iPhone app iPad app Android phone app Android tablet app More

Environmental Migration: Climate Change Could Spawn Mass Migrations, Study Says


First Posted: 03/13/2012 3:13 am Updated: 03/13/2012 10:20 am

MANILA, Philippines (AP) — The Asian Development Bank is warning countries to prepare for influxes of people fleeing natural disasters as climate change exacerbates rising sea levels, soil degradation and seasonal flooding.

Natural disasters drove 42 million people from their homes in the Asia-Pacific in 2010 and 2011, though it was unclear how many of those were caused by climate change, the bank said in a study released Tuesday.

It said that one-third of Southeast Asia's population lives in at-risk areas, including Indonesia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Thailand and Vietnam.

Six of the 10 countries most vulnerable to climate change are in the Asia-Pacific. Bangladesh tops the list followed by India, Nepal, the Philippines, Afghanistan and Myanmar.

The study did not make any specific projections for migration induced by climate change, noting that the numbers are difficult to estimate as migration decisions often depend on a wide array of factors, including poverty.

"Given that climate change acts as an aggravating factor for environmental degradation, it is expected to boost the number of people migrating because of environmental changes, both sudden and slow onset. Though the amplitude of these movements remains difficult to forecast, climate change is likely to become a major driver of migration in the 21st century," it said.

It cited the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, a U.N. network of 2,000 scientists, as saying that the Asia-Pacific will bear the brunt of significant temperature increases, changing rainfall patterns, greater monsoon variability, sea-level rise, floods, and more intense tropical cyclones. Most scientists expect such changes to accompany a rise in the planet's temperature caused in part by greenhouse gasses from burning fossil fuels for electricity and transport.

The region is particularly vulnerable because of its high population density and long coastlines.

Recent examples of such migration include Papua New Guinea, where residents of Carteret and neighboring atolls moved to the island of Bougainville because of rising sea levels.

In 2010, more than 10 million Pakistanis were displaced by monsoon rains and flooding along the Indus River basin, and last year, a typhoon ravaged the southern Philippines, displacing more than 300,000 people.

___

Online:

http://beta.adb.org/sites/default/files/pub/2012/addressing-climate-change-migration.pdf

Also on HuffPost:

FOLLOW HUFFPOST GREEN

MANILA, Philippines (AP) — The Asian Development Bank is warning countries to prepare for influxes of people fleeing natural disasters as climate change exacerbates rising sea levels, soil degradati...
MANILA, Philippines (AP) — The Asian Development Bank is warning countries to prepare for influxes of people fleeing natural disasters as climate change exacerbates rising sea levels, soil degradati...
MANILA, Philippines (AP) — The Asian Development Bank is warning countries to prepare for influxes of people fleeing natural disasters as climate change exacerbates rising sea levels, soil degradati...
MANILA, Philippines (AP) — The Asian Development Bank is warning countries to prepare for influxes of people fleeing natural disasters as climate change exacerbates rising sea levels, soil degradati...
Filed by Joanna Zelman  |  Report Corrections
 
 
  • Comments
  • 63
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3  Next ›  Last »  (3 total)
10:07 PM on 03/23/2012
Maybe every country should develop a plan to balance population, food, water, energy, resources and jobs.

Exporting people is not a solution. The overpopulation beyond what is sustainable is.
12:22 AM on 03/18/2012
Overpopulation in parts of the world will lead to mass migration to other parts of the world causing an imbalance between population, resources, energy and jobs.
12:20 AM on 03/18/2012
Too few resources and too many people. The world added a billion people in the last 12 years.

We now have a food crisis, a water crisis, an oil crisis, a climate change crisis, a financial crisis, a jobs crisis and an over population crisis.

Every problem is made harder to solve with the worlds ever growing population.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
usa1freedom
got me
10:10 PM on 03/13/2012
O' and about every 5 - 15k years the same thing happens. Leif ericson's village in Greenland that was covered with ice, was re-discovered a while back.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
usa1freedom
got me
10:06 PM on 03/13/2012
I hope like HELL they dont try to come here and live off my tax dollars.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WeMustDoBetter09
07:14 PM on 03/13/2012
This is an oldie-but-goodie from March 18th, 2011, about the exodus out of Japan after the meltdowns.

I just thought it was interesting to see how different companies/gov'ts. reacted back then….

* There was "a request to move 185 people to Singapore as soon as possible"

Wonder who those 185 people were?

* State Department was working to evacuate Americans within 50-mile radius and family members of "diplomatic staff in Tokyo, Nagoya and Yokohama"

* 80 employees of French Telecom evacuated

* Hennes & Mauritz relocated stores to Osaka and prepared to close stores in Tokyo

* Ford Motor Co. in Tokyo cut back to key staff from its 200 employees, and said their employees could leave or stay

* Google said its few hundred employees could leave or stay

* Tupperware made plans to move all of their 20,000 employees from Tokyo to Okazaki

* WPP in Tokyo (4,600 employees) hadn't yet evacuated and CEO Sir Martin Sorrell said, "Whilst the situation in Japan is very troubling, as far as business risk is concerned, the situation in the Middle East is probably more serious given this unpredictability."

* Planes were chartered at the cost of $500,000 and were booking up

* British Airways, Singapore Airlines, and Qantas moved their crews rest stop out of Tokyo

* Duetsche Lufhansa stopped flights out of Tokyo

* Virgin Atlantic "continued to base crew in Tokyo"

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704360404576206554285721120.html
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WeMustDoBetter09
08:14 PM on 03/13/2012
What's happened since? Governments have been totally SILENT about Japan.
Amazing how much an Industry can buy in the MSM.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jean-Francois Guilbert
07:02 PM on 03/13/2012
I OPEN I STARTY UP I OPEN I LAGOTARY I WAITING I INTERESING
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
08:25 AM on 03/14/2012
you weird
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bubblessharky
Where sanity dares to tread
06:50 PM on 03/13/2012
This news item is unfortunately so very real and easy to predict. The question is how the rest of the world largely unaffected is going to respond. I think poorly as they will be facing their own sets of challenges. The only countries that might be able to act as realistic havens might be New Zealand and Australia given their relatively small populations. For example the population of Australia is less than 30 million, but yet it is the same size of the US f one excludes Alaska.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WeMustDoBetter09
06:00 PM on 03/13/2012
NO MENTION OF RADIATION BEING REASON FOR FLEEING?!?!?
You know....F U K U S H I M A - J A P A N
03:47 PM on 03/13/2012
The numbers of people who will be displaced by climate change is staggering, and compounded by their economic vulnerability. More efforts need to be made to protect these parts of the world now, as the longer we wait, the harder and more terrible the consequences will be.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WeMustDoBetter09
06:43 PM on 03/13/2012
1st Fan. Sadly you are right Odyssey....
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lbsaltzman
Permaculture and Sustainability
07:25 PM on 03/13/2012
2nd fan!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
4evercanadian
Still my guitar gently weeps
03:09 PM on 03/13/2012
Gwynne Dyer wrote a book about this in 2008.

http://www.randomhouse.ca/catalog/display.pperl?isbn=9780307355836
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Luke Armstrong
Your children will run this country one day.... st
11:52 AM on 03/13/2012
Could? It already is a reality.
11:06 AM on 03/13/2012
Lets outsource their jobs back to the US they won't be needing them.
11:04 AM on 03/13/2012
Perhaps the Japan can give lessons on how to fight at meetings at the UN so the council doesn't appear like whimps on the evening news.
photo
ILoveFiction
That's unbelievable!
11:00 AM on 03/13/2012
Meanwhile, back in the USA, Rick Santorum recommends talking to a plant.
ubrew12
that crazy uncle from Amarcord
02:40 PM on 03/13/2012
Could someone introduce ol' Rick to that plant from 'Little Shop of Horrors'?
photo
bridge to somewhere
That's impossible, even for a computer!
03:01 PM on 03/13/2012
The guy sure looks like plant-food to me!