People who are driven to
migrate by floods, droughts and other disasters linked to climate change come
overwhelmingly from middle-income countries, not the poorest parts of the
world, as is commonly believed, new research finds.
Thomson
Reuters Foundation report continues:
And
those who move abroad due to natural disasters are likely to be highly
educated, suggesting climate change could exacerbate "brain drain"
from developing countries, according to Linguere Mously Mbaye, a consultant for
the African Development Bank.
Very
poor people cannot afford to migrate and the richest have other ways of coping
such as accessing social services in the wake of disasters, she found.
There
are no reliable estimates of the number of people who have migrated or will do
so due to environmental changes. But forecasts range from 25 million to 1
billion globally by 2050, according to the International Organization for
Migration.
The
issue has garnered political attention amid a global refugee crisis, and led to
growing calls to give people fleeing climate-linked disasters similar
protections to political refugees under international law.
But
the reality of climate migration is often misunderstood, said Mbaye, whose
research was recently published by online database IZA World of Labour.
"People
think we'll have a whole bunch of people coming to rich countries due to
climate change, but they overestimate (this)," she told the Thomson
Reuters Foundation. "If you look at the literature, it's not that
straightforward."
Between
2008 and 2014, developing countries accounted for 95% of global
displacement due to disasters, but 86% of those uprooted came from
middle-income countries such as India, China and Pakistan, and only 9% from lower-income countries, she found.
On
top of the misconception that climate migrants come from poor nations, people
tend to assume that climate change causes people to move overseas when in
reality, most move within their own countries or to neighbouring ones, she
said.
In
Bangladesh, for example, researchers found that moderate flooding over more
than a decade increased people's likelihood of moving locally but made them
less likely to migrate long-distance, Mbaye said.
But
in places like sub-Saharan Africa, weather shifts that hurt farming can drive
villagers to cities, which in turn may put a strain on urban jobs and fuel
migration overseas.
Despite
myriad warnings of displacement caused by climate change, the world remains
unprepared to deal with the problem, experts said last month in a policy brief
for the Group of 20 major economies, adding that international law and aid
policies need urgent reform.
To
prevent large-scale displacement, governments should fund infrastructure
projects and social protection programmes so that families can cope with
climate shocks, experts said.
"Investing
in resilience in source countries is absolutely crucial to helping people
remain in place, which they often prefer," said Shiloh Fetzek, a senior
fellow at the U.S. Centre for Climate and Security.
"But migration shouldn't be seen as a failure of resilience. Migration is often an important part of resilience," she added.
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