Mon 02 December 2019:
Catastrophes such as floods, cyclones and fires caused by the climate crisis have driven millions of people from their homes every year for a decade, research by Oxfam has found.
Such disasters have forced more than 20 million people a year to flee – equivalent to one every two seconds – according to a new report by the charity.
Climate was the biggest cause of people being forced from home, bigger even than war, it says.
The study, which looked at how people were made refugees inside their home countries by climate disasters between 2008 and last year, reveals the reported number of weather emergencies over the past decade increased five-fold.
Millions more have been driven away by drought, rising sea levels and other “slow-onset” climate-fuelled disasters, while more still are forced to emigrate.
“While no one is immune, it is overwhelmingly poor countries that are most at risk,” it warns. “Eighty per cent of those displaced in the last decade live in Asia – home to over a third of the world’s poorest people.”
“Women are often among the last to leave home when more extreme or erratic weather makes it harder for families to put food on the table, staying behind to look after children and elderly or sick relatives, while male family members leave to search for an income elsewhere,” the study found.
Small island developing states such as Cuba and Tuvalu make up seven of the 10 countries that face the highest risk of internal displacement from extreme weather, and people there are 150 times more likely to be displaced by such disasters than those in Europe.
Its figures show that the number of climate-related disasters each year forcing citizens to flee nearly tripled between 2016 and last year, from 527 to 1,518.
The report, entitled Forced from Home, is based on data from the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre, and the issue is among topics due be discussed at the UN climate summit in Madrid this week.
Oxfam condemns the “little progress” made by the international community towards providing new funds to help poor countries recover from loss and damage resulting from the climate emergency.
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