The Oklahoman

Report details how climate change could displace millions.

Report looks at possible three-decade scenarios

- Renata Brito

BARCELONA, Spain – Climate change could push more than 200 million people to leave their homes in the next three decades and create migration hot spots unless urgent action is taken to reduce global emissions and bridge the developmen­t gap, a World Bank report has found.

The second part of the Groundswel­l report published Monday examined how the impacts of slow-onset climate change such as water scarcity, decreasing crop productivi­ty and rising sea levels could lead to millions of what it describes as “climate migrants” by 2050 under three different scenarios with varying degrees of climate action and developmen­t.

Under the most pessimisti­c scenario, with high emissions and unequal developmen­t, the report forecasts up to 216 million people moving within their own countries across the six regions analyzed. Those regions are Latin America; North Africa; Sub-Saharan Africa; Eastern Europe and Central Asia; South Asia; and East Asia and the Pacific.

In the most climate-friendly scenario, with a low level of emissions and inclusive, sustainabl­e developmen­t, the world could still see 44 million people being forced to leave their homes.

The findings “reaffirm the potency of climate to induce migration within countries,” said Viviane Wei Chen Clement, a senior climate change specialist at the World Bank and one of the report’s authors.

The report didn’t look at the shortterm impacts of climate change, such as the effects of extreme weather events, and did not look at climate migration across borders.

In the worst-case scenario, Sub-Saharan Africa – the most vulnerable region due to desertification, fragile coastlines and the population’s dependence on agricultur­e – would see the most migrants, with up to 86 million people moving within national borders.

North Africa, however, is predicted to have the largest proportion of climate migrants, with 19 million people moving, equivalent to roughly 9% of its population, due mainly to increased water scarcity in northeaste­rn Tunisia; northweste­rn Algeria; western and southern Morocco; and the central Atlas foothills, the report said.

In South Asia, Bangladesh is particular­ly affected by flooding and crop failures, accounting for almost half of the predicted climate migrants, with 19.9 million people, including an increasing number of women, moving by 2050 under the pessimisti­c scenario.

“This is our humanitari­an reality right now, and we are concerned this is going to be even worse where vulnerabil­ity is more acute,” said Maarten van Aalst, director of the Internatio­nal Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Centre, who wasn’t involved with the report.

While climate change’s influence on migration is not new, it is often one of multiple factors pushing people to move. People affected by conflicts and inequality are also more vulnerable to the impacts of climate change as they have limited means to adapt.

“Globally we know that three out of four people that move stay within countries,” said Dr. Kanta Kumari Rigaud, a lead environmen­tal specialist at the World Bank and co-author of the report.

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 ?? RAJANISH KAKADE/AP FILE ?? People prepare to draw water from a dried-up well in Maharashtr­a state, India, in 2016 after a tanker emptied water into the well.
RAJANISH KAKADE/AP FILE People prepare to draw water from a dried-up well in Maharashtr­a state, India, in 2016 after a tanker emptied water into the well.

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