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Home Climate Change

Destructive floods force Eccles Village resident to move

by Cari-Bois Youth Journalists
September 11, 2023
in Climate Change
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In its 2021 Groundswell report, The World Bank estimates that climate change could force 216 million people to migrate to different areas within their own country by 2050 while an Institute for Economics and Peace think tank estimates 1 billion people can be displaced by that time. 

Though the exact number of climate migrants may be uncertain at this point, leading global organisations have recognised the effects of climate change as a catalyst for humanitarian disasters which can trigger a global migration crisis. 

As a Small Island Developing State, Trinidad and Tobago isn’t immune to climate migration and citizens should be aware that it is already a reality that some face.

In 2022, one Eccles Village resident decided to leave the community altogether as he found it was no longer possible to sustain a good quality of life given the community’s frequent flooding. 

With climate change expected to exacerbate the frequency and intensity of flood events in Trinidad and Tobago, people living in flood prone areas face the reality of becoming climate migrants if they aren’t sufficiently able to adapt.

While Eccles Village is known for its lush greenery and hospitality, the community has also become synonymous with devastating floods overtime. 

With the Office of Disaster Preparedness and Management (ODPM) warning that climate change will continue to exacerbate the intensity of floods across Trinidad and Tobago in the wet season,  villagers are bracing themselves to cope with more floods. 

But Daveanad Lutchman is one of a handful of residents who have already made the difficult decision to walk away from the community they loved in recent years.  

A teacher, Lutchman told Cari-Bois the community is no stranger to flooding but they have gotten worse in recent years. 

According to the International Organisation for Migration, the world had a record number of internal displacements (migration within a country) in 2022 due to different natural disasters. Former Eccles Village resident, Daveanand Lutchman, was one of the displaced after he moved from the village to Port of Spain in 2022 due to severe flooding.

Though Lutchman and other villagers coped with the regular floods by moving their belongings to higher grounds, he reached his “final straw” in November 2022 when his house was severely damaged – and all his appliances were washed away – during a flood.

His two pet dogs were also killed in the incident.

Compounding the problem is the fact that Lutchman’s house was near a slope which is experiencing a landslip that has threatened the stability of the land on which his former home stood and the structural integrity of the house.

After already incurring financial losses in previous years, he decided the situation was no longer sustainable and now lives in Port of Spain.

While Lutchman is wishing the people he left in Eccles Village the best, he wants them to create a comprehensive plan to navigate the situation to avoid further financial losses or even loss of life.

Tags: Climate ChangeClimate MigrationClimate ResilienceFloodingTrinidad and TobagoYouthYouth Journalism
Cari-Bois Youth Journalists

Cari-Bois Youth Journalists

In the 2024/2025 academic year, Cari-Bois will work closely with ten secondary schools across Trinidad and Tobago to empower a total of 20 students with journalism skills and climate knowledge. With funding support from the Scotiabank Foundation, the project aims to challenge each student to write and publish three climate stories to raise awareness about the effect of the climate crisis on their communities and beyond. The project’s stories are set to be published under a special social media campaign titled the “Green Gazette” that will be shared across the social media platforms of Cari-Bois.

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