Tony DeBrum
A Large Voice from Tiny Islands
Nathaniel Bradford was a 2016-2017 Environmental Ethics Fellow at the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics.
The sky transformed into a bright red as a monstrous mushroom cloud arose on the horizon. Tony DeBrum and his grandfather looked on in awe, fishing nets in hand, at the American nuclear test. The effects of this experiment, which was estimated to be than the bomb dropped on Hiroshima during World War II, would prove disastrous for the people of the Marshall Islands.
DeBrumâs childhood coincided with the Cold War, during which the United States was testing its nuclear capabilities in the Pacific. The effects of the , which deBrum witnessed at just nine years old, and 67 more nuclear tests, would later be grounds for a number of lawsuits DeBrum would file against the United States as Foreign Minister. DeBrumâs work to bring justice for the Marshallese people has taken a new form in the last decade. With the effects of climate change accelerating the rise of sea levels, his people face the disappearance of their homes and livelihoods.
The Marshall Islands are made up of 29 and five islands scattered between Hawaii and the Philippines. These atolls are small, usually only stretching above the Oceanâs surface. Today, the Marshallese people are even more vulnerable than they were during deBrumâs childhood, when nuclear weapons were being tested in their backyard. With sea levels rising at an increasing speed, the Marshall Islands will likely be underwater if the earthâs temperature rises another two degrees Celsius. To scientists, this is beginning to look more and more unavoidable.
âSitting six feet above the water and looking where my mother's garden used to be,â deBrum sighs. âItâs now landfill because if it was not landfill it would be underwater. The realities of climate change and the effects on human beings didnât need to be taught to me in a textbook.â Already, rising sea levels are beginning to impact the livelihoods of the Marshallese people as they move inland to avoid having their houses be torn apart by the ocean during . For people like deBrum who wake up and see the effects of climate change firsthand everyday, it is hard to understand how others can deny its existence.
Since sharing his firsthand experience only goes so far in negotiations, celsius is a key point for deBrum. In addition to the disappearance of nations like the Marshall Islands, exceeding the two degree mark will result in the flooding of major coastal cities in the United States. In countries like Bangladesh, India, and Vietnam, millions of people will be forced to relocate, signifying the . âWe are the signal that things are going to get worse if [major nations] donât behave, rather quickly,â deBrum said about the major world powers responsible for accelerating temperatures.
DeBrum has worked tirelessly throughout his career to align major nations around this idea that no one will be safe from the effects of climate change, but has received little support. After the last year where a significant international agreement was made, deBrum sees a hopeful path for the future in spreading awareness of climate change. To stay on this path and curb the worst effects of climate change before itâs too late, there are a few factors of significant importance.

Image Credit: Flickr/UNclimatechange
The first is that closer coordination will be required between activists. Many subgroups have been created to bring justice to the Marshallese people, but these groups often become splintered in their efforts. DeBrum believes that
As a small island country with limited economic power and resources, the Marshall Islands and other nations like it can use their lack of power to their advantage.
âWe are vulnerable, but not threatening,â deBrum said. âAnd therefore, we are able to approach some of the more un-approachables in such a way that they felt somewhat obligated to assist in promoting our cause. They knew that we were there literally as a matter of life and death, there was no âIf we donât do it now, maybe we can do it laterâ type of message. Our message was âIf we donât do this now, you wonât be seeing this kind of people anymore. Our countries are forever condemned.ââ
This message resonated with Brazil especially at the Paris Climate Conference. The countryâs ambassador immediately picked up her phone and spoke to her home office about the need to get on board with deBrum and the Marshall Islands. As one of the worldâs largest countries that emits 2.5% of the worldâs carbon dioxide, Brazil has pledged to cut its 2005 emission levels down 37% by 2025, leading the effort to combat climate change in South America.
However, deBrum wants to make sure that countries are not solely motivated by pity. When this happens, offers begin to focus more on providing a destination for refugees from his nation than on curbing climate change. It is vital to deBrum that these countries understand why climate change is relevant to them if the changes are to be sustainable.
At the Paris Climate Conference, a reporter ran up to him and asked, âAre you here to save your country?â DeBrum stopped, turned and replied sternly, âNo, weâre actually here to save the world.â
At 72, saving the world is not as immediately tangible of a goal for deBrum as it once might have been, but he sees hope in the future. deBrum claims that the key to implementing policy to combat climate change and disseminate the message of what itâs effects will be is todayâs youth. âThe team that we took to Paris, the most important component of our team were the young people,â deBrum said.
DeBrum likes to speak of his message being âcarried forwardâ by the youth of today. He believes they have the power to invigorate those they speak to and make the messages that he preaches transcend political and societal trends. When , an 18 year old who grew up on the island of Majuro, expressed her concerns about how climate change would affect the next generation during the Paris talks, deBrum claims that âeven the toughest and most thick skinned of the representatives who'd been in this climate change thing forever and think they've heard everything were moved to tears.â To deBrum, this showed that climate change is not a contemporary issue that requires a band-aid, it is an ongoing issue that the next generation is prepared to commit to solving.
All quotes from Tony DeBrum were collected by Tamara Greenstone Alefaio. The author is greatly appreciative of Ms. Greenstone Alefaio for passing along questions to Mr. DeBrum, and to Mr. DeBrum himself for taking the time to answer them so thoughtfully.
AP Images/Frank Franklin II