The Last Savings at Bengal Delta

Arati Biswas, a 70-year-old widow who lives at the shore of the Bay of Bengal, doesn't know the "Climate Crisis" and why her food storage is getting shorter daily. She doesn't know about the local economic recession due to the spread of the Novel coronavirus. Her husband died 35 years ago. She had the only married daughter; her husband was a street hawker, and they had three children to feed. Arati lives with her daughter; she makes crackers every day and walks miles in villages to sell her product. As her daughter cannot work due to illness and the daughter's husband has a spinal injury, none of them can earn their living. These crackers are the food by selling she buys food to feed her family. She lives in the world's most catastrophic zone at the world's largest mangrove forest, the Sundarbans, where hundreds of Royal Bengal Tigers nested their home. Still, the frequent cyclones cannot sustain anyone, not humans, animals, or other species. The scientists forecasted that the seawater would drown the whole coastal belt of Bangladesh around the Sundarbans by 2050.

 

We're one step ahead to embracing the apocalypse to build worldly wealth, the so-called development of civilization, and maneuvering the earth's structure by supplying to the demand of hyper-consumption. The recent data from the Global Carbon Project shows that the top five countries, China (28%), the United States of America (15%), India (7%), Russia (5%), and Japan (3%), produce the most of the carbon dioxide, this culprit gas is causing the world's temperature to rise and bring adverse climate experiences affecting human survival and destabilizing ecological harmony. The rest of the world only produces 23% carbon while Bangladesh emits non-significant but already has become a scapegoat of the climate crisis.