Skip to main content
Open this photo in gallery:

The ruins of a monastery are seen after a riverbank collapsed into the water in Ta Dar U village, Bago, Myanmar, on Feb. 6, 2020.ANN WANG/Reuters

Three years ago, the villagers watched as the Sittaung River on Myanmar’s southeast coast crept closer to them, swollen by powerful tidal surges from the Gulf of Mottama that eroded its banks.

Eventually, the 1,500 residents of Ta Dar U had to accept the inevitable: Move or be washed away.

Dismantling their wooden homes, they relocated several kilometres inland, away from the fertile fields they had cultivated for decades.

“Where we now see water, our farming land used to be,” farmer Tint Khaing said. “It was very big, nearly three hours’ walking distance. We all lost our farmland to the sea.”

Ta Dar U is among hundreds of villages at the front line of a climate crisis in the country, formerly known as Burma, where extreme weather patterns and rising sea levels have amplified and accelerated natural erosion.

Environmentalists consider Myanmar to be particularly vulnerable. It was among the top three countries affected by extreme weather between 1998 and 2018 on the Global Climate Risk Index, published by environmental think-tank Germanwatch.

Sea levels are projected to rise about 13 centimetres by 2020, putting about 2.5 million coastal residents at risk, said Myint Thein, a U.S.-based groundwater consultant and member of Myanmar’s natural water resources committee.

“Flooding will be worst during the rainy season and high tide, dragging salty water up into the land,” he said.

Rapid erosion has already devoured 10 villages in the past four years, said Jos van der Zanden, chief technical adviser to the Gulf of Mottama Project, a Swiss-based organization that provides assistance to displaced villagers.

FADING FUTURE

After their homes fell into the sea, the people of Ta Dar U, mostly rice farmers, scattered across the delta.

Saltwater contaminated their lands and they were forced to take up new occupations, with little success.

Nearly 200 students now travel hours every day to attend school after their own, which once stood near the town centre, was reduced to a crumbling pile of rubble on the riverbank.

“If the erosion continues at this rate, the future of the students will fade as well,” said Myo Min Thein, the sole teacher at a makeshift school, who said he is struggling to teach the 26 students, ages 4 to 14, by himself.

Myanmar’s climate change department has drafted plans to address rising waters, but is not involved in resettling those displaced, deputy director Thin Thuzar Win said.

An official from the disaster-management department said it did not have specific programmes for those displaced by riverbank erosion. Regional government officials did not respond to Reuters’ requests for comment.

Low-lying villages should be moved immediately to areas at least seven metres above sea level, Myint Thein said.

“It will be costly, but it must be done,” he said. “The environment has changed, so the people must learn to adapt.”

Our Morning Update and Evening Update newsletters are written by Globe editors, giving you a concise summary of the day’s most important headlines. Sign up today.

Follow related authors and topics

Authors and topics you follow will be added to your personal news feed in Following.

Interact with The Globe