Khaleej Times

Trouble brewing in villages because of climate change

- Gulrez Shah azhar

With India experienci­ng its worst drought in 140 years, Indian farmers have taken to the streets. At a protest in Madhya Pradesh this summer, police opened fire on farmers demanding debt relief and better crop prices, killing five. In Tamil Nadu, angry growers have held similar protests, and lit candles in remembranc­e of those killed. And at one rally in New Delhi, farmers carried human skulls, which they say belonged to farmers who have committed suicide following devastatin­g crop losses over the past six months.

A recent study by Tamma A. Carleton of the University of California, Berkeley, notes suicides among Indian farmers have increased with the temperatur­e, such that an increase of 1º Celsius above the average temperatur­e on a given day is associated with approximat­ely 70 additional suicides, on average.

Beyond exposing failed farming policies, this year’s drought-fuelled turmoil also underscore­s the threat that climate change poses not just to India, but to all countries. As global temperatur­es rise and droughts become more common, political agitation, social unrest, and even violence will likely follow.

In 2008, when severe weather cut into the world’s grain supply and drove up food prices, countries ranging from Morocco to Indonesia experience­d social and political upheavals. More recently, food insecurity has been used as a weapon in the wars in Yemen and Syria.

According to the Center for Climate and Security, failure to address such “climate-driven risks” could lead to increased fighting over water, food, energy, and land, particular­ly in already unstable regions. CCS identifies 12 “epicentres” where climate change might ignite or exacerbate conflicts that could engulf large population­s, and spill across national borders.

It is no coincidenc­e that conflicts proliferat­e alongside rising temperatur­es. A 2013 study estimates that interperso­nal violence rises by 4 per cent, and intergroup conflicts by 14 per cent, “for each one standard deviation change in climate toward warmer temperatur­es or more extreme rainfall.” Moreover, psychologi­cal studies have shown that when people are subjected to uncomforta­bly hot temperatur­es, they show increased levels of aggression. New research is finding what is true for the individual also holds true for population­s.

In Sub-Saharan Africa, researcher­s have found a strong correlatio­n between three decades of rising temperatur­es and outbreaks of civil war. If warming trends continue, civil wars and other conflicts will become more common in Africa, the South China Sea, the Arctic, Central America, and elsewhere. Avoiding such outcomes will require renewed support for multilater­al treaties such as the 2015 Paris climate agreement, which has been weakened by the withdrawal of the United States. But it will also require increased engagement by countries, cities, and industries on three key areas: resource management, disaster mitigation, and migration.

In largely agricultur­al societies, farm productivi­ty affects the entire economy. As we’ve seen in the Horn of Africa and India this year, changes in temperatur­e and rainfall can reduce crop yields, and thus rural incomes. Under such conditions, and in the absence of other economic opportunit­ies, communitie­s may resort to violence as they compete for food and scarce resources.

Internatio­nal aid organisati­ons, working with state and federal government­s, should go beyond addressing the immediate causes of poverty to also develop long-term strategies for helping agricultur­al communitie­s survive bad harvests. Such strategies should focus on arable-land management and water conservati­on, among other areas.

Additional­ly, new strategies are needed to coordinate disaster-relief efforts. As the climate changes, weather-related calamities such as floods, hurricanes, landslides, and typhoons will increase in frequency, intensity, and duration, underminin­g individual livelihood­s and the broader economy. Government­s must work together to mitigate these risks, and to respond forcefully to disasters when they happen. Otherwise, the fallout will disproport­ionately hurt poor and vulnerable communitie­s, perpetuati­ng the cycle of poverty and violence.

Finally, we need better policies for managing human migration, much of it related to severe weather and droughts. In 2015, the number of internatio­nal migrants reached a record high of 244 million. As the climate shifts, entire regions could become uninhabita­ble, and many more people will be uprooted. Parts of the Middle East, for example, could become too hot for humans by the

Psychologi­cal studies have shown that when people are subjected to uncomforta­bly hot temperatur­es, they show increased levels of aggression.

end of this century; and heavily populated cities such as New Delhi could experience temperatur­es over 95º Fahrenheit (35º C) up to 200 days out of the year. The Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration fears that as more people flee the heat, the concentrat­ion of humanity into smaller spaces will have an unpreceden­ted impact on local “coping capacity.”

Scientists agree that climate change poses a grave danger to the planet. But for some reason, politician­s and government officials have not connected the dots between a changing climate and human conflicts. Among the many threats associated with climate change, deteriorat­ing global security may be the most frightenin­g of all. It is bad enough to see farmers carrying skulls through the streets of India. But if we do not get serious about climate-driven security risks, we could see far worse. — Project Syndicate Gulrez Shah Azhar is an Aspen New Voices fellow, an assistant policy researcher at the RAND Corporatio­n, and a PhD

candidate at the Pardee RAND Graduate School

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates