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Canada
Related: About this forumHow do you move a village? Residents of France's last outpost in North America try to outrun the sea
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/oct/28/canada-st-pierre-miquelon-relocation-climate-crisis-rising-tides-france-hurricanesHow do you move a village? Residents of Frances last outpost in North America try to outrun the sea
As rising tides eat away at the Saint-Pierre and Miquelon archipelago off Canada, plans to move the historic village to higher ground have divided residents
By Sara Hashemi
Tue 28 Oct 2025 09.00 EDT
Franck Detcheverry, Miquelons 41-year-old mayor, trudges up a grassy hill. The view isnt too bad, huh? he jokes. The ocean sparkles 40 metres below the empty mound. The sound of a man playing the bagpipes, as if serenading the sea, floats up from the shoreline. This hill will be the location of his new home and those of all his fellow villagers.
In the distance, about half a mile away, you can see the outline of the 400 or so buildings in the village of Miquelon. It sits only 2 metres above sea level on the archipelago of Saint-Pierre and Miquelon. Situated off the Canadian coast to the south of Newfoundland, it is an overseas collectivity of France, and the countrys last foothold in North America.
It is the kind of place where people leave their car door open while they grab their groceries from the general store, and everyone nods bonjour as they pass you on the street.
We negotiated with the government to give us three years to build our new homes were doing it little by little
Franck Detcheverry, mayor of Miquelon
But just over a decade ago something happened that would change the direction of the islands future for ever. In 2014, François Hollande became the first French head of state to set foot on Miquelon  and he delivered a huge blow to its 600 or so population: Miquelon could soon disappear because of the rise in sea level, he said, which is estimated to reach one metre by the end of the century.
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						How do you move a village? Residents of France's last outpost in North America try to outrun the sea (Original Post)
						cbabe
						Tuesday
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EYESORE 9001
(29,246 posts)1. I first heard of Saint-Pierre and Miquelon from stamp collecting as a child
        I looked in an atlas and remembered thinking those islands looked vulnerable out there. Turns out I was correct.
carpetbagger
(5,391 posts)2. I've been to Ste. Pierre
        Really cool place. Great food, friendly people, and enough like Metropolitan France (i.e. the France that is that land mass between Spain and Germany) that the differences stand out. That town is fortunately sloped a bit so that worsening harbour storms and the first few metres of sea level rise will only take out the centre of the town.


