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This tropical paradise may be the first island affected by climate change

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With its pristine sands, glistening saltwater flats and gently swaying palms, Kiribati ought to be a tropical paradise, but this precarious slice of heaven on Earth is living on borrowed time.

The low-lying Pacific nation of 33 atolls and reef islands is facing the unstoppable rise of the sea and will be gone before long, making its people the world’s first nation of climate change refugees.

“I’ve been trying to communicate to the international community that we have a problem. It’s a small part of the larger challenge on climate change, but our case is more immediate,” said former Kiribati president and climate activist Anote Tong. “We’re at the bottom end of the spectrum, where we are the most vulnerable. We are on the front line. Before anyone else is affected, we will be.”

Tong, who ruled the isolated nation for 12 years until completing his third term in 2016, is the focus of Anote’s Ark, a new film documenting the plight of Kiribati’s 110,000 inhabitants and the struggle for the survival of 4,000 years of Kiribati culture.

“They are most likely to be uninhabitable well within the century, before they disappear,” said Tong at the Sundance Film Festival in the US state of Utah, where Anote’s Ark had its world premiere last week. “Already we have had communities who had to relocate because the village, the community they used to have, is no longer there. We have communities where the seawater has broken into the freshwater pond and destroyed food crops.”

Anote’s Ark is the first feature film directed by Rytz, a Canadian photographer who was exposed to the plight of the islanders and persuaded Tong to be part of a film. The documentary follows the statesman on his journey through international halls of power leading up to the 2015 Paris Climate Conference. “It was an incredible story —a head of state who knows he won’t have a state within a generation,” said Rytz.

The filmmaker was clear from the beginning that he didn’t want to make just another climate change movie following politicians or celebrities at summits around the world. Instead he weaves Tong’s campaign into the wider story of the people of Kiribati, and we meet Sermery Tiare, a young mother of six who decides to relocate to New Zealand with her family.

Tong, 65, has developed a string of attention-grabbing schemes designed to help his people cope when their homeland is swamped. Among those strategies is the construction of floating islands, anchored to the sea, that could sustain up to 30,000 people for a century.

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