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BANGKOK/JAKARTA/KUALA LUMPUR: Standing at the shoreline of the Gulf of Thailand, murky waves rippling at makeshift coastal defence barriers, is to be a witness to a creeping calamity.
The marshy land grips to the edge of the Earth. It is a helpless endeavour – the waves will claim it soon enough. So it has been now for decades, the sea taking more and more. A land marker that used to indicate the water’s edge is now a distant sight on the water. Faraway seagulls swirl around a concrete outpost that serves little purpose but a nesting spot and a reminder of what has been lost.
More than ever, there is a sense of foreboding here. It rings in the voices of anxious locals and hangs on the salty air.
The community at Bang Khun Thian is a watchdog at the gates of the Gulf of Thailand, forebearers to the flooding that experts fear will increasingly threaten Bangkok, the megapolis visible on the horizon and that stretches deep inland.
The Thai capital is precariously close to sea level – just 1.5 m.
There is little to divide the rising waves from the seemingly endless roads and factories and shopping malls and high rises of the city, all of which are contributing to the land mass slowly sinking up to 2cm each year on average.Only the fledgling mangrove forests – long neglected by all but those who understood their function and power – and the fishing communities who brave much to build whatever rudimentary defences they can by pouring rocks or shifting soil and erecting bamboo fences.
There’s also little margin for error – forecasts warn that by mid-century, rising sea levels could submerge much of the city.
“We have been living here since olden days. But things have changed from the past,” said Mr Suthee Changcharoen, the head of the Bang Khun Thian community.
“During storms or rainy season, the tides are strong and the waves erode the land and it collapses.
“We then need to retreat and retreat. Us villagers don’t have wealth to fight against the sea. We flee because we cannot fight,” he told CNA.
Like many of Southeast Asia’s capitals, Bangkok was made by water. It was a floodplain long before humans started carving out canals and pouring concrete.Now, these powerhouse cities – including Jakarta and Kuala Lumpur – are having to find new solutions to manage it.
Singapore too faces the threat of rising sea levels – forecast to be by up to 1.15m by the end of the century – and has unveiled measures such as reclaiming a “Long Island” off the east coast to protect endangered shorelines.
Climate change is supercharging the power of water in and around urban areas – from the rising seas to more powerful storms and unpredictable rain.
What is at stake is the lives of millions living on land that could conceivably be underwater, the productivity of critical economies and the potential collapse of vital urban infrastructure and natural ecosystems alike.
The question is whether engineering can save them.
Or if nature itself can be managed instead – or at the same time – to bring equilibrium back to places where human development has run wild.
There is a big idea in the Gulf of Thailand to literally construct an answer to Bangkok’s flooding dilemma.
In September, Mr Thaksin Shinawatra, Thai political doyen and the father and advisor of the current prime minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra, refloated a radical plan to construct a mega project up to 3km offshore, in the coastal expanse beyond Bang Khun Thian.Dubbed the “Pearl Necklace”, the project would consist of a string of nine artificial islands that would act as a barrier to the rising seas.
Each island would have functioning protective sea walls, inspired by enormous flood mitigation infrastructure built in the Netherlands, notably its Delta Works.
“We call them pearls since these islands are prime areas and we will think of how to use them beneficially,” said Mr Plodprasop Suraswadi, a former Thai deputy prime minister and the chairman of the environment policy committee for Pheu Thai party, which currently holds office.
“The first benefit is that it can reduce coastal erosion because we build it in the sea, right? Secondly, we don’t need to take land back and there’s no impact during the construction, which will take over 10 years because humongous structures will be built.”The types of infrastructure he means could include railways, an airport, a shipping port, residential areas within a “green city”, entertainment complexes, factories, water gates and communication lines all stretching across the overall span of the gulf – some 100km.
Mr Plodprasop has for many years championed the bold vision that is not unlike Singapore’s Long Island. While he admits that a lot of research needs to be done before it is approved or realised, he is adamant that big thinking is necessary for Bangkok to endure.
“Will it be expensive? Yes. Will it take long? It will. Definitely,” he told CNA.
“But if we want to save 16,000 sq km of land, we have to do it this way. There’s no way out. We do this to protect our country and our history,” he added, referring to low lying land in Thailand that faces the threat of inundation.
Indeed, greater Bangkok faces a multitude of flooding issues – from the sea, the sky and the several rivers that flow in and around the city before arriving at the gulf.A report by Greenpeace in 2021 found that more than 96 per cent of Bangkok’s land area could be affected by flooding during a once-a -decade flood event. Its projections found that by 2030, 10 million residents of the city and gross domestic product (GDP) of US$512 billion would be threatened. Thailand’s 2023 GDP stands at US$514.94 billion while Bangkok has an estimated population of 11.2 million people.
“Bangkok will be heavily, heavily impacted by sea level rise in the future due to the global boiling we are facing today and in the near future,” said Mr Tara Buakamsri, the country director for Greenpeace Thailand.
Many grey infrastructure projects – like dams, seawalls, roads and pipes – are underway in Bangkok and beyond aimed at mitigating the flood threat.
The waterways that snake their way through the metropolis like veins are abuzz with messy construction activities these days.The works include repairing and reinforcing flood levees and maintaining drainage tunnels and canals throughout the city.
The Bangkok Metropolitan Administration had pledged to fix 737 at-risk areas, the vast majority of which were expected to be completed by the end of this year.It is also considering a flood defence barrier that would function similarly to one in the Thames River, which protects London from tidal surges.
“The problem in the future is when sea water levels rise, water in the Chao Phraya river will rise higher as well,” Bangkok governor Chadchart Sittipunt told Thai media last month.
“It won’t be just in Bang Khun Thian, everywhere will be flooded. So, we need to think of how to make protective barriers,” he said.
The Thai government is pressing on with a broad agenda to manage water, with the ongoing protection of Bangkok – the country’s overwhelming economic powerhouse region – at its heart.
It has started to implement its “Chao Phraya 9 Plans”, which includes water management investments with an estimated cost of US$9.4 billion. That includes hydraulic infrastructure and expanding water storage capacity.
The scars of the devastation from deadly floods in 2011 still feel raw in many parts. At that time, the capital was ravaged by a combination of powerful rainfall and flood waters flowing from the north, which killed 815 people and caused US$46.5 billion in damages.
Some industry experts say it needs to spend more and build more to contend with the rising challenge, amid the backdrop of northern Thailand experiencing exceptionally destructive flooding this wet season.
The World Bank has been in discussions to support the investments and its senior water resources management specialist, Mr Sanjay Pahuja, says Thailand vastly underspends on flood control, compared with Japan for example, which has consistently spent 1 per cent of its GDP every year on the issue.“This speaks to a realisation of people who say, wow, we cannot afford those kinds of (damaging) events,” he told a panel discussion this month, noting that Thailand only spent 0.04 per cent of GDP on such flood controls.
“These are nation building exercises, and we have to realise that if we don’t do that, we’re just running on a treadmill.”
Mr Pahuja noted the dangerous nexus that existed for Bangkok at present – a city facing a worsening flood hazard in a highly exposed region with an outsized concentration of people, production, strategic skills and supply chains.
“There are not that many places in the world that have such a worrisome combination”, he said.
“For some areas in Thailand, flood protection is not just another folder or business that you have to do. It is much more fundamental, and if you don’t do it, nothing else that you do would matter.
In Jakarta, a similar story is playing out. Here too, grand ideas of engineering swirl around the heads of local residents just trying to keep their feet dry.
Each night, Madam Fatimah listens anxiously to the waves crashing on the 10m tall concrete wall protecting her sinking neighbourhood, Muara Baru, from the rising sea. During full and new moons when the tides are at their peak or during the monsoon season when the seas are rough, she barely sleeps at all.
The coastal floods sometimes come unexpectedly and without warning.
Last month, the sea rose so quickly it almost reached the top of the wall. Salt water was seeping through the structure’s cracks, inundating her congested neighbourhood, which is already around 5m below sea level, under ankle deep water.
“I am scared that the wall might collapse one day. I can’t imagine what it will be like if that happens,” the 45-year-old said.
Because in Muara Baru water has nowhere to go but to be absorbed by the soil, Mdm Fatimah said her neighbourhood was not completely dry until five days later.
Over the past 50 years, Jakarta has been sinking at a rate of up to 25 cm per year, particularly in the coastal areas like Muara Baru, which lie on loose and unconsolidated soil and sediment.
According to some studies, around 20 per cent of Jakarta is already below sea level, including the estuaries of the city’s 13 rivers.
This makes the city more susceptible to fluvial floods – rivers overflowing and inundating nearby lower lying areas – as the waterways lose their natural ability to drain themselves to the sea.
During the rainy season, Jakarta has to rely on more than 200 pumping stations along the coastal areas to flush out to sea the influx of water coming in from these rivers.
With some studies suggesting that the whole of Jakarta could be below sea level by 2050, Indonesia is moving its capital from Jakarta to Nusantara, a city built from scratch some 1,200km away in Borneo.
The Nusantara move aside, Indonesia has been mulling the idea of building a 30km long giant sea wall around 4km off the coast of Jakarta, where the ground is not sinking.
The plan, first proposed in 2014, promised to serve as a permanent solution to Jakarta’s land subsidence as well as rising sea level brought by climate change.
The US$3.7 billion wall is designed to have multiple purposes: A toll road connecting Jakarta and its suburbs; and a pond where water fed by Jakarta’s 13 rivers are collected and treated as a source of drinking water.
“The question is: Who is going to finance this sea wall?” Dr Yayat Supriyatna, an urban planning expert from Jakarta’s Trisakti University, told CNA.
“Is there anyone interested in investing? Even if it serves as a toll road and a fresh water source, and we can make money off of it, will (the project) be profitable?”
The plan was later shelved because of a lack of investment as well as criticisms that it could damage Jakarta’s delicate mangrove ecosystem – which requires a mixture of fresh and saltwater – and make it harder for fishermen to sail out of Jakarta Bay and catch fish in the Java Sea.
However, Indonesia’s new president Prabowo Subianto is considering not only reviving the Jakarta sea wall project but also extending it all the way to Gresik, some 650km away.
A spokesman from the Indonesian Ministry of Public Works said on Oct 10 that the ministry will soon get to work on the design of the 650km long wall.
Dr Heri Andreas, a researcher at the Bandung Institute of Technology, said building a giant sea wall, no matter the length, does not address the root cause of the problem: The over-extraction of groundwater.
“Finding new sources of clean water and expanding the municipal water network will be much more effective and cheaper than building a giant sea wall,” he told CNA, adding that as Jakarta’s population grows by around 100,000 every year, the city will need more drinking water.
And ironically, that is the main reason why Jakarta is sinking in the first place.
According to a 2021 study conducted by the Jakarta Environmental Agency, 74 per cent of the water from Jakarta’s rivers are severely contaminated by solid waste, heavy metals and bacteria. These rivers also feed the city’s flood retention ponds and basins.
To make things worse, only around 940,000 homes, offices and factories have access to municipal water, according to data from the city’s piped water distribution company PAM Jaya.
This leaves little choice for the rest of Jakarta’s 11.3 million population but to rely on groundwater.
However, over-extracting groundwater from underground aquifers can cause the soil above them to compact and sink.
Dr Heri, an expert on geodesy – the study of how the Earth’s geometry changes over time – said it is hard to get people to understand the consequences of extracting groundwater because land subsidence happens gradually over a long period of time.
“Which is why people keep digging deeper and deeper for water without realising that their neighbourhoods are sinking,” he said.
Today, Jakarta relies on walls and dikes built along the capital’s coast lines to keep sea water at bay.
But because these structures sit close to areas affected by land subsidence, the dikes are also sinking and need to be raised and reinforced regularly.
As bodies of water in Jakarta are polluted, the city relies on fresh water piped from dozens of kilometres away in neighbouring West Java and Banten provinces.
“Jakarta has too much water during the rainy season but not enough during the dry season,” Mr Nirwono Joga, executive director of think-tank Centre for Urban Studies, told CNA.
To mitigate this, Jakarta needs more places to store water such as open green spaces and reservoirs.
The government, he said, must also ensure that water from the hilly upstream areas, around 50km south of Jakarta, stays clean by the time it reaches the city.
“The problem is illegal settlements and factories along the riverbanks. (Does the government) have the courage to enforce their zoning laws and relocate these settlements (and) shut down industries polluting the environment?,” Mr Nirwono said.
This requires Jakarta to work together with two provinces, four cities and five regencies surrounding the metropolis.
But Dr Yayat of Trisakti University said this is hard, because each government has its own priorities and interests.
The urban planning expert said Bogor, a mountainous regency where most of Jakarta’s 13 rivers originate, needs to stop issuing permits for more villas and resorts in order to preserve the upstream area, improve the soil’s ability to absorb rain and prevent flood prone rivers to overflow by the time they reach Jakarta.
“But for Bogor, these villas, hotels and restaurants are sources of revenue. What compensation can Jakarta give if Bogor were to dismantle these villas and restore the forest?” he said.
Across in neighbouring Malaysia, in the capital Kuala Lumpur, authorities and residents alike have learnt in recent years that they too cannot outrun or ignore the water around them.
Whenever Mr Muarif Matrawi observes black skies in the horizon from his home in Kampung Chubadak in Kuala Lumpur, he gets worried.
He knows that even a short spell of rain can result in the river near his home rising quickly.
In the past one and half years, he has seen his one-storey home been inundated by flood waters twice, the first time resulting in him having to get rid of his belongings such as mattresses and some electrical devices.
He has taken his own measures to prevent flood waters from entering his home by building a small concrete barrier at the front door of his home.
“It is very worrisome for us living in this area every time there is heavy rain. It doesn’t have to be for very long before the water rises,” said the 61-year-old contractor.
He is not alone. As Kuala Lumpur continues to grow and develop rapidly, the threat of flash floods looms every time there are heavy downpours.
Several rivers run through Kuala Lumpur and the Klang Valley, with two of the biggest rivers – the Klang River and the Gombak river – converging in the city centre.
Authorities and experts say that changing weather patterns have resulted in the country experiencing more frequent and heavier rainfall events in recent years as existing infrastructure is not able to cope with the deluge of rain.
So much so that in August of this year, the authorities declared 14 new flash flood hotspots in the city, bringing the total number to 39 hotspots.
“Climate change is a challenge in overcoming this problem. Previously, August wasn’t the rainy season, but now it’s all changed,” Kuala Lumpur mayor Maimunah Mohd Sharif was quoted as saying by state media agency Bernama back in August.
Ms Maimunah said the city was looking at speeding up mitigation projects to overcome the issue, including to intensify periodic maintenance of the Onsite Stormwater Detention Ponds, rivers and main drains.
She added that deepening work at the nine detention ponds is being carried out, along with the upgrading of roadside drainage systems.
In a statement on Oct 19 – a few days after flash floods hit parts of the city – Ms Maimunah said that three flood mitigation projects have been completed, three projects were being carried out while another eight projects were to be implemented.
All the projects were slated to be completed by the first quarter of next year, she said.
Ms Maimunah also said that the city hall had installed water level sensors at 30 flood risk areas including rivers and drains that would alert authorities of rising water levels that could cause flooding.
The Institute of Engineers Malaysia vice-president Nor Hisham Mohd Ghazalli told CNA that the current infrastructure has not been able to keep up with the rapid rate of urbanisation.
He said that some of the existing systems were not built for high-intensity rainfall.
“There seems to be a change in weather patterns where we are getting high intensity rainfall more frequently. Because of that, existing systems get overloaded and cannot cope, causing flash floods to occur,” said the former Director-General of the Department of Irrigation and Drainage Malaysia from Feb 2020 to Nov 2021.
Grey infrastructure has been central to the capital’s adaptation strategy.
The Stormwater Management and Road Tunnel (SMART) – a project under the Federal Government initiated to alleviate the flooding problem in the city – was opened in 2007.
The 9.7km tunnel, which cost about RM1.9 billion (US$443 milion) to construct, runs from the southern part of Kuala Lumpur to the city centre.
Its purpose is twofold – to relieve traffic congestion and for flood management.
When it rains heavily, the SMART system can divert large volumes of flood water via two holding ponds, a bypass tunnel and a storage reservoir.
“The tunnel was purposefully built to divert flows away from the area where two rivers meet in the city. From the upstream of the confluence, the flow is diverted into the tunnel that bypasses the city centre altogether,” Mr Nor Hisham said, adding that there have been no major floods in the city centre since the tunnel came into operation.
The tunnel alone addresses about 45 per cent of Klang Valley’s major floods, SMART’s chief operating officer Mohd Noor Mohd Ali said in an interview with the Star in 2022.
Mr Nor Hisham said that the flash floods such as those in early October are known as nuisance floods caused by blockages and damage to existing structures.
He said that the rapid pace of urbanisation has caused green areas to be paved over, with the ability of the land to absorb rainfall drastically reduced.
“Maybe it is time to reverse the process and purposefully create more green areas from existing pavements. For example, if we are looking at parking lots which were tarred over, we must go back to something more permeable,” he said.
On August 23, 2023, a 48-year-old Indian tourist, Ms Vijayaletchumy, vanished into a sinkhole near the Malayan Mansion in Kuala Lumpur’s Masjid Jamek area.
Shortly after the incident, another cave-in occurred on Aug 27 in the Kuala Lumpur suburb of Kampung Kerinchi, along Jalan Pantai Permai, due to a collapsed drain although no casualties or injuries were reported.
These incidents sparked widespread fear and speculation that the city might be sinking.
But experts have debunked claims that Kuala Lumpur is a sinking city.
Prof Dr Norzailawati Mohd Noor of the International Islamic University Malaysia’s Architecture and Environmental Design faculty told CNA that there was no solid evidence that the sinkholes were connected to a sinking city.
“A sinkhole and a sinking city are two completely different things. A sinking city is related to climate change and global warming. There is no evidence to show that Kuala Lumpur is in danger of sinking,” she said.
She said that the sinkhole that swallowed up a tourist in Masjid India was likely to be caused by improper planning.
“The development above ground might look alright, but the development below the ground wasn’t done properly and led to these kinds of issues,” she said.
Geologist Lim Choun Sian, a senior researcher at the Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, also told CNA that a sinkhole and sinking city were different phenomena.
“Sinking is normally when the whole city goes down, while a sinkhole occurs at a specific site,” he said, adding that sinking was linked to groundwater extraction and sea level rise.
Unlike the capital cities of Thailand and Indonesia, Kuala Lumpur is not a coastal city.
The situation in all three cities is an example of the contest of ideas between building more grey infrastructure versus harnessing nature instead to solve water issues.
In Thailand, as the Pearl Necklace concept emerged from the depths and onto the desks of decision makers, a debate has been further ignited about the role of nature as a complement – or even a substitution – to those works.
Ms Kotchakorn Voraakhom, an internationally acclaimed landscape architect who collaborates closely with the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration to design and implement visionary water management projects in the city, says the co-benefits that nature provides for cities are often overlooked.The chief executive of the Porous City Network and founder of Bangkok-based firm Landprocess has been behind projects like the Chulalongkorn University Centenary Park and Chong Nonsi Canal Park, which are leading examples of nature-based solutions at work.
She is still battling to push this philosophy more broadly, to have it incorporated into everything the city does in the future. Resistance and inertia remain, she said.
“Living with water hasn’t been a strategy for Bangkok. It seems like Bangkok is actually trying to live without water and it’s impossible because we are talking about a delta city.
“The city actually is on top of this natural dynamic. And when we’re not putting nature at the centre and we only think about human-centric development, we are losing the balance of how the city can be resilient and how it can be sustained,” she said.
“Nature can be part of great infrastructure, and great infrastructure has to prioritise the regeneration of the nature that we have destroyed. Living with nature is the only way to survive.”
Her concerns extend to the Gulf of Thailand, where she would prefer to see the natural dynamics of mangrove forests restored and local communities empowered as protectors, rather than a vast project that could do more harm than good if not fairly considered.
“I hope that the Pearl Necklace project won’t choke our neck as a nation,” she said, expressing concern that blocking the sea could exacerbate challenges around the vast amounts of water from the country’s north draining into the sea, year-round.
“If we have more structures that are actually going to make this water flow in the opposite direction, that means we’re going to create a flooded Bangkok forever. We’re going to create the biggest stagnant water in the world,” she said.
“For me it’s actually showing how we still want to fight against nature rather than live with it.”Mr Nirwono of Indonesia’s Centre for Urban Studies, said that nature can also provide a solution for Jakarta’s land subsidence and coastal erosion problems.
“Instead of a giant sea wall, why not build a giant wall of mangroves?” he told CNA, arguing that reforesting the coastal areas will not only be a more ecological friendly solution but be economically beneficial.
“Fish and other marine life can also thrive and serve as a source of income for our fishermen.”
And for some Malaysian experts, Kuala Lumpur should further explore and adopt the “Sponge City” concept, which has been substantially adopted in China to overcome the urban flood issues in recent years.It too is an example of harnessing nature to improve urban defences.
A “sponge city” would include permeable roads, rooftop gardens, the building of wetlands and man-made lakes, the construction of community gardens and planting of trees, said Dr Mohd Fairullazi Ayob of the Department of Architecture and Environmental Design of the International Islamic University Malaysia.
Through nature-focused landscaping, cities are more able to absorb and retain water, reducing surface run-off and reducing the risk of floods, he said.
“The Sponge City is a city with a water system that is highly adaptable to environmental changes and natural disasters that acts like a sponge, absorbing, storing, infiltrating, cleaning and purifying rainwater before releasing it for reuse.”
He pointed out that the Malaysia government had announced in 2022 to conduct a feasibility study in developing the proposed SMART 2 tunnel, a new flood mitigation measure for the city of Shah Alam in Selangor, which was devastated by flooding in December, 2021. The 22km underground tunnel proposed by Gamuda, the company behind SMART, would embed the “sponge city” concept within it, Dr Mohd Fairullazi Ayob noted.
The system would absorb rainwater and surface runoff through interception and infiltration, storing water underground for regulated release to the sea later.
Each of the three capitals – and many other cities facing similar water challenges – have complex problems to contend with.
Mr Nirwono in Indonesia said Jakarta’s issues require multiple ministries and local governments at various levels to work together.
To overcome this bureaucratic mess, Indonesia must look at other cities like Bangkok and Kuala Lumpur in how they manage their water and mitigate disaster, he argued.
“Bangkok for example has the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration which manages not only the Thai capital itself but also the surrounding areas,” he said.
The Bangkok Metropolitan Administration too also has limits to what it can achieve, when flooding issues are so systemic and incorporate national infrastructure across the expanse of the country.
Indonesia is forming the so-called Jakarta Agglomeration Area Council, with the country’s newly inaugurated vice-president Gibran Rakabuming Raka – former President Joko Widodo’s son – among the names touted to head it.
The council is tasked with coming up with a blueprint to solve problems such as transportation, flooding, spatial planning and environmental degradation in Jakarta and its suburbs, and coordinate its implementation with related ministries, provinces, cities and regencies.
But the formation of the new council raises many questions over its effectiveness.
“How powerful will this new body be? If the body has no power to force different municipalities and regencies to follow its masterplan, if the body does not manage its own budgets needed to finance various infrastructure projects then the body is doomed to fail,” Mr Nirwono said.
Within the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), the policy framework under Article 7 encourages member states to share strategies, resources and knowledge to better respond to events like flooding. It should be leaned upon more readily, according to Mr Decharut Sukkumnoed, director of the Think Forward Center in Thailand.
“It’s very necessary to coordinate this. We can invest together. We can share together and we can prepare better together,” he told a panel event in Bangkok this month.
Finding commonalities in nature-based solutions, and looking to the past for solutions are both ways that regional cities could also help each other going forward, said Mr Pakkasem Tongchai, programme officer on water and wetlands at the International Union for Conservation of Nature.
“Every city has its own problems and their own systems. But the same problem is the water,” he said.
“Nature-based solutions actually connect everyone. People always think about the new thing or the new technology. But to me, I think the things that we have in the past can guide us to something that we can help in the future. “Because people in the past knew how to live with water,” he said.
While planning continues on paper and strategies get developed, affected locals live a strained reality.
With the sea already higher than the second storey of her home, Jakarta resident Fatimah said she is worried about the future of her neighbourhood, Muara Baru.
“Maybe this whole area will become one with the sea some day,” she said as she gazed emptily at a swampy wasteland where her childhood home used to be.
In her years living here, Mdm Fatimah has had to move houses twice because the Jakarta government needed her land: First to build a retainer wall in 2009 and later a pumping station in 2014.
“When city officials told me to move, I did so without making a fuss,” she said. “I have done my bit. I just need the government to do theirs.”
The residents of Bang Khun Thian have been moving too, as the water has bitten away at their land on the coast.
“I am scared because there’s nothing that can fend it off. When the waves come, they come a lot. And all the villagers are in trouble,” said Mr Sinsamut Phuttameephol, a 64-year-old fisherman.Their livelihoods – their very future in shrinking ancestral grounds – are at stake. Their space is being enveloped on two fronts, by the sprawl of the city growing around them and from coastal erosion.Soon, a mega project might land on their horizon. Some locals along the coast are already mobilising against it. Yet Mr Plodprasop – behind the Pearl Necklace vision – has little patience for protest, another reminder of the often stark split between those living the impacts of flooding and those wielding the power of change.
“Instead of thanking us for saving their lives, they disagree,” he said. “You’re the first to be underwater. You’re the first. Don’t forget.”