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Climate Crises Force Rising Numbers Of Children From Their Homes With No Way Back

Surging temperatures, rising water levels and land degradation drove an estimated record 10 million children from their homes last year with the increase in climate migration coming with a new risk - they may never return.

A new report from Save the Children, Walking into the Eye of the Storm, released on the eve of the COP26 summit, highlights climate change-induced migration is here and set to get worse, with 30 million people - about one third children - forced from their homes in 2020 due to climate related disasters. This was three times as many as displaced by conflict and violence, and compared to 19 million people displaced internally by such disasters five years ago.

"The scale of the crisis is huge, and growing fast. It is a perfect storm that we must stop in its path - before it’s too late," says Save the Children New Zealand’s Advocacy and Research Director Jacqui Southey.

"Before, climate change often led to short term displacements and families would go back after the cyclone or flood was over. Now because of the frequency of natural disasters and slow onset degradation, we’re seeing more and more permanent migration, with many children unable or unwilling to return. Children and their families often move to areas that are equally high-risk, and get little support to build their resilience and integrate in their destinations. It is clear that many current responses to climate-related migration and displacement are not sustainable or fit for purpose.

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"And with research showing today’s one-year-olds likely to face far greater climate-induced disasters than previous generations, it’s vital that we act now."

The research also emphasized a rapidly emerging trend with twice as many people impacted by slow-onset droughts than sudden storms in 2020 and migration prompted by extreme temperatures, rising sea levels and salinization of agricultural land far more likely to be permanent. Much of this permanent migration, however, is to areas equally or even more at risk from climatic factors - out of the frying pan into the fire.

The study was based on the findings of more than 420 research reports exploring climate change and child displacement, 125 experts, and interviews with 239 children living in high-risk climate settings in five countries in five continents - Fiji, Iraq, Mali, Mozambique and Peru - some of whom had relocated due to climate change.

Children from all five continents said the climate crisis was having a devastating impact on their lives right now and that they and/or their friends were having to move, increasingly from rural to urban areas and sometimes travelling alone.

Some mentioned that climate risks were increasing their poverty levels, leaving them "trapped" in high risk locations. Some children were skipping meals, not attending school, engaging in child labour, child marriage, street begging, or sexually exploited.

"Last year and in 2018, a lot of houses collapsed due to heavy rains. If it rains too much, our fields will be flooded so the harvest will not be good, in which case people will be forced to find [other] solutions to feed their families. But that is not possible all the time so the [only] solution is to leave this very hostile area," said Ousmane-, 14, from Mali.

Globally, more than 1 billion children3 live in areas at high risk of flooding, severe drought, or other climate threats that pose a serious risk to lives and livelihoods.

"Copra farming is one of the most important things in our life. It is our source of income ... but due to climate change, there can be loss of income ... I decided to move for a better education and a better life," said Matila-, 15, from Fiji.

Children are already set to face the brunt of climate change, with Save the Children’s Born into the Climate Crisis report in September showing that children born in 2020 were poised to experience 6.8 times more heatwaves, 2.8 times as many river floods, and 2.6 times as many droughts as their grandparents under the original Paris Agreement emission reduction pledge.

But the urgency of the situation was emphasised by the latest report that showed climate change is not just increasing the likelihood of displacement but directly driving people from their homes through more intense, extreme weather events that disrupt services, damage infrastructure and destroy livelihoods.

The report, "Walking into the eye of the Storm: How the Climate Crisis is driving Child Migration and Displacement", stressed that children were more likely to be physically affected by climate-related events than adults, being more sensitive to malnutrition and infections, but also face threats to their mental health and a greater risk of violence including recruitment to armed militias.

Save the Children said currently most national policies on displacement did not consider climate-related events to be a trigger for displacement and that needed to change. The organisation called on the humanitarian sector and governments to:

- Incorporate climate expertise and associated risks into child migration and displacement programming

- Prioritise the rights and needs of children affected by climate-related migration and displacement by ensuring that legislation, policies, strategies, and plans holistically address climate change’s impact on children

- Prepare for proactive, planned and child responsive movement (e.g. timely relocation of communities downstream of glacial lakes) within national responses to climate-related migration and displacement, not just reactive support for unplanned displacement.

- Build on predictive analytics and forecasting expertise to carry out long-term scenario planning for child migration and displacement in high-risk climate settings alongside responses for improved early or anticipatory action.

- Establish partnerships with migration and displacement specialists and national government to advance the collection and sharing of disaggregated data on climate-related child migration and displacement.

- Establish forums for children to share their experiences of climate-related displacement, support each other, and contribute to decision-making and planning processes.

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