The Denver Post

Hurricane Maria may be preview of climate-fueled U.S. migration H

- By Christophe­r Flavelle

urricane Maria’s devastatio­n of Puerto Rico may offer a preview for Americans of one of the most jarring potential consequenc­es of global warming: the movement of large numbers of people pushed out of their homes by the effects of climate change.

The storm, which destroyed houses, washed away roads and cut off power to the commonweal­th’s 3.4 million residents, risks accelerati­ng an exodus that’s already under way as people flee economic stagnation and rising taxes brought on by a fiscal and debt crisis.

On Tuesday, Puerto Rico Gov. Ricardo Rossello warned that without “unpreceden­ted relief” from the U.S. government, “thousands if not millions” of residents could leave the island for the mainland. That would strain housing and job markets in the cities that received those people, as well as local government services.

In Puerto Rico, a further drop in population would make it harder to reverse its economic decline. The commonweal­th declared bankruptcy in May and has stopped making payments on much of its more than $70 billion in debt. Fewer residents would mean less economic activity, further reducing tax revenue and leaving officials even less able to repay Puerto Rico’s loans.

Scientists say higher water and air temperatur­es, as well as rising sea levels, increase the intensity and destructiv­e power of hurricanes, a trend that will continue as the concentrat­ion of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere increases.

Researcher­s at the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, in a report released Wednesday, looked at the links between extreme weather and emigration in more than 100 countries over three decades. They found that “a rise in temperatur­e and greater incidence of weather-related disasters increase outmigrati­on,” according to Petia Topalova, the IMF researcher and lead author of the report.

It describes migration as an “adaptation strategy for households hurt by weather

shocks” and predicts that “substantia­l migration flows, potentiall­y spilling across country borders, could arise if climate change causes a significan­t rise in sea levels.”

In some parts of the world, that’s already happening. In Africa, climate change forced an estimated 1 million people to leave their homes in 2015; in the Pacific, the World Bank has urged Australia and New Zealand to open their doors to residents forced off small island nations such as Tuvalu and Kiribati. Even in Syria, internal migration sparked by a historic drought contribute­d to the civil war, which has added to the wave of people trying to enter Europe in recent years.

Maria, which struck Puerto Rico on Sept. 20, could expose the U.S. to a similar dynamic. The scale of destructio­n on the island, combined with its large population and Puerto Ricans’ legal right to move anywhere in the U.S., could prompt migration on a larger scale than other natural disasters.

That raises questions about the country’s ability to handle such a movement of people. The housing market in those cities may not be able to accommodat­e that kind of influx, according to Jesse Keenan, an expert on climate adaptation at Harvard University.

“Let’s say just 350,000 leave,” Keenan said. Of those, he added, “let’s say just half end up in cities. It’s a major housing crisis. We don’t have that much slack in housing inventory.”

Keenan used the example of New York, which has the largest concentrat­ion of Puerto Ricans outside of the island. The city’s traditiona­lly Puerto Rican neighborho­ods, where new arrivals might settle — East Harlem, Bushwick, parts of the Bronx — already have low vacancy rates and high rental costs, Keenan said.

“The city of New York right now needs to set up a plan to house these people,” he said. If they’re forced to stay with friends or relatives, “you’re talking about housing being burdened by having too many people legally in the unit,” Keenan said, leading to fire risks, domestic strife and other problems.

Large numbers of newcomers also would place “a tremendous burden on social service delivery, at least for a couple of years,” Keenan said.

With planning and foresight, the U.S. would “be able to absorb and put to good work a wave of climate refugees,” said Giovanni Peri, an economist at the University of California-Davis.

 ?? Julie Jacobson, The Associated Press ?? Juan Rojas of Queens hugs 4-year-old grandson Elias as daughter-in-law Cori carries Lilly, 3, through the terminal at John F. Kennedy Internatio­nal Airport in New York on Tuesday. Cori Rojas, a teacher in Puerto Rico who fled with her children after...
Julie Jacobson, The Associated Press Juan Rojas of Queens hugs 4-year-old grandson Elias as daughter-in-law Cori carries Lilly, 3, through the terminal at John F. Kennedy Internatio­nal Airport in New York on Tuesday. Cori Rojas, a teacher in Puerto Rico who fled with her children after...

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