Guyana’s first climate change refugees
Students cross a bridge over the Mahaica Creek
Students cross a bridge over the Mahaica Creek

– who don’t know what climate change is

By Neil Marks
Photos by Samuel Maughn

“Iz na da mek we come out hay.”

MRS Doodnauth butts in, using her Guyanese creole tongue, as her husband, Roopnarine, is being interviewed about the fact that the effects of climate change are what led the family to abandon their home and farmlands in the Mahaica Creek and relocate to an area identified by the authorities. She was clear climate change was not the reason.

“And what’s the reason?”

Khemwantie Ramkissoon
Khemwantie Ramkissoon

“Too much rain,” she says. “We never see so much rain before; every now and then you in flood water, sometimes for months.”

“What is climate change?”

She returns a blank stare. You get a similar reaction when you ask the question of other families who now occupy Hope Estate, where the families were given modest homes by the charitable organisation Food For The Poor, after they decided to leave the creek. They may have heard the word before, but have no idea what climate change is about.

Ramdasee Sarju
Ramdasee Sarju

“I really don’t understand,” Doodnauth says.

It is now 10 years since extreme rainfall caused widespread flooding which devastated the coastal lowland areas of Guyana, which is below sea level and prone to flooding.

Official figures show that the 2005 floods caused an estimated US$465 million in damage, or just about 59 percent of the country’s GDP at the time.

That major flood was followed by others, which resulted from severe rainfall events in the years to follow.

The families of the Mahaica Creek were the collateral damage of the extreme rainfall patterns.

Bahawanie Basdeo
Bahawanie Basdeo

Even when the rains didn’t cause the banks of the creek to overflow, flooding came as a direct result of government orders.

The coastal zone of Guyana, where most people live and where most economic activity is concentrated, is cut across by a dense network of drainage and irrigation canals which are all linked to the East Demerara Water Conservancy (EDWC), a water storage canal which is the source of drinking water for the capital Georgetown and also provides water for rice, sugar and cash crop farms during the dry season.

One of the houses built for Mahaica residents who relocated to Hope Estate
One of the houses built for Mahaica residents who relocated to Hope Estate

The problem is that the Conservancy is hemmed in by an earthen dam, approximately 67 km long, which could collapse if it takes in more than the 250 million cubic metres of water that it was designed to hold. The collapse of the dam could cause widespread flooding along the coast.

So at times of extreme rainfall, the Conservancy acts as a drainage canal, using five sluices at different locations – Cunha, Kofi, Maduni, Lama and Land of Canaan. Two of those sluices – Lama and Maduni – release water into the Mahaica River.

During periods of extreme rainfall however, pumping the water into the Mahaica Creek aggravates the already stressful flood conditions there.

Unable to cope with the constant flooding, many families decided they had to leave the Creek for a new life on the coast.

In addition to the plots of land to live on, with modest houses built by Food for the Poor, they were also offered new farmlands, which they could lease.

Ramdasee Sarju moved to Mahaica Creek 50 years ago when she got married.

“I don’t know what it is about,” she says, in response to a question about climate change.

The constant floods meant her source of livelihood – cash crops -was washed away year after year.

“I could no longer make a living in the creek,” Ms Sarju says.

“I miss the Creek life.”

For 44-year-old Khemwantie Ramkissoon, missing the creek is not just for sentimental reasons; not just about missing “home.” She has seen her crops – watermelons, pumpkins and other cash crops – destroyed time and time again and so she had to leave.

These days, she is unable to travel with her husband to the farm, as it often involves an overnight trip sleeping in a shack.

These days also, instead of taking her line and hook to get fish for the typical evening curry, Ramkissoon now has to find money to buy fish.

A question about climate change leaves Ramkissoon baffled.

“I hear people talk about it, but I don’t know what it is.”

For Bahawanie Basdeo, 57, a resident of Joe Hook, the creek was the only life he knew until the floods forced him to move to higher ground.

“It was terrible. When the floods come, it took away everything. Then you are forced to use your savings, but that could only last so long,” he says with a smile, but his eyes well up with tears as he speaks of his cattle killed time and time again by the floodwaters.

“The families of Joe Hook were the first to be affected and the worst affected when water is discharged from the Conservancy into the Mahaica and Mahaicony Creeks,” said Robert Persaud, who served as Agriculture Minister when the decision of voluntary resettlement was offered.

Many families still remain in the creek. For them, the days of flooding could be over.

A Conservancy Adaptation Project to ease flooding, was developed after the 2005 floods, with the main component being another canal to drain excess water from the conservancy.

“It is the single largest adaption project in water management in Guyana.

“This can also be seen in the wider context of adaptation to the effects of climate change, given Guyana’s acute vulnerabilities,” adds Persaud.

A recent test of the Hope sluice was successful, the current Minister of Agriculture Noel Holder said.

Mr Narine Singh, the chairman of a nearby local authority, believes that the new sluice will definitely reduce the possibility of flooding the Mahaica Creek.

“It will very much ease the flooding; I don’t think we will see dead cows coming down the river as before,” he says.

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