Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumSinking Island Nation Of Nauru Unveils Trump-esque Plan To Sell Citizenships, Ostensibly To Pay To Relocate Its Citizens
The Pacific island nation of Nauru is selling citizenship to fund its retreat from rising seas, the countrys president, David Adeang, announced on Tuesday, opening a contentious golden passport scheme as climate financing runs dry. The low-lying island nation of 13,000 residents is planning a mass inland relocation as the human-caused climate crisis raises global sea levels, eating away at the countrys fertile coastal fringe.
The country will drum up funding by selling passports to foreigners for US$105,000 each, despite fears such schemes are ripe for criminal exploitation. Nauru claims its passport will provide visa-free entry into 89 countries, including the United Kingdom, Ireland, the United Arab Emirates and Hong Kong. For Nauru it is not just about adapting to climate change, but about securing a sustainable and prosperous future for generations to come, Adeang told AFP. This is about more than survival. It is about ensuring future generations have a safe, resilient and sustainable home. We are ready for the journey ahead.
The island republic sits on a small plateau of phosphate rock in the sparsely populated South Pacific. With a total landmass of just 21 square kilometres (8 square miles), it is one of the worlds smallest nations. Unusually pure phosphate deposits a key ingredient in fertiliser once made Nauru one of the wealthiest places, per capita, on the planet. But these supplies have long dried up, and researchers today estimate 80% of Nauru has been rendered uninhabitable by mining. What little land Nauru has left is threatened by encroaching tides; scientists have measured sea levels rising 1.5 times faster than global averages.
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Henrietta McNeill, a research fellow in pacific affairs at the Australian National University, said while these schemes helped bolster government revenue, they were also prone to exploitation. She said criminals could use these documents to evade law enforcement, launder money or exploit visa-free entry rules. A previous Nauru attempt to sell passports ended in disaster. In 2003, Nauru officials sold citizenship to al-Qaida members who were later arrested in Asia, according to Australian broadcaster ABC.
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https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/feb/26/nauru-climate-citizenship-golden-passport
Ed. - Incidentally, if you'd like more of Nauru's backstory, there's a fascinating piece from This American Life that's well worth listening to - about 30 minutes in all.
https://www.thisamericanlife.org/253/the-middle-of-nowhere

NNadir
(35,468 posts)It's one of those microcosmic situations that has profound macrocosmic implications.
It is also of interest from the pespective of the important issue of phosphate flows.
There really never was a "green revolution" in energy, despite the persistent public fantasy that one exists. There was, however a real "green revolution" in agriculture in the 1950s and beyond connected with the use of fertilizers. It is an industrial practice to fix nitrogen as ammonia, albeit requiring energy to make hydrogen. (Roughly 3% of the world's energy supply goes into making hydrogen for this purpose.) Phosphorus rock ores however are subject to depletion however and any effort to create a circular system around it will surely prove expensive and very energy dependent.
We all know future generations are in deep shit. This is just one, but very often overlooked despite its seriousness, reason why.