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Analysis: Wildfire and flood disasters are causing sa国际传媒榗limate migrationsa国际传媒 within Canada

Polticians need to implement environmental policies or people will go elsewhere
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Trees burnt by the White Rock Lake wildfire earlier this month are seen in Monte Lake, B.C., on Thursday, Aug. 26, 2021. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck

Summer 2021 saw a succession of record breaking disasters.

Wildfires raged in Greece, Turkey, the United States and Canada. Floods hit western Europe and China and have caused hundreds of casualties. Unprecedented rainfall on the summit of Greenland also triggered massive ice melts.

The release of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Changesa国际传媒檚 (IPCC) sixth assessment report confirmed our worst fears about human-induced climate change. The report predicts a worst-case scenerio of 4.5 C warming by 2100.

Antonio Guterres, the secretary-general of the United Nations, called the report sa国际传媒渁 code red for humanity.sa国际传媒

And hesa国际传媒檚 right, the report issues a stark warning sa国际传媒 sa国际传媒渦nless there are immediate, rapid and large-scale reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, limiting warming to close to 1.5 C or even 2 C will be beyond reach.sa国际传媒

Climate change is already affecting every region on earth and the changes are expected to be widespread, rapid and intensifying. The results of the IPCC assessment likely has many Canadians asking, what does this mean for Canada?

An influx of climate refugees?

After the IPCC reports release headlines read things like sa国际传媒淗istoric human tsunami likely in Canadasa国际传媒檚 futuresa国际传媒 and sa国际传媒淭he great climate migration is happening and you might be the next to move.sa国际传媒

A Vancouver Sun article used unreliable estimates of the number of sa国际传媒渃limate refugeessa国际传媒 to make its point. The article read sa国际传媒渢here can be as many as one billion environmental migrants by 2050,sa国际传媒 which is a statistic that is widely misquoted and often attributed to the UN International Organization of Migrants (IOM).

In a 2014 report by the IOM to address estimates of climate or environmental migrants. It stated that there was sa国际传媒済reat uncertainty about the figures,sa国际传媒 and noted that the forecasts for the number of environmental migrants vary widely sa国际传媒 by as much as a factor of 40 sa国际传媒 or between 25 million and one billion.

Structuring an article around an influx of climate refugees may create fear for some Canadians. The reality is however, that the majority of displaced peoples do not cross borders, and one of the largest categories of displaced peoples is internally displaced peoples.

One could conclude that those displaced by the consequences of climate change will also likely be internally displaced.

Climate migration within Canada

Another common climate change concern for Canadians is climate migration within our country.

Climate migrants are people who may be displaced by wildfires or floods or choose to move away from disaster-prone regions. As one headline states: sa国际传媒淐limate displacement a growing concern in B.C. as extreme weather forces residents out of their homes.sa国际传媒

Many saw the destruction of Lytton, B.C., by wildfires this summer as an example of what our future holds if serious action is not taken to reduce the impacts of climate change. As the frequency and intensity of disasters increase, the idea of moving to escape the consequences of climate change feels more real. And for some it is already happening.

In 2019, Georgia Fisher told the National Observer: sa国际传媒淚 just moved east along with my partner and infant daughter, after about 15 years in Albertasa国际传媒 I wouldnsa国际传媒檛 have begun to consider this move if it werensa国际传媒檛 for last summer and all the smoke.sa国际传媒

Moving for climate change

For Canadians who may want to move proactively, the environmental policy and sustainability of their new home will be an important factor.

An Angus Reid Institute survey conducted on Aug. 16, with a representative sample of 1,511 Canadians, found that 76 per cent of Canadians say environmental policy and sustainability are a priority when considering where to live, with 45 per cent considering it an essential or high priority.

People in British Columbia, Ontario, Qu茅bec and the Atlantic provinces were more likely to prioritize environmental policy and sustainability in considering where to live than people who live in the Prairies.

Differences also existed between age groups sa国际传媒 19 per cent of Canadians between the ages of 18 and 34 indicated that the environmental policy and/or sustainability of an area is an essential priority when considering where to live, while those aged 55+ were more likely to say it is a high priority (34 per cent).

The impact of these findings

So what do these findings mean? There are calls for stronger policies to address climate change and promote green jobs. Advocacy groups are asking political parties to stop working for the interest of the oil and gas industry and instead work for Canadians.

In response to the IPCCsa国际传媒檚 sixth assessment, the Liberal government argued that revenue generated by the Trans Mountain pipeline will help Canada achieve its climate objectives. Academic research into the financial impact of fossil fuel divestment has found that divestment does not result in financial harm to investors.

While fighting climate change may start at home, through recycling programs and sustainable purchasing, it may soon grow into moving to cities and towns where a more sustainable lifestyle is achievable. So while academic studies are behind on addressing whether climate migration is inevitable in Canada, wildfires, floods and other disasters are already forcing people to flee.

We need to act fast, politicians need to implement environmental policies that will fill their constituents desire for living in a community that has good environmental policy and sustainability practices, or they will go and find it somewhere else.

sa国际传媒擸vonne Su, Assistant Professor in the Department of Equity Studies, York University, Canada. This article was originally published on The Conversation, an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts. Disclosure information is available on the original site.





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