Abstract
Purpose of the Study: This research aims to identify the susceptibility of Bangladesh's coastal areas to natural disasters related to climate change and raise vigilance in the region. Methodology: We have conducted a survey of farmers in eight coastal Unions to identify the impact of climate change and the ability to implement coping mechanisms and their family size and income level. Face-to-face interviews, in-depth case studies, and focus group discussions were carried out in the survey. We further summarized the effect and recent consequences of cyclones, the major disaster in the country that are followed by flooding. Main Findings: The finding of the study reveals that the shelters are insufficient to accommodate the dense population and will be a crowded space under the influence of COVID-19, further raising the vulnerability of those affected by a disaster. The coping mechanisms implemented were the storage of rainwater and groundwater and empowering women to produce dairy products and sustain the household income. The experts’ opinion to counteract the climate change was adaptation and mitigation. Since building resilience requires a fair budget and global support, we focused on adaption, considering three adaptive approaches: accommodation, protection, and retreat. Among those, considering the densely populated nature of Bangladesh, improving accommodation and protection were the feasible solution to be proposed. In conclusion, people's livelihood activities could be diversified by providing need-based training and motivations. Research Implications: One-fourth of the total population lives in the coastal areas in Bangladesh, which frequently faces tropical cyclones, storm surges, coastal erosion, and sea-level rise that cost enormous loss to the crops, livestock, forestry, and human selves. The biodiversity of the Sundarban, one of the most vulnerable ecosystems, is also at risk of those natural disasters. The novelty of the study: Climate change is posing major threats to Bangladesh's coast. This study's findings will help individuals recover from the effects of climate change and prepare for the future.
Highlights
Bangladesh is a small deltaic country from the mighty Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna river flow with an external elevation
The research's goal was to describe the socio-economic impact of climate change in coastal areas; explore how many areas were affected due to climate change in the coastal belt in Bangladesh; explore the vulnerability and coping mechanism of climate change in coastal regions of Bangladesh; find out the resilience mechanism, and seeking suggestions for the mitigation of climate change
More than half the proportion (51.25%) had a medium level of knowledge on climate change impact, while 28.13 % had poor knowledge; 20.63% of respondents had a high level of knowledge on climate change impact
Summary
Bangladesh is a small deltaic country from the mighty Ganges-Brahmaputra-Meghna river flow with an external elevation. It is a highly densely populated poverty-prone country with a 711 km long coastline with a vast river system network (Minar et al, 2013). The coastline region's entire area is 47,211 square kilometers, accounting for 32% of its overall geographical area. Many people (35 million) reside in coastal areas in 6.85 million homes, accounting for over 28 percent of the country's total population (BBS, 2017). In terms of administrative districts, 19 of the country's 64 districts lay inside the coastline administrative district (Shamsuddoha and Chowdhury, 2007). Read online: Scan this QR code with your smart phone or mobile device to read online
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More From: International Journal of Social Sciences and Economic Review
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