Hundreds of people living in the Torres Strait face the prospect of having to leave their homes in the coming decades as rising seas engulf their low-lying islands, a new report says.
The Torres Strait Regional Authority (TSRA), the local government body for most of the 20 or so populated islands, is warning that some communities may become uninhabitable if, as projected, sea levels rise by 52 to 98cm by the end of this century.
Already, low-lying communities in the strait - which separates the far northeastern tip of the Australian mainland from Papua New Guinea - are experiencing abnormally high king tides which flood homes, roads, graveyards and cause major coastal erosion.
The fear is that as the ocean warms and sea levels rise further, some islands may have to be abandoned.
Yet the threat to people's lives and livelihoods seems barely to register in Canberra, which only recently - after years of lobbying by the islanders - released funds for the construction and repair of seawalls on Saibai and Boigu, two of the worst affected communities.