Climate change will result in a massive movement of people inside countries and across borders, creating “hotspots” where tens of millions pour into already crowded slums, according to the World Bank.
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| Lalmonirhat in Bangladesh was flooded last year. It is one of the areas likely to be hard-hit by climate change, leading to high levels of migration. |
More than 140 million people in just three regions of the developing world are likely to migrate within their native countries between now and 2050, the first report on the subject has found.
The World Bank examined three regions, which between them account for 55% of the developing world’s population. In sub-Saharan Africa, 86 million are expected to be internally displaced over the period; in south Asia, about 40 million; and in Latin America, 17 million.
Read Fiona Harvey’s story from The Guardian - “Climate change soon to cause mass movement, World Bank warns.”
(Australia’s present border concerns will be trivial compared to what the country faces when the predicted impacts of climate change evolve into reality, which will be within a decade or so - Robert McLean)

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