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This competition is run by CIWEM and supported by the UN Environment, Arup and Olympus UK. Terry Fuller, CIWEM chief executive said: This year’s Environmental Photographer of the Year is SL Shanth Kumar with his photo High Tide Enters Home. It depicts a huge wave which lashed at a shanty town in Bandra, Mumbai, throwing a 40-year old fisherman out of his home. He was pulled in by the strong currents, and was rescued by fellow fishermen. The reclaimed city of Mumbai is facing an increased risk of coastal flooding as a result of climate change. The city’s land and sea temperatures have been rising causing a corresponding impact on the sea level. SL Shanth Kumar said: The 2019 Changing Environments Prize was awarded to Sean Gallagher for the photo Tuvalu Beneath the Rising Tide. The photo shows fallen trees lying on a beach as the waves from the Funafuti lagoon in Tuvalu lap around them. “Land erosion has always been a problem for the country, but problems are intensifying as sea levels rise. Rising seas are on the verge of submerging the tiny archipelago’s islands completely under water,” the photographer explains. Eliud Gil Samaniego was awarded this year’s Sustainable Cities Prize for his image Polluted New Year. It shows Mexicali on the 1 January 2018, right after the New Year’s Eve. On that day, the city was one of the most contaminated cities in the world because the pyrotechnics, climate change, geographic location, industry and cars. Water, Equality and Sustainability Prize was awarded to Frederick Dharshie Wissah for the image Water Scarcity, showing a young boy drinking dirty water. This happens due to lack of water points in the area, which has occurred due to deforestation. The photographer explains that a lack of clean water “greatly increases the risk of diarrhoeal diseases as cholera, typhoid fever and dysentery, and other water-borne tropical diseases.” J Henry Fair won this year’s Climate Action and Energy Prize for the photo Remains of the Forest. The photo captures Hambach Forest which was nearly 12,000 years old when it was bought by a power company to dig for the brown coal buried underneath. “The ancient forest was once the size of Manhattan. Now only 10 percent of it remains.” Young Environmental Photographer of the Year was awarded to Neville Ngomane and his photo Desperate Measures. “This rhino is being de-horned in an attempt to protect it from being poached,” the photographer explains, adding that “this was not an easy watch.” The goal of this contest is, above all, to make an impact and inspire change from political leaders, decision-makers, and the general public. But looking at these winning images will make anyone moved. I believe they will inspire many of us to try and make a change, no matter how small it may seem. Take a look at more photos below, and you can see the full gallery of shortlisted images on CIWEM’s website.