Climate refugee crises are happening right now. Here’s how you can help

July 10, 2019

The total number of displaced people in the world has now surpassed an astounding 70 million people. This total includes nearly 26 million refugees who have been forced to leave their country due to fear of persecution, war, famine, flood, disease, and often a combination of these factors. There is mounting evidence that the conditions leading so many to flee their homes can be tied to one major cause: climate change.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, or UNHCR, is one of the leading bodies identifying and assisting the world’s climate refugees. The group advocates for international policy changes and provides material assistance and legal advice for those displaced by crisis. Considering the emergencies for which the UNHCR provides assistance, 24/7 Wall St. reviewed five ongoing global refugee crises today related to climate change. 

When considering the groups that can be most affected by climate change, many would likely first think of rising sea levels affecting the populations of small, low-lying island nations. For example: Kiribati, the Pacific Island nation of roughly 100,000 residents, is projected to be effectively uninhabitable within decades. Even in the United States, there are a number of coastal cities that will soon be under water.

But islands and low-lying inhabited areas are far from the only places on Earth where climate change is contributing to a refugee crisis. In fact, many of the worst active refugee crises in the world today are tied to worsening climate conditions. These emergencies are not expected to occur in the next few decades – they are already happening. 

On every continent, water scarcity, drought, flooding, wildfires, and more – all conditions which have been shown to be increasing in intensity and frequency as a result of climate change – are displacing residents directly and exacerbating poor conditions for those who are fleeing their homes.

While violent conflict, the source of a great many of the world’s refugee crises, is not directly a condition of climate change, it is clear that worsening climate conditions are often a root cause of these conflicts. 

If you want to get involved helping these refugees and those who have been displaced by climate change, there are many ways you can help, including volunteering with and contributing financially to a nonprofit that specifically works on behalf of climate refugees. Here is a list of organizations that work directly to help climate refugees, including the UNHCR and the Environmental Justice Foundation.

1. Myanmar

Members of the long-persecuted Rohingya Muslim minority group have often been displaced in Myanmar, but conditions caused by climate change exacerbated their circumstances and the country’s current refugee crisis. After large parts of Myanmar were devastated by flooding and landslides in 2015, hundreds of thousands fled inundated areas, including Rohingya people. In the following years, the Southeast Asian nation has undergone a political change and faced a number of health crises.

surge of violence against the Rohingya in the summer of 2017 caused more than 700,000 to flee the country, the majority of which have gone to Bangladesh. In early July, massive flooding destroyed many of the temporary shelters of Rohingya refugees in the Cox’s Bazar settlement in Bangladesh, where over 900,000 refugees currently reside. According to the UNHCR, the vast majority of the Rohingya are women and children, and over 40% are under the age of 12.

2. Syria

Civil war, not climate change, is commonly associated with the world’s worst refugee crisis. But a report published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciencesfound that severe regional drought between 2006 and 2011 led to food shortages and illness in Syria and drove hundreds of thousands of residents to live in poor conditions on the outskirts of the country’s cities. It was these conditions that served as one of the primary triggers for the civil war that killed several hundred thousand and led to the refugee crisis. Further, the researchers concluded that climate change was a significant factor in the length and severity of the drought – the worst the country has faced in centuries – since normal variability in regional weather would not be sufficient to explain it.

There are roughly 5.6 million Syrians refugees living in neighboring countries. The majority of Syria’s refugees are in neighboring Turkey. In countries like Lebanon and Jordan, which are host to hundreds of thousands of Syrian refugees, the vast majority of Syrian refugees do not live in organized camps and face severe poverty. Overall, there are nearly 13 million forcibly displaced Syrians, the largest such population in the world.

Read the entire article here: https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/2019/07/10/disease-flood-war-climate-refugee-crises-happening-now/39669605/?fbclid=IwAR1rdY203B4OXxsRRRv0q9jcfLWGPq9ULXS0ObG4VI0PUurGRZWcwTZSDr0

 

Michael B. Sauter and Evan Comen