, members of the tribe settled on the island to escape aggression from Spanish colonizers and the Panamanian government.
But now, things are changing: Rising water levels are threatening the island and other nearby sites, forcing one of the largest migrations due to climate change in modern history.
Flooding on the low-lying islands has become more frequent due to the effects of sea level rise.
Magdalena Martinez, a resident of the island, told CBS News in Spanish that the flooding is a "sad reality" of life on the island. But in 30 years, scientists predict the islands will be completely underwater. Overpopulation is also an issue, but climate change is the biggest threat, said Laurel Avila, a member of Panama's Ministry of the Environment.
Avila explained that increased carbon emissions have raised the earth's temperature and caused glaciers to melt. This means water molecules expand, eventually leading to flooding like the kind seen on Crab Island. In the 1960s, the water around the islands rose at a rate of around 1 millimeter per year. Now, though, it's rising at about 3.5 millimeters a year, according to tide-gauge data from the Panama Canal Authority and satellite data from the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.
"(The tribe has) to be moved. There's no other option," Avila said. "The rise of the sea level is not going to stop."
It's a reality that the island's residents have only recently started to accept, after years of putting up a fight. Some members of the tribe see the move as a problem caused by the industrialized world unfairly bearing down on them and the culture they've defended.
Some residents, including Augusto Boyd, have put up a fight by using rocks and remnants of coral reefs to try to expand the island and keep the water at bay. However, he's realized it's a losing battle and the only option is to leave it all behind.
"Filling, filling, filling all the time, because the water doesn't stop. It keeps going up," he told CBS News in Spanish. "It's difficult. Everything you did here stays behind."
There is a place for the tribe to relocate to, but it's a stark, cookie-cutter subdivision with rows of houses that could not be more different than life on Cardi Sugdub. It's being built on land owned by the tribe, with the majority of the funding coming from the Panamanian government.
While life will be different on the mainland, Martinez says she knows the tribe's traditions will carry on.
"We carry that here, inside," she said.
- In:
- Panama
- Climate Change
- Environment
Manuel Bojorquez is a CBS News national correspondent based in Miami. He joined CBS News in 2012 as a Dallas-based correspondent and was promoted to national correspondent for the network's Miami bureau in January 2017. Bojorquez reports across all CBS News broadcasts and platforms.
Twitter InstagramveryGood! (7)
Related
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- El Salvador's President Proposes Using Bitcoin As Legal Tender
- Save 45% On It Cosmetics Finishing Powder To Get Rid of Shine and Create a Long-Lasting Airbrushed Look
- Detectives Just Used DNA To Solve A 1956 Double Homicide. They May Have Made History
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- Adidas won't challenge Black Lives Matter over three-stripes trademark
- Bruce Willis’ Wife Emma Heming Reacts to Comment About Getting Her “5 Minutes” of Fame
- TikTok Star Alix Earle Talks Festival Must-Haves and Her Forever 21 X Juicy Couture Campaign
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- China-Taiwan tension is soaring and the U.S. is directly involved. Here's what to know.
Ranking
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Jason Sudeikis Is a Soccer Dad in Training Thanks to His and Olivia Wilde's Son Otis
- Vanderpump Rules' Raquel Leviss Breaks Silence on Tom Sandoval Scandal
- Latvian foreign minister urges NATO not to overreact to Russia's plans for tactical nukes in Belarus
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- U.N. pushes for Russia-Ukraine deal to protect Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant, warns of more dangerous phase
- Seal Praises Daughter Leni's Humility as She Follows in Her Mom Heidi Klum's Modeling Footsteps
- Russian sought for extradition by U.S. over alleged tech sales to arms company back home after escape from Italy
Recommendation
Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
U.K. cows could get methane suppressing products in effort to reduce farm greenhouse gas emissions
Women's rights activist built a cookware empire that pays tribute to her culture
Kim Kardashian’s SKIMS Perfects Activewear With Squat-Proof Performance Collection
The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
At least 20 killed as landslide hits Congo villagers cleaning clothes in mountain stream
A college student asked ChatGPT to write a letter to get out of a parking ticket – and it worked
Pope Francis, day after being discharged from hospital, presides over Palm Sunday Mass