"The Groundswell report is a stark reminder of the human toll of climate change, particularly on the world's poorest—those who are contributing the least to its causes."
Groundswell Part 2: Acting on Internal Climate Migration includes analyses for East Asia and the Pacific, North Africa, and Eastern Europe and Central Asia, building on a modeling approach from a 2018 report that covered Sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia, and Latin America.
"The Groundswell report is a stark reminder of the human toll of climate change, particularly on the world's poorest—those who are contributing the least to its causes," said Juergen Voegele, vice president of sustainable development at the World Bank, in a statement.
The report's highest projection is for Sub-Saharan Africa, which could see up to 86 million internal climate migrants by 2050, followed by East Asia and the Pacific (49 million), South Asia (40 million), North Africa (19 million), Latin America (17 million), and Eastern Europe and Central Asia (five million). The 216 million figure is a worst-case scenario total for the six regions, Voegele explained in the report's introduction.The World Bank projects as many as 216 million people will be forced to move *only within their country* (meaning, excluding those forced to other countries) by climate change by 2050 across huge chunks of the world.https://t.co/Qy755e8kNu pic.twitter.com/ZvsOyAeoeu
— Dave Levitan (@davelevitan) September 13, 2021
"It's important to note that this projection is not cast in stone," he wrote. "If countries start now to reduce greenhouse gases, close development gaps, restore vital ecosystems, and help people adapt, internal climate migration could be reduced by up to 80%—to 44 million people by 2050."
Voegele continued:
Without these actions, the report predicts that "hotspots" of climate migration will emerge as soon as within the next decade and intensify by 2050, as people leave places that can no longer sustain them and go to areas that offer opportunity. For instance, people are increasingly moving to cities, and we find that climate-related challenges such as water scarcity, declining crop productivity, and sea-level rise play a role in this migration. Even places which could become hotspots of climate out-migration because of increased impacts will likely still support large numbers of people. Meanwhile, receiving areas are often ill-prepared to receive additional internal climate migrants and provide them with basic services or use their skills."Development that is green, resilient, and inclusive can slow the pace of distress-driven internal climate migration," he concluded. "This report is a timely call for urgent action at the intersection of climate, migration, and development."
As the World Bank's statement outlined, the report's policy recommendations include:
- Reducing global emissions and making every effort to meet the temperature goals of the Paris agreement;
- Embedding internal climate migration in far-sighted green, resilient, and inclusive development planning;
- Preparing for each phase of migration, so that internal climate migration as an adaptation strategy can result in positive development outcomes; and
- Investing in better understanding of the drivers of internal climate migration to inform well-targeted policies.
The AP noted that though many scientists say the world is not on track for the worst-case scenario in terms of planet-heating emissions, van Aalst pointed out that even under more moderate scenarios, climate impacts are now happening more quickly than projected, "including the extremes we are already experiencing, as well as potential implications for migration and displacement."
Kanta Kumari Rigaud, the World Bank's lead environment specialist and one of the report's co-authors, highlighted that even if political and business leaders take the actions scientists say are necessary to decrease emissions, "we're already locked into a certain amount of warming, so climate migration is a reality."
"We have to reduce or cut our greenhouse gases to meet the Paris target," she told Reuters, "because those climate impacts are going to escalate and increase the scale of climate migration."
NEWS: #ClimateChange could force 216 million people to migrate within their own countries by 2050, including 40 million people in #SouthAsia. New #Groundswell report: https://t.co/c7fj6fDb0R pic.twitter.com/kYQaxGEZpm
— Hartwig Schafer (@HartwigSchafer) September 13, 2021
While the World Bank's figures focus on internal displacement in specific
regions, previous broader analyses have shown the
greater impact
that the climate emergency is expected to have on migration in the coming
decades, boosting
pressure
on the Biden administration and other major governments to
take action
now.
The new report came ahead of a major climate
summit for parties to the Paris agreement
that kicks off in Scotland on October 31, and as United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet on Monday
delivered
a relevant warning to the U.N. Human Rights Council.
"A safe, clean, healthy, and sustainable environment is the foundation of
human life," she said. "But today, because of human action—and inhuman
inaction—the triple planetary crises of climate change, pollution, and nature
loss is directly and severely impacting a broad range of rights, including the
rights to adequate food, water, education, housing, health, development, and
even life itself."
Bachelet explained that these interlinked crises "act as threat
multipliers—amplifying conflicts, tensions, and structural inequalities, and
forcing people into increasingly vulnerable situations. As these environmental
threats intensify, they will constitute the single greatest challenge to human
rights in our era."
"The greatest uncertainty about these challenges is what policymakers will do
about them," she added. "Addressing the world's triple environmental crisis is
a humanitarian imperative, a human rights imperative, a peace-building
imperative, and a development imperative."
Links
- (Report) Groundswell Part 2 : Acting on Internal Climate Migration
- (Forbes) World Bank Predicts Massive Internal Migration From Climate Change By 2050
- (AP News) Report: Climate change could see 200 million move by 2050
- (Bangor Daily News) Report expects to see more than 200 million climate refugees
- (Geo.tv) Climate change could trigger internal migration of 216 million people, says World Bank
- (NY1) UN expert warns climate change will impact human rights
- (SMH) ‘Hazards Are Many’: Millions Found To Be At Risk From Sea Level Rise
- Climate Change Could Create 63 Million Migrants In South Asia By 2050
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