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A Visit to Tuvalu, Surrounded by the Rising Pacific (24 photos)

Fiona Goodall, a photographer working with Getty Images, recently visited the tiny South Pacific island nation of Tuvalu, a country battling rising sea levels with limited resources. Goodall reports that high tides regularly bring flooding that “inundates taro plantations, floods either side of the airport runway and affects peoples homes.” While a study released in February showed that Tuvalu’s land area had actually increased by 2.9 per cent since 1970, due mostly to wave-driven beach buildup, the elevation of the nation’s nine islands was not growing—while the sea has been rising by approximately 0.2 inches (5mm) every year, above the global average, since 1993. The government of Tuvalu is working with public and private groups from around the Pacific to develop hardy crops, shore up vulnerable beaches, and work toward a goal of becoming 100% renewable energy-dependent by 2025.

From the air, the Pacific Ocean (left) and Te Namo Lagoon (right) are separated by a thin strip of land—the atoll of Funafuti, Tuvalu, photographed on August 15, 2018. (Fiona Goodall / Getty for Lumix)
https://www.theatlantic.com/photo/2018/08/a-visit-to-tuvalu-surrounded-by-the-rising-pacific/567622/