A/HRC/17/33
report dedicated on the relationship between climate change and human rights,18 “the
effects on human rights can be of a direct nature, such as the threat extreme weather events
may pose to the right to life, but will often have an indirect and gradual effect on human
rights, such as increasing stress on health systems and vulnerabilities related to climate
change-induced migration. Particularly vulnerable are those living on the “front line” of
climate change, in places where even small climatic changes can have catastrophic
consequences for lives and livelihoods”.
2.
Policy challenges: migration and adaptation strategies
53.
The Special Rapporteur recalls that only recently has attention been paid to develop
the knowledge base about the interrelationship between environmental pressures (including
climate change) and migration, in order to develop informed policy and programmes.
54.
Policy makers have been slow to identify potential responses to environmentally
induced migration. Recent literature on environmentally induced movements emphasizes
that migration can have positive as well as negative consequences – a factor that affects
how policies are formulated.19 The more positive impacts occur when migration is a
voluntary coping strategy that allows people time to weigh alternatives and to use migration
as a way of reducing household risk. Concerning the negative impacts, the Special
Rapporteur emphasizes that they stem particularly from emergency mass movements that
are generally related to intensified natural disasters and to competition for resources. These
movements most closely resemble refugee movements and would often require large-scale
humanitarian assistance.
55.
Experts have traditionally been categorized into two groups: the alarmists, who see
the environment as a principal cause of population movements, emphasizing the forced
nature of the migration process (and who use the term “environmental refugee”), and who
project that hundreds of millions of persons will be affected, often without differentiating
between those who will move short distances to safer ground and those who may move
thousand of miles to new countries. The sceptics, by contrast, raise question about the
models used to generate estimates of those who would be forced to migrate, emphasizing
that pull factors in destination places are more important than push factors at home in
determining whether, where and in what numbers people will migrate.20
56.
Concerning the strategies to manage environmental migration adopted in developing
countries, the Special Rapporteur would like to mention the National Adaptation
Programmes of Action (NAPAs) which are considered the principal frameworks adopted by
low-income developing countries to manage environmentally induced migration. According
to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), NAPAs
“provide a process for Least Developed Countries (LDCs) to identify priority activities that
respond to their urgent and immediate needs to adapt to climate change – those for which
further delay would increase vulnerability and/or costs at a later stage”.21 The majority of
NAPAs outline the adaptation strategies described as ways to reduce migration pressures
and allow people to remain in their original settlements. The strategies generally seek to
adapt agricultural practices, management of pastoral lands, infrastructure such as dykes and
coastal barriers, fishing patterns and other strategies to reduce pressures on fragile
ecosystems, thereby allowing populations to remain in place.
18
19
20
21
A/HRC/10/61, paras. 92-93
See note 5 above , p. 357.
See note 12 above.
See http://unfccc.int/adaptation/items/4159.php.
13