Oroville Mercury-Register

US: More threats, refugees as climate warms

- By Julie Watson, Ellen Knickmeyer and Nomaan Merchant

WASHINGTON » The Earth’s warming and resulting natural disasters are creating a more dangerous world of desperate leaders and peoples, the Biden administra­tion said Thursday in the federal government’s starkest assessment­s yet of security and migration challenges facing the United States as the climate worsens.

The Defense Department for years has called climate change a threat to U.S. national security. But Thursday’s reports by the department­s of Defense and Homeland Security, National Security Council and Director of National Intelligen­ce provide one of the government’s deepest looks yet at the vast rippling effects on the world’s stability and resulting heightened threats to U.S. security, as well as its impact on migration.

They include a first-ofits-kind intelligen­ce assessment on climate change that identified 11 nations of greatest concern, from Haiti to Afghanista­n.

New steps pushed

Another report, the first by the government focusing at length on climate and migration, recommends a number of steps, including monitoring the flows of people forced to leave their homes because of natural disasters, and working with Congress on a groundbrea­king plan that would add droughts, floods and wildfires and other climate-related reasons to be considered in granting refugee status.

The climate migration assessment­s urge the creation of a task force to coordinate U.S. management of climate change and migration across government, from climate scientists to aid and security officials.

Each year, storms, the failure of seasonal rains and other sudden natural disasters force an average of 21.5 million people from their homes around the world, the U.N. High Commission­er for Refugees says. Worsening climate from the burning of coal and gas already is intensifyi­ng a range of disasters, from wildfires overrunnin­g towns in California, rising seas overtaking island nations and drought aggravated conflict in some parts of the world.

“Policy and programmin­g efforts made today and in coming years will impact estimates of people moving due to climate-related factors,” said the report, one of dozens of climate change assessment­s President Joe Biden ordered from federal agencies. “Tens of millions of people, however, are likely to be displaced over the next two to three decades due in large measure to climate change impacts.”

Climate intel estimate

The Biden administra­tion is eager to show itself confrontin­g the impacts of climate change ahead of a crucial U.N. climate conference in Glasgow, Scotland, that starts late this month. That’s especially so as Biden

struggles to get lawmakers to agree to multibilli­ondollar measures to slow climate change, a key part of his domestic agenda.

As part of its push Thursday, the administra­tion released the first-ever national intelligen­ce estimate on climate change, a document intended to signal the importance placed on the issue. National intelligen­ce estimates are benchmark documents created by U.S. intelligen­ce agencies that are intended to inform decision-making and analysis across the government.

Notably, U.S. intelligen­ce agencies concluded it was probably already too late to keep the warming of the planet at or below the level laid out in the 2015 U.N. Paris climate accord. While that level remains the official goal for the United States and United Nations, many scientists have concluded the Earth’s temperatur­e will rise at least several more tenths of a degree, a level of warming that brings even more damage and threatens some nations’ existence.

“Given current government policies and trends in technology developmen­t, we judge that collective­ly countries are unlikely to meet the Paris goals because highemitti­ng countries would have to make rapid progress toward decarboniz­ing their energy systems by transition­ing away from fossil fuels within the next decade, whereas developing countries would need to rely on low-carbon energy sources for their economic developmen­t,” the intelligen­ce report said.

Blazing a new trail

No nation offers asylum or other legal protection­s to people displaced specifical­ly because of climate change. The United States has the opportunit­y to change that, which could prompt others to follow suit, refugee advocates said.

The administra­tion said it is not seeking to change internatio­nal agreements on refugees but rather create U.S. laws that would allow climate change effects to be part of a valid claim for refugee status.

It noted that activists persecuted for speaking out against government inaction on climate change may also have plausible claims to refugee status.

It’s imperative the report turn into legislatio­n that allows climate refugees the ability to resettle in the United States, and not just result in another task force, others said.

Krish O’Mara Vignarajah, president of the Lutheran Immigratio­n and Refugee Service, one of nine U.S. agencies working to resettle refugees, said action is needed because the current U.S. humanitari­an protection system “wasn’t engineered for cascading natural disasters, mass aridificat­ion or large swath of lands consumed by rising seas.”

According to the separate intelligen­ce assessment, a warming planet could increase geopolitic­al tensions particular­ly as poorer countries grapple with droughts, rising seas and other effects, while they wait for richer, higher-polluting countries to change their behavior. Climate change will “increasing­ly exacerbate risks to U.S. national security interests,” according to the estimate.

 ?? RINGO H.W. CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A firefighte­r watches as smoke rises from a wildfire in Goleta.
RINGO H.W. CHIU — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A firefighte­r watches as smoke rises from a wildfire in Goleta.

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