BANGKOK (AFP) – Thailand may have to consider relocating its capital Bangkok because of rising sea levels, a senior official in the country’s climate change office told AFP yesterday.
Projections consistently show that low-lying Bangkok risks being inundated by the ocean before the end of the century.
Much of the bustling capital already battles flooding during the rainy season.
Deputy director-general of the government’s department of climate change and environment Pavich Kesavawong, warned that the city might not be able to adapt with the world on its current warming pathway.
“I think we are beyond the 1.5 degrees Celsius already,” he told AFP, referring to the increase in global temperatures from pre-industrial levels.
“Now we have to come back and think about adaptation.
“I imagine Bangkok will be under water already, if we stay in our (current) circumstance.”
Bangkok’s city government is exploring measures that include building dikes, along the lines of those used in the Netherlands, he said.
But “we’ve been thinking about moving”, Pavich said, noting that the discussions were still hypothetical and the issue was “very complex”.
“Personally I think it’s a good choice, so we can separate the capital, the government areas, and business areas,” he said.