With the launch of a major report by the Global Commission on Adaptation on 10 September 2019, we follow the story of an environmental hero from the Seychelles and their quest to adapt by harnessing the power of trees. #AdaptOurWorld
For many people, retirement is a chance to take a break. Not so for Victorin Laboudallon, a grandfather from the Seychelles who spends his days planting forests to fight climate change.
Wherever there鈥檚 a forest fire in the Seychelles, you can be sure you鈥檒l find Laboudallon ready to fight back, armed with seeds and shovels.
鈥淧rotecting nature makes me very happy in life,鈥 says Laboudallon. 鈥淲e need to protect it as much as we can, so other generations can enjoy it like I did when I was a kid.鈥
Laboudallon, 65, has built a network of volunteers, from children to retirees, whom he calls upon to help him with replanting.
鈥淚f tomorrow we have another fire, we are ready to go back and plant.鈥
Laboudallon is widely known across the Seychelles for his decades of environmental action and his big personality. While planting trees in the wet dirt, barefoot and laughing, he says his surname means 鈥渇riend of the mud鈥 in his local Creole language.
鈥淚鈥檓 not somebody who lives under the big concrete. I live under the beautiful trees,鈥 he says, pointing above at the iconic听coco-de-mer听palm.
The Seychelles is a nation of 115 islands鈥攌nown for glistening beaches and stunning biodiversity鈥攐ff the east coast of Africa. Here climate change is not a distant prospect, but a daily reality.
Sea levels are rising and many of the islands are low-lying. As the waters creep higher, the shoreline crumbles away and floods devastate people鈥檚 land.听
鈥淲e鈥檝e got the sea rising,鈥 says Laboudallon. 鈥淵ou can see places where there used to be houses. Now there are none. There is something on this planet going wrong.鈥
It鈥檚 unknown how the Seychelles will adapt. More than 16 per cent of the nation鈥檚 land is听, yet a study in the journal听Nature听suggests Antarctic ice alone could increase sea levels听. The waters of this tourist paradise are crystal-clear, but the future is anything but.
Nature enthusiasts like Laboudallon have taken matters into their own hands. While giving a tour of his tree nursery, he explains how different types of trees offer different services when adapting to climate change. For the Seychellois, mangroves are fundamental.
鈥淚f the mangroves are gone, the nation of Seychelles will be gone,鈥 says Laboudallon. 鈥淥ur protection for human life is the mangroves.鈥
Mangroves defend against the impacts of rising seas and coastal erosion by drastically reducing the height and force of the waves before they hit the shoreline. In fact, if all of today鈥檚 mangroves were lost, the global damage from flooding would be an听