Mal\u00e9, Maldives<\/center><\/div><\/p><\/div>\r\n\r\nDo you think there there a \u201cPlan B\u201d for countries like the Maldives? <\/strong>\r\nI don\u2019t think there is a plan B because I keep saying there is no planet B. There\u2019s no plan B, even if we wanted to leave people will not leave. We are not only talking about the Maldives, Manhattan is as low as the Maldives. Now, can you see all these people leaving this island? No, I can\u2019t see that. And in my view they would go in for more adaptation measures, so we must be looking at more technology for adaptation. \r\n\r\nYou\u2019re also trained as a marine scientist and just received the Sylvia Earle Award at the BLUE Ocean Film Festival. What do you think besides climate change are the greatest threats to the world\u2019s oceans?<\/strong>\r\nUsing the oceans as a dumping ground. The amount of garbage, waste going into the oceans. Not just the huge islands of rubbish forming in the middle of the oceans, but also invisible waste going into these oceans. People are dumping all sorts of lethal chemicals coming from fertilizers, coming from the kind of living that we are living. And of course on top of all that ocean acidification, because of temperature rise, is having a very strong stress on the reefs. Reefs need the right temperature for it to thrive and survive. So we are losing the reefs, we are losing the biodiversity, and we are losing\u2026 the bluefin, just one example. The type of fishing that others are doing. The Maldives is fishing one by one, we do not purse seine, so our fishing is environmentally friendly. But when you do, when you huge big trawlers purse seining everything from the floor to the surface of the ocean, then half the time more than 50 percent of your catch is the catch that you don\u2019t want to catch. And that is having a very negative impact on biodiversity. So the ocean has the fishing methods, ocean acidification, and waste. \r\n\r\nWhat is next for you?<\/strong>\r\nI want to keep on advocating on climate change issues. And also I\u2019ve always believed that good governance is the most important adaptation measure, so I want to advocate for building political parties and other adaptation work. I want to concentrate more on how we may be able to survive now. For the Maldives, the deed probably is now done. The world is going to heat beyond two degrees. And that is going to melt the polar ice caps, and we will find a situation where seas will rise. So we must now find proper adaptation and again I would say financially viable adaptation measures. "},"comments":{"comments_amount":0}}}