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Climate Migration

Kartavya Desk Staff

Syllabus: Population and Migration

Source: TH

Context: Rising climate-induced droughts in Bundelkhand and floods along Bangladesh’s Jamuna River have spotlighted climate migration as a growing livelihood crisis across South Asia.

About Climate Migration:

What is Climate Migration?

• Climate migration refers to the forced movement of people due to climate-related events like floods, droughts, cyclones, or slow-onset changes such as sea-level rise or desertification. Annual Impact: As per the International Refugee Assistance Project (2022), 20 million people are internally displaced by climate disasters every year. Nature: These movements are often seasonal, cyclical, or permanent, with poor households most vulnerable.

• Climate migration refers to the forced movement of people due to climate-related events like floods, droughts, cyclones, or slow-onset changes such as sea-level rise or desertification.

Annual Impact: As per the International Refugee Assistance Project (2022), 20 million people are internally displaced by climate disasters every year.

Nature: These movements are often seasonal, cyclical, or permanent, with poor households most vulnerable.

Data & Case Examples:

Bundelkhand: Faced 8–9 droughts between 1998–2009; temperatures expected to rise by 2–3.5°C by 2100. (IMD) Charpauli (Bangladesh): Lost 500+ houses in 1 week due to Jamuna River erosion in 2022 and riverbanks eroding by 12–52m annually. Vidarbha-Marathwada: Migrants Walk hundreds of kilometres for sugarcane cutting, facing 50°C+ temperatures and erratic rains.

Bundelkhand: Faced 8–9 droughts between 1998–2009; temperatures expected to rise by 2–3.5°C by 2100. (IMD)

Charpauli (Bangladesh): Lost 500+ houses in 1 week due to Jamuna River erosion in 2022 and riverbanks eroding by 12–52m annually.

Vidarbha-Marathwada: Migrants Walk hundreds of kilometres for sugarcane cutting, facing 50°C+ temperatures and erratic rains.

Factors Pushing Climate Migration:

Drought & Rainfall Variability: In Bundelkhand and Marathwada, failed monsoons and delayed rains have collapsed agriculture.

Flooding & River Erosion: Charpauli village shows how river swelling from glacial melt/floods leads to loss of homes.

Heatwaves & Water Scarcity: Maharashtra’s sugarcane belt records extreme heat and water-stressed agriculture, pushing labour migration.

Debt & Income Collapse: Crop failure leads to bonded seasonal labour (e.g., ₹50,000–₹5 lakh sugarcane advance trapping koita couples).

Loss of Livelihood Assets: Soil degradation, arable land erosion, and rising input costs in climate-sensitive regions worsen distress.

Implications of Climate Migration:

Rural Displacement: Entire families are leaving villages, altering demographic and land-use patterns.

Urban Informality: Migrants often settle in slums without sanitation, housing, or safety nets (e.g., Bundelkhand migrants in Delhi).

Gendered Risks: Women left behind face sexual violence, financial burden, and school dropouts among children.

Labour Exploitation: Contract-bound cane cutters must work without exit, creating modern debt bondage.

Erosion of Social Structures: Long-term migration breaks rural social support systems and collective farming resilience.

Challenges with Climate Migration

No Legal Recognition: India lacks a legal category for climate migrants, making them invisible in welfare schemes.

Lack of Social Security Portability: Migrants lose access to ration cards, pensions, MGNREGA at new locations.

Poor Working Conditions: Living in plastic tents without water, electricity, or sanitation (e.g., Maharashtra cane cutters).

Debt Cycle: Wages tied to harvest output amid falling yields trap families in multi-year debt cycles.

Data Deficit: No centralized climate migration monitoring system, making policy response slow and under-informed.

Way Forward:

Legal Recognition: Integrate climate-displaced persons under national migration and disaster frameworks (e.g., NDMA Act).

Social Protection Portability: Use One Nation One Ration Card and eShram to ensure benefit access during migration.

Climate-Resilient Rural Employment: Expand MGNREGA for water conservation, drought-proofing, and agroforestry.

Skill Diversification: Provide mobile skill training and job matching for seasonal migrants (like koita couples).

National Climate Migration Index: Create a district-level vulnerability map integrating IMD, Census, and SECC data for early action.

Conclusion:

Climate migration is no longer a distant threat—it is India’s lived reality, especially for the rural poor. Without adaptive policy and protective social infrastructure, migration will remain a forced displacement rather than a choice. Inclusive growth must now account for mobility, dignity, and resilience in the face of climate change.

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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