"People are taking to the
streets across the globe to demand urgent climate action. If politicians ignore
their pleas, more people will die, more people will go hungry, and more people
will be forced from their homes."
Monday, December 02, 2019
As world leaders convened in
Madrid for COP25 amid surging
grassroots demands for radical action, the charitable organization
Oxfam released new
research Monday showing that climate-related disasters were the
leading cause of internal displacement over the past decade, forcing an average
of over 20 million people to flee their homes per year.
That, according to Oxfam,
amounts to one person every two seconds being forced from their home due to
hurricanes, wildfires, cyclones, and other extreme weather.
"Our governments are
fueling a crisis that is driving millions of women, men, and children from
their homes and the poorest people in the poorest countries are paying the
heaviest price," Chema Vera, acting executive director of Oxfam
International, said in a statement.
According to Oxfam's analysis (pdf),
which relied on data Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre, the last decade
has seen a dramatic increase in the number of extreme weather disasters that
have forced people from their homes.
"Today, you are seven
times more likely to be internally displaced by extreme weather disasters...
than by geophysical disasters such as earthquakes and volcanic eruptions, and
three times more likely than by conflict," the organization found.
"There was a five-fold increase in the reported number of extreme weather
disasters that resulted in people being displaced over the last decade."
Emphasizing that small island
nations such as Tuvalu and Cuba face far higher risk of internal displacement
due to extreme weather than rich European nations, Oxfam condemned the wealthy
nations of the world for making "little progress towards the provision of
new funds to help poor countries recover from loss and damage resulting from
the climate emergency."
"Rich donor countries
have largely left poor countries to cover the rising costs of extreme weather
disasters themselves," Oxfam said.
To help vulnerable nations
recover from previous disasters and prepare for future extreme weather, Oxfam
called on world leaders at COP25 to commit to establishing an international
"Loss and Damage" fund to assist displaced people and communities.
Oxfam also urged nations to
commit to deeper emission cuts and more rapid phase-outs of fossil fuels to
limit global warming to 1.5°C by 2030.
"People are taking to the
streets across the globe to demand urgent climate action," Vera said.
"If politicians ignore their pleas, more people will die, more people will
go hungry and more people will be forced from their homes."
"Governments can and must
make Madrid matter," Vera added. "They must commit to faster, deeper
emissions cuts and they must establish a new 'Loss and Damage' fund to help
poor communities recover from climate disasters."
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