UNDERWATER PRANK DID NOT STOP HIGH RISE UNITS IN MALDIVES

The Dharumavantha Hospital at 25 storeys is the tallest building in the Maldives. Followed by several Social Housing developments with a total construction area of 214,000 square meters and a building height of 74.95 meters, (15 Storeys). There are 3,200 Social Housing Units project in Maldives located in Hulhumale Phase-2 consisting of 7 buildings of 15-floors each with one floor underground.

No Concern of Sea Level

President Mohamed Nasheed, Vice President Dr Mohamed Waheed and 11 cabinet ministers in 2009 donned scuba gear and submerged 4 meters below the surface of sea to hold the world’s first underwater cabinet meeting, for a stronger climate change agreement in the upcoming climate summit in 2009. “We are trying to send our message to let the world know what is happening and what will happen to the Maldives if climate change isn’t checked” said President Nasheed, speaking to the press when he resurfaced from underwater.

“What we are trying to make people realize is that the Maldives is a frontline state. This is not merely an issue for the Maldives but for the world. If we can’t save the Maldives today, you can’t save the rest of the world tomorrow”, said President Nasheed further.

During the 30-minute meeting held in the turquoise lagoon off Girifushi Island, with a backdrop of corals, the President, the Vice President and eleven other Cabinet ministers signed a resolution calling for global cuts in carbon emissions. President Nasheed and the ministers used a waterproof pencils to sign the declaration, ‘SOS from the frontline’, printed on a white plastic slate, to be presented before the landmark UN climate summit in Copenhagen in December.

“Climate change is happening and it threatens the rights and security of everyone on Earth” the SOS message said. The SOS, endorsed by the cabinet, further called for people to “unite in global effort to halt further temperature rises, by slashing carbon dioxide emissions to a safe level of 350 parts per million”. The Maldives is calling for an agreement at Copenhagen that will help reduce carbon dioxide concentration in the atmosphere to no more than 350 part per million. This would require a 40 per cent global reduction in green house gas emissions by 2020 from 1990 levels.

When asked what would happen if Copenhagen fails, the President said that “we are all going to die”. However, he said the Maldives would be the first country to adopt any amicable climate agreement that comes through Copenhagen. In March this year President Nasheed announced that the Malives would be the first country in the world to go carbon neutral, and the Maldives would achieve the target by 2020. President Nasheed, who is an influential voice on climate change, is a certified open water diver, while other ministers took diving lessons recent weeks.

After the dive, signed wet suits of the President and the ministers will be auctioned on www.protectmaldives.com.mv to raise funds for coral reef protection in the Maldives.

 

5 Comments

  1. Warren says:

    When asked what would happen if Copenhagen fails, President Nasheed said that “we are all going to die”. However, he said the Maldives would be the first country to adopt any amicable climate agreement that comes through Copenhagen!!

  2. I. Billet says:

    High rise apartment buildings generate more emissions but there is no alternative and no other way the burgeoning population can be accommodated given the limited amount of land available.The smell from motor bike emissions permeates the air as you walk around the beach front causing you to wonder how the hell this atoll could ever be regarded as a tropical paradise.

  3. Sally Anne says:

    It was predicted that the Maldives would be completely underwater by 2028. Looks like being another failed prediction by Guterres and his henchmen at the UN.

  4. Peter Lucas says:

    The more you read about this so called warming the less inclined you are to believe it. When the opportunity to convert our coal fired power stations to gas, that would create a reduction in emissions by 40%, they banned it. They are now banning gas appliances in new homes.

  5. Bonza Wright says:

    If emissions are really the problem then we have to go with Nuclear like France did in the 1960’s. Gas, which has far less emissions, should be adopted but they have blocked that option in Australia.

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