UN Peacekeepers from Mongolia reach the town of Tong, South Sudan, affected by floodwater in 2023. Credit: UNMISS

At the crossroads of crisis 

How the climate crisis worsens displacement and conflict

 

Conflict forces people to flee their homes, the climate crisis makes sure they cannot go back. By June 2025, this was the harsh reality for many of the world’s forcibly displaced by conflict and violence.

According to UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, are currently living in countries facing high-to-extreme exposure to climate-related hazards. Tens of millions of people are left with nowhere to go as extreme weather amplifies the suffering from violence. Over half of the world’s refugee settlements are located in high heat spots, with the fifteen hottest camps for displaced people projected to face over 200 days of hazardous heat per year by 2050.

The need for humanitarian aid spikes alongside the risks of repeated displacement, while chances of recovery rapidly disappear from view. Inclusive, accessible, and joined global action is needed now to stop the crisis, and to return hope and perspective to millions.

A phenomenon that knows no borders

The connection between the climate crisis and displacement is not new, but it is intensifying. Since 2016, have been displaced within their home countries by weather-related disasters such as droughts and floods, averaging around 67,000 displacements every day for 10 years. This is a from the ten-year average through the end of 2023, indicative of the sharp . In line with this trend, the number of countries facing extreme climate-related hazards is from the current three  to 65 by 2040.

The consequences are being felt worldwide, in a phenomenon that knows no borders. Exemplary is the situation in 2024 in refugee camps in Dabaab, Kenya, where for the second time following floods, among them many Somalis who had initially fled their country due to . Around the same time, thousands of kilometers away, heavy floods displaced , in a region that is tarnished by extreme weather Caught in the middle of this disaster were around , whose need for protection surged.

Exacerbating conflict and displacement

While the climate crisis has shown to directly lead to displacement, it also exacerbates conflict. This means existing threats and vulnerabilities from violence are amplified. For example, droughts and floods in South Sudan are . This raises food insecurity to emergency levels for millions and adds to the already dire situation in the country, which is hosting from war-torn neighbor Sudan alongside its own internally displaced population of .

In Haiti, armed conflict and weather shocks to drive up food prices. Over have been displaced. As armed groups control nearly 90 per cent of the capital Port-au-Prince, large numbers of farmers no longer have access to the city’s markets, making it impossible for them to bring food to the masses. Meanwhile, the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season at an above-average intensity, plaguing the region with floods and failed harvests. About face acute food insecurity due to these combined factors.

Collective climate action has become an urgent and essential component of peace processes. As described in , governments must weave displacement concerns into their national climate and disaster plans, to make sure that no one is left behind when adaptation strategies are made and implemented.

Reliable and consistent funding is as vital as ever to help host countries that are already bearing the brunt of overlapping crises adapt to climate-related shocks. Investing in early warning systems, climate-resilient infrastructure, and regional cooperation is a matter of life and death in the world’s most vulnerable regions.

The message is clear: if the world does not act, millions will be left with nowhere to go, no home to return to.

 

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