0 “Advancing human security through knowledge-based approaches to reducing vulnerability and environmental risks“ UNITED NATIONS UNIVERSITY Institute for.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Main gaps in knowledge and technical capacity Dr. Paul V. Desanker Vice-Chair, UNFCCC LDC Expert Group (Malawi)
Advertisements

Global Gender and Climate Aliance CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION Reducing the vulnerability to extreme events through prevention.
Protection during Early Recovery (Place) – (Date) Session 8.2: Durable Solutions Framework Adapted from presentation developed by the Office of the Representative.
Climate Change Adaptation Louise Collett Climate Change Advocacy Coordinator Oxfam Australia
1 Climate Change and the Most Vulnerable Countries: The Imperative to Act, Informal Meeting of UNGA, New York, 8 July 2008 Disaster Risk.
United Nations University Institute for Environment & Human Security EFMSV Germanwatch Session “Climate change, migration and European.
United Nations University Institute for Environment & Human Security Environmental Change & Migration: The Evidence Dr. Koko Warner.
United Nations University Institute for Environment & Human Security Environmental Change & Migration: The Evidence Dr. Koko Warner.
Today we are going to build a case study of flooding in Bangladesh. This will contrast with the MEDC case study of Boscastle that we have already studied.
“Youth on the move” Taking up the challenge of environmental change and migration from a youth perspective.
Climate change and the Risk of Hunger Social Forum of the Human Rights Council Carlo Scaramella WFP Climate Change and Disaster Risk Reduction Office October.
DISASTER RISK REDUCTION AND RESILIENCE FOR FOOD SECURITY The First Arab Conference on Disaster Risk Reduction March, 2013 Carlo Scaramella WFP Deputy Regional.
"Climate Change - a global pressing issue” A.K.M. Saiful Islam Associate Professor Institute of Water and Flood Management (IWFM) Bangladesh University.
1 Roberto Pitea Regional Research Officer for Africa and the Middle East International Organization for Migration (IOM), Cairo Cairo, 20 – 21 September.
cafod.org.uk finding out about … the impacts of climate change.
Vulnerability Assessments and Adaptation to Climate Change Consultations on the Relationship between Climate and human rightsGeneva 22 October 2008 Festus.
CLIMATE CHANGE IN AFRICA: SCIENCE, RISK AND VULNERABILITY Dr Lisa Frost Ramsay
Mainstreaming human mobility in adaptation to climate change policies and actions TADDESSE BEKELE FANTA ETHIOPIA.
Adaptation to Climate Change
Tamyka Steinbeck Laura Barlow Thomas Caddell Brittany DeWitt.
A lesson on the Environment and Human Impact 8th Grade Science
CLIMATIC HAZARDS Climatic disasters are recurrent threats to sustainable livelihoods in Orissa. Rather than mean temperature or seasonal rainfall these.
Building the capacity of climate- vulnerable states to migrate with ‘dignity’
1 MET 12 Global Warming: Lecture 10 Solutions: Adaptation Shaun Tanner Outline:   Issues   Impacts   Adaptation methods.
Adaptation to Climate Change: Making development disaster-proof January 2008.
Global Climate Change Project Based Learning Environmental Issues and Global Climate Change… “How can I affect change in my world?” Global Climate Change.
Climate Change Impacts and Urban Migration: Confronting the Looming Crisis Mohammad Zaman, PhD Social Policy/Development Specialist & Executive Director,
(Optional Game) (Site information came from)
Investment in Sustainable Natural Resource Management (focus: Agriculture) increases in agricultural productivity have come in part at the expense of deterioration.
The impact of climate change on policy and migration of people Sandor Szalai Szent Istvan University
Climate Resilience in Fragile and Conflict-Affected Societies Workshop on Climate Sceince Needed to Support Robust Adaptation Decisions Georgia Tech, Atlanta,
Migration, Climate Change and the Environment & Angela Santucci Project Officer International Organization for Migration (IOM) Cairo, 20 – 21 September.
Md. Shahidul Haque Director, IOM, Geneva
CLICO (Climate Change, Hydro-Conflict and Human Security) Jakob Rhyner UNU Institute for Environment and Human Security, Bonn 12th WaterNet | WARFSA |
LO:I can explain the effects of river flooding on people and the environment.
Better water resources management -- Greater resilience today, more effective adaptation tomorrow GWP Perspective on water and climate change adaptation.
Adaptation to Climate Change Actions in Mongolia Adaptation Workshop IFAD, Rome May 2007.
Index Human Migration. Index: 1. Definition of migration 2. Number of international immigration and emigration Directions of international.
Sustainable Development Prospects for North Africa: Ad Hoc Experts Meeting Sustainable Development in North Africa: Experiences and Lessons Tunisia,
1 Implications of disasters for achieving the Millennium Development Goals International Strategy for Disaster Reduction (UNISDR)
Integrating Gender issues into Climate Change Adaptation: National and Regional policy making and planning ECOWAS Regional Ministerial Dialogue on Climate.
Funding Adaptation: Challenges and Opportunities Orestes Anastasia USAID Regional Development Mission for Asia Cities at Risk: Building Adaptive Capacity.
5 th WORLD WATER FORUM TOPIC 1.2 WATER-RELATED MIGRATION, CHANGING LAND USE AND HUMAN SETTLEMENTS Panel Discussion on “Climate Change” 1. What adaptation.
Dr Mark Cresswell Scenarios of the Future 69EG6517 – Impacts & Models of Climate Change.
Nansen Initiative Regional Consultation in South Asia Results of the Individual Questionnaires.
Seminar on Climate Forced Migrants: Human Rights Perspective Need New Protocol under UNFCCC 3 December 2011 CoP-17, UNFCCC, December,2011.
Sight Words.
High Frequency Words.
Displacement related to disasters and the effects of climate change is a reality and one of the big challenges which States and the international community.
1 Who are IDPs and what are their needs?. 2 Objectives  To define the basic elements of the definition of an IDP  To identify the specific problems.
Identifying, Evaluating and Prioritising Urban Adaptation Measures.
State of Kenya Population Report 2015 Theme: Vulnerable Populations in Emergencies with Special focus on Sexual and Reproductive health Overview Alfred.
Global Data Integration CRED Workshop October 26, 2009 Greg Yetman World Data Center for Human Interactions in the Environment.
Funded by Scaling up Urban Disaster Risk Reduction in Cambodia by: People in Need.
Research progress on floods and flood risk management 1st Meeting of Working Group F on Floods 7 May 2007, Brussels Marta Moren Abat Directorate General.
1) Sea level has risen more in the last decade than it has in the past century 2)Global warming and cooling is a natural earth process 3)If we take action,
To recap… What are some of the consequences of global warming for Africa and the Arctic?
Title Presenter, Position, Organisation. The Deep South National Science Challenge Te Kōmata o Te Tonga.
Climate Change & Security in South Asia: COOPERATING FOR PEACE.
Global Warming History & Geography
Copenhagen Climate Congress
THEME Addressing drivers of migration, including the adverse effects of climate change, natural disasters and human-made crises, through protection and.
Climate Change-induced Migration and Water Conflicts in Africa: The Case of Pastoral Communities in Northern Kenya James biu kung’u (Phd) Department of.
GLOBAL WARMING By ……. 8E1 Science.
Vulnerability Assessments and Adaptation to Climate Change
The EU strategy on adaptation to climate change
8th Feb 2019 Nisreen Elsaim Muawia Shaddad
Vulnerability Profile of Shanghai Cooperation Region (SCO)
Reintegration of Boys, Girls and Adolescents Victims of Trafficking and other Migrants in Vulnerable Situations Guatemala, September 2013.
Presentation transcript:

0 “Advancing human security through knowledge-based approaches to reducing vulnerability and environmental risks“ UNITED NATIONS UNIVERSITY Institute for Environment and Human Security (UNU-EHS)

1 Environmental Change & Human Migration: Current Evidence and Need for Leadership Dr. Koko Warner Head of Section, Environmental Migration, Social Vulnerability and Adaptation Bonn, Germany

2 1st global survey of environmental change and forced migration scenarios, European Commission

3 Definitions, data, dilemmas No widely agreed upon, measurable definition of what an environmental or climate –related migrant is. o refugee, migrant, displacee, forced migrant, flee- ant, emergency migrant, survival migrant, etc. o “refugee” has a legally specific meaning in the context of the 1951 Geneva Convention. o IOM useful working term “environmentally induced migration” o We still only have general understanding of how environment affects human movement.

4  Definitions: How should we define those who move for environmental reasons? (many different categories and definitions developed since 1980s) Is environmental migration inherently a form of forced displacement ?  Data: How many will move? Who is likely to move? When, and where will people move?  Drivers: To what extent can environmental factors be identified and shown to be a primary cause of movement?  Policy responses: Do those migrating or displaced for environmental reasons have special needs not met by existing institutional frameworks? How adequate are existing legal and normative frameworks? 4 Guiding Questions

5 Environmentally induced migration today  Seasonal migration Seasonal migration already plays an important part in many families’ struggle to deal with environmental change. This is likely to become even more common, as is the practice of groups migrating from one spot to the next in search of ecosystems that can still support rural livelihoods.  Disaster displacement Disasters continue to be a major driver of shorter-term displacement and migration. As climate change increases the frequency and intensity of natural hazards such as cyclones, floods, and droughts, the number of temporarily displaced people will rise. This is especially true in countries that do not or cannot invest now in disaster risk reduction.  Migration and vulnerability Many people are not able to flee far enough to adequately avoid the negative impacts of environmental change. Migration requires resources that the only a handful of people have. EACH-FOR case studies indicate that environmental migrants can find their destinations as precarious as the places they left behind.

6 hs.unu.ed u Rockefeller Foundation Donor Briefing 23 September 2009, New York City

7 “Disasters occur so often - Flooding sometimes threatened our lives. Life was miserable. We did not know what else to do other than growing rice and fishing …but we lost everything. We had to migrate away. My children had to stop school, and I sent my girls to [Phnum Pénh] to work to help our family.”

8

9 Rockefeller Foundation Donor Briefing 23 September 2009, New York City

10 “My grandfather has worked on our lands, my father—and so do I. But times have changed…the rain is coming later now or not at all, and our crops are declining. The only solution is to go away, at least for a while. But leave my village forever? No. I was raised here and here I will stay.”

11

12 “My grandfather & father provided abundantly. They were farmers, & sometimes hunted in the forest. After the big drought, the trees died & the animals went away. I am a farmer, too, but I have to go to the city to earn extra money. And our children? None of the young people have a chance to farm—it's a mix of big dreams & too many problems with the weather. Life is too hard here, so they almost all try to go.”

13 Rockefeller Foundation Donor Briefing 23 September 2009, New York City

14 hs.unu.ed u Rockefeller Foundation Donor Briefing 23 September 2009, New York City

15 Climate change on population distribution impacts Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Program says that Arctic temperatures in the past six years were the highest since measurements began in The AMAP report also said the melting of Arctic glaciers and ice caps, including Greenland's huge ice sheet, are projected to help raise global sea levels by 35 to 63 inches ( centimeters) by the end of this century, though this estimate is highly uncertain. But just compare that to the IPCC´s 2007 projection of 7 to 23 inches (19-59 centimeters) which didn't consider the dynamics of ice caps in the Arctic and Antarctica.

16 5 tasks for leadership 1. Support the best of science to expand the knowledge base on specific interactions – like desertification, rainfall variability, disaster occurrence, coastal erosion – with human mobility. 2. Multiply adaptation alternatives—this is the most important point. Where possible, help people stay through sustainable rural and urban development. Where necessary, help people move in safety and dignity 3. Involve the diaspora in designing and funding adaptation strategies that enable their home countries and communities cope with climate change. 4. Promote disaster risk reduction and conflict mediation strategies while strengthening humanitarian responses. Invest today in resilience building strategies designed to preempt uncontrolled crisis. Invest in humanitarian responses to natural hazards and conflict. 5. Innovate in guiding principles, effective practices and institutional frameworks to help governments in developing appropriate laws, policies and programs to address both internal and international migration resulting from climate change.

17 The decisions of the US and its neighbors today will determine whether migration becomes a matter of choice amongst a range of adaptation options, or merely a matter of survival due to a collective failure to find alternatives.

18 Dr. Koko Warner Institute for Environment and Human Security (UNU-EHS) Hermann-Ehlers-Str. 10 D Bonn, Germany Phone: (0) , Fax: (0) Thank you.