
Climate crisis worsening already 'hellish' refugee situation: U.N.
The Hindu
U.N.H.C.R highlights impact of climate change on displacement, calls for increased investment in mitigating risks at international talks.
Climate change is contributing to record numbers of people being uprooted from their homes globally, while worsening the often already "hellish" conditions of displacement, the United Nations (U.N.) said on Tuesday (November 12, 2024).
With international climate talks under way in Baku, the U.N. refugee agency highlighted how soaring global temperatures and extreme weather events are impacting displacement numbers and conditions, as it called for more and better investment in mitigating the risks.
In a fresh report, U.N.H.C.R pointed to how climate shocks in places like Sudan, Somalia and Myanmar were interacting with conflict to push those already in danger into even more dire situations.
"Across our warming world, drought, floods, life-threatening heat and other extreme weather events are creating emergencies with alarming frequency," U.N.H.C.R chief Filippo Grandi said in the foreword to the report.
"People forced to flee their homes are on the front lines of this crisis," he said, pointing out that 75 percent of displaced people live in countries with high-to-extreme exposure to climate-related hazards.
"As the speed and scale of climate change increase, this figure will only continue to rise."
A record 120 million people already live forcibly displaced by war, violence and persecution -- most of them inside their own countries, U.N.H.C.R figures from June showed.

Hical Technologies rolls out ‘Corporate Commute’ to encourage employees to shift to public transport
Hical Technologies launches 'Corporate Commute' to promote public transport use among employees, enhancing sustainable commuting in Bengaluru.












