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Faced With Rising Temperatures, People May Seek Asylum (axios.com)

Europe is already struggling to absorb an influx of refugees from war-torn Syria, Afghanistan, Iraq, and Africa. Germany alone has taken in more than a million people since 2015. This wave of immigration has led to political upheaval, with the rise of right-wing political parties in Germany, Poland, Austria, and Hungary, among others. Now a new study, published in the journal Science, shows that the current surge in refugees may just be a preview of what's to come due in large part to global warming. From a report: At an average growing season temperature of about 68 Fahrenheit, which is the optimum one for agriculture, the number of applications for asylum was lowest. As the average temperature rose, so did the number of people from Somalia, Bangladesh and other warmer climate countries seeking asylum. But when cooler countries -- such as Serbia and Peru -- got warmer, fewer applications were received. The acceptance rate for asylum application to the EU is less than 10%. But when there was a spike in applications tied to weather fluctuations, the admittance rate rose to about 30%, suggesting agencies who evaluate the applicants find their cause worthy.

34 of 210 comments (clear)

  1. Context would be useful by XXongo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Would be useful if this were given some numerical context. How do the numbers of refugees due to climate compare to the numbers of refugees due to war and due to oppressive governments?

    1. Re:Context would be useful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The lack of numerical data is intentional. This is low effort propaganda designed to tug at your feels by throwing a bunch of half ass speculation in your face, juxtapositioned with stock photos of starving children.

    2. Re:Context would be useful by Hal_Porter · · Score: 5, Informative

      That would require someone do a multivariate analysis. And they won't do that because it would show civil war, oppressive governments etc are more strongly correlated to refugee flows than climate.

      Actually one big driver was getting rid of people like Gaddafi who stopped migrants coming to Europe. The EU had a deal with Gaddafi. Then France and the UK toppled him and Libya became essentially a failed state.

      https://www.theguardian.com/co...

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

      Turkey also uses refugee flows as a foreign policy tool - they turn on the tap when they want more money from Europe.

      https://www.euractiv.com/secti...

      So how much is climate a cause? Not much. Weather probably does have some impact though - mainly because if you're going to cross the Med or walk across Europe you'd be better off doing when it's not freezing cold. But weather and climate are not the same thing.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    3. Re:Context would be useful by hey! · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Actually this is a good point, but you're presupposing that these two causes of refugee flight are mutually exclusive. In fact they work synergistically. Environmental stress creates economic disruption, creating political unrest, encouraging people predisposed to fight oppressive governments rebel. That in turn prompting oppressive responses which exacerbate the underlying crisis and further erode the regime's credibility. This takes resources and focus away from the response to the underlying disaster, and in any case the inevitable favoritism and corruption push the regime to the brink of collapse.

      Take Syria, a perfect storm scenario. It's had a horrifically brutal, but *stable* regime for decades. A multi-year drought depopulated the countryside, further reducing its own agricultural output and creating large urban concentrations of unemployed young men ripe for radicalization. Then a transient spike in global wheat prices created shortages of subsidized bread and huge price spikes in market prices. This was

      It's hard to say how much better an honest and generally popular Syrian government would have weathered the crisis, but this much is clear: while oppressive governments *can* produce refugees on their own, they don't necessarily do so. But put a country where people hate and fear their government under stress, and you'll get refugees.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    4. Re:Context would be useful by Hal_Porter · · Score: 3

      True, but the alarmist side always trot out 'weather is not climate' whenever the weather is cold because one day's cold weather doesn't say anything about long term climate changes. Which is true - saying 'The fact it's cold means global warming isn't happening' is a dumb argument. However it's also a dumb argument to say that because it's warm on a particular day global warming must be happening is a dumb argument, but not one the alarmist side ever object to. I.e. the media are being intellectually dishonest about when they use this argument.

      In this case the 'weather is not climate' distinction applies. If you're a wannabe migrant it's plausible that you're more likely leave when it is summer rather than winter because you've got less chance of freezing to death. That's responding to weather - it's 20 degrees C warmer in summer than in winter and if you want to cross the Med and walk across multiple countries that makes a difference. You're not responding to the fact that it's 0.8 degrees C warmer now than it was 100 years ago, because that makes no difference.

      I.e. you're responding to weather not climate.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    5. Re:Context would be useful by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You have the basic idea right, but the motivations wrong.

      This isn't intended to make people "forget their internal divisions". On the contrary, it is supposed to stimulate and create division.

      A divided people is easier to "unite" under a common rule. (In the case of CoR, meaning rule of a select pre-chosen few.)

      Get the picture?

      Just look at the artificial divisions that have been introduced in the last 9 years or so (coincidentally REALLY ramping up at about the time Obama was elected): the most racial division (at least in U.S) in many decades, up to and including calls for white genocide; the most division by sex; nearly unrestrained, unwanted immigration; more politically-motivated shootings; "climate change", Antifa (which is really anything but), etc., etc.

    6. Re:Context would be useful by meglon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      http://archive.defense.gov/pub...

      You living in your own private fantasy land doesn't mean jack shit to reality.

      --
      Fascism: An authoritarian and nationalistic right-wing system of government and social organization. See also: NAZI's
    7. Re:Context would be useful by thegarbz · · Score: 4, Informative

      3) Inside the EU the migrants can claim asylum and even if they are refused they're unlikely to be deported

      Using an Anti-EU tabloid as a reference doesn't really help this point here. The fact is while few migrants are deported in figures, that is only because the official figures count people who are forced out using the country's resources. e.g. 580 people were deported from Germany in 2016. While that number is low 55,000 ended up leaving voluntarily after their asylum claim was denied.

      Deporting people is expensive so it doesn't happen a lot, so why do people leave voluntarily? Well it's actually damn hard to find even a place to live let alone work as an illegal immigrant in many EU countries, and as soon as your asylum claim is rejected you don't qualify for any state sponsored aid / housing anymore either. Not exactly a good thing when winter comes.

      4) The numbers of asylum seekers who are likely to find work is minimal. Of the million plus migrants who arrived in 2016 only 54 found a job

      Wow following up an express article with Breitbart. That is class.
      Speaking of I was working next to a building in Germany which got converted into temporary accommodation for people who were granted asylum. The building went in about Feb 2016 in quite a damn small town. Of the 50 people in there, more than half of them had a job by the time I left Germany (we shared some services with them including security and catering so chatted to them a bit). I find it amazing that half of the number of that reliable source all came from one little building in one little town in a little corner of Germany. They must be extremely lucky.

      It's a shame that Breitbart doesn't have a printed edition, I'm running low on toilet paper.

      I.e. if Turkey or Libya open the floodgates then there's nothing the EU can do legally to stop large numbers of people being dependent on benefits in the EU indefinitely.

      i.e. you get EU legal advice from far right anti-immigration and anti-EU fake news sources. Shame on you and shame on whoever modded you insightful.

    8. Re:Context would be useful by Muros · · Score: 2

      The numbers of asylum seekers who are likely to find work is minimal. Of the million plus migrants who arrived in 2016 only 54 found a job

      http://www.breitbart.com/londo...

      Funny that you think that, given that the source linked in the Breitbart article mentioned 400 full time jobs and 1800 interns. And that is from the companies that responded, not all did. Besides, why would you imagine that people who don't speak German and who have little in the way of relevant qualifications would be working in the top few companies in the country? How many people working in top Silicon Valley companies today arrived in America as asylum seekers within the past 18 months?

    9. Re:Context would be useful by AmiMoJo · · Score: 2, Informative

      Brietbart is not a reliable source of information.

      https://www.bloomberg.com/news...

      More than 54 have jobs, and many of the rest are in training to prepare them for work. See, Germany doesn't just invite them in and then ignore them, it deals with the situation actively.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
  2. Suspicious reasoning by SuperKendall · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Is it really climate that drives people from Somalia or Bangladesh? Or is it instead the fact those countries are pretty unstable and people want to get to a more stable area?

    Especially if you are talking refugees, and not simply immigration requests. "Refugee" implies something catastrophic they are fleeing, not slightly warmer weather.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  3. They can come over to my place... by Kenja · · Score: 2

    Floors be COLD in the morning yall...

    --

    "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
  4. Re:Plenty of cold in Russia by XXongo · · Score: 2

    Why don't they go to Siberia if heat is really their reason for migration?

    Well, mostly crop failures are the reason for migration. Heat is the reason for crop failure, but it's the crop failures that are the reason people are forced to leave.

    How much crops does Siberia grow?

  5. They're illegal aliens, not "refugees". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's absurd to call them "refugees".

    Real refugees have 2 primary goals:

    1) To reach the nearest location where the immediate danger they face is no longer present.

    2) To return to their origin as soon as it is safe to do so.

    In the case of Syrians, the locations matching those criteria would typically be within Syria itself. They could find safety without ever leaving the country.

    In rare situations, some Syrians might find Lebanon, Jordan, Turkey, or even Iraq to be closer. But that's as far as they'd ever need to go to reach safety, while still being able to return home as soon as possible.

    There's absolutely no legitimate reason for any Syrian to have made the long journey to a Europe nation like Greece, never mind distant European nations like Germany, Sweden or the UK.

    The same goes for anyone coming from Africa. At least Syrians can say there is something resembling a real war going on in their nation. That's not true for nearly all of the Africans. They conditions might not be good, but they're nothing like Syria.

    It's even worse when it comes to those from Afghanistan, given how far away Afghanistan is from Europe.

    Anyone traveling thousands upon thousands of miles to Europe, through numerous safe countries, and with no intent to ever leave Europe, is not a "refugee". They're illegal aliens, and that's exactly what they should be referred to as. They should also be immediately deported.

    1. Re:They're illegal aliens, not "refugees". by CohibaVancouver · · Score: 3, Interesting

      2) To return to their origin as soon as it is safe to do so.

      My next-door-neighbours arrived here in Canada as refugees from Vietnam in the 70s. They got jobs, became citizens, and raised children. 40 years later, Vietnam is now 'safe' but they have no interest in returning there. They're Canadians now. The mother of the household vacations there every few years to visit friends and family, but that's it.

      The Syrian refugees across the street from me will likely follow the same pattern - They are integrating themselves into our community. If, a decade from now, Syria is 'safe,' the pull to go back there will likely be weak.

    2. Re:They're illegal aliens, not "refugees". by Kjella · · Score: 2

      Real refugees have 2 primary goals:
      1) To reach the nearest location where the immediate danger they face is no longer present.
      2) To return to their origin as soon as it is safe to do so.

      So what you're saying is that everybody's primary goal is to stay at their origin, only refugees leave and only because they're forced away and only for as long as absolutely necessary? I think quite a lot of people who has left their home town or state or emigrated would disagree with that. I'll admit that I've ended up fairly close to home, but it's because of family, friends and familiar surroundings. If I didn't have anyone left behind because they've either with me, fled somewhere else or they're dead and the town was in ruins, would I be drawn to these geographical coordinates like a homing beacon to rebuild from the ashes? I doubt it.

      I'd start over, but I don't think you'd mind because I'd adapt to the culture that gave me a second chance in life. And to be honest short of one rather large and medieval religion with a huge appetite for cultural appeasement I think most immigrants have integrated quite okay. And even among those you have a lot of casually religious that aren't much of a bother, like who you say your prayers to is not really a big deal. But then we have those who can't and won't integrate, that insist on rewriting equality and civil rights, freedom of speech, antiquated ideas of honor and quite frankly racism and blatant disdain for our culture and our people. And it doesn't take that many well-pissers to ruin it for everyone, those who want to just get along both on "our" side and "their" side.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  6. So the study concludes asylum seekers are lying? by magzteel · · Score: 2

    According to https://www.immigrationequalit...

    An asylum seeker must prove that he or she has a well-founded fear of persecution based on one or more of five grounds:

    Race
    Religion
    Nationality
    Membership in a particular social group (Most LGBTQ individuals who apply for asylum qualify under this category)
    Political opinion

  7. Bangladesh crop yields up, not down by SuperKendall · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They're not running away from slightly warmer weather, they're running away from the secondary effects of that warmer weather: Too much rain/not enough rain, crop losses due to higher temps

    The truth is those factors alone are not enough to convince most people to move. Several years of bad crops and California farmers are still farming.

    You aren't suffering from a lack of imagination, just a lack of understanding the overall conditions of the regions people are leaving. "Poor crop yield" is so far down the list it doesn't even register, and makes very little sense for some of the areas talked about (like Bangladesh).

    In fact, it turns out that Bangladesh crop yields are going up, if you look at potatoes the output is up - in fact the real problem with crops this past year was not warmer weather, but flooding. Even so total agricultural production was up 2.9% overall, so why would people be refugees from Bangladesh based on crop yields when they are up?

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Bangladesh crop yields up, not down by Thirty4 · · Score: 2

      To put immigration on climate change is a far stretch, the relationship is more of a butterfly effect. To completely ignore climate change as a factor would be a mistake. Climate change can drive significant agricultural changes. Significant change to crop yield, be it negative or lateral disrupts a lot of families and individuals. By lateral crop yield change, I mean the change from one crop to another. Ex: A farmer, who has invested to grow wheat, may fail and his farmland may be acquired by a company that farms potatoes. The company is better suited to handle the changing market and growing dynamics than the individual farmer, so the company capitalizes on it and the farmer is displaced. Cumulative individual disruption leads to unrest. You can't reasonable quantify how much climate change contributed, If climate change didn't happen, perhaps issues would not have compounded and things would have gotten better. Or perhaps it would have happened anyway. Thus the butterfly affect. Unless you're in a time paradox, you'll never know. I think the point most people miss is that cumulative individual disruption leads to unrest. The rate and the severity of that disruption affects the severity of the unrest. People adjust to disruption, but when the rate of disruption is too fast and too severe, society reaches a tipping point and falls off a cliff.

  8. No place to go by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    Real refugees have 2 primary goals 1) To reach the nearest location where the immediate danger they face is no longer present. 2) To return to their origin as soon as it is safe to do so.

    In the case of Syrians, the locations matching those criteria would typically be within Syria itself. They could find safety without ever leaving the country.

    I take it you know nothing about the Syrian crisis, then.

    What place in Syria is it that you believe is "where the immediate danger they face is no longer present"? The few places within Syria that aren't in a war zone with boundaries that are constantly changing... are jammed to overflowing with the eight million people who are already displaced within Syria; the largest internally displaced population in the world. About six in ten Syrians are now refugees, most of them internally.

    http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-34189117

  9. Not a trivial problem by sjbe · · Score: 3, Informative

    The US per wikipedia has a total of about 12 million illegal immigrants.

    Which were absorbed over a long period of time and who came to work for depressingly low wages. It wasn't 12 million all at once. Many of them have been here literally for decades. The total number of illegal immigrants in the US hasn't risen for about a decade and in fact has declined somewhat from the peak.

    Migration has been a relatively minor problem for Europe.

    It isn't a minor problem. It's not to the scale justifying any sort of panic but any time you get a million new refugees in a relatively short time frame that creates a lot of very real problems. These people need to be fed, sheltered, to find work and school, etc. This isn't a trivial undertaking by an measure. It's made worse of course by the inevitable racists and xenophobes who want to shut the borders to keep anyone different out.

  10. Things that make you go hmmmm by IWantMoreSpamPlease · · Score: 2

    >>...with the rise of right-wing political parties...
    This is curious to me. Are these parties rising because they see their country and identity being overrun with immigrants, or are they on the rise because they see their country becoming a (perceived, rightly or wrongly) welfare state for foreigners, or is it something else?

    The implication from the summary is it's due to climate shift, but I'm not so certain that's accurate.

    --
    So rise up, all ye lost ones, as one, we'll claw the clouds.
  11. Re:Overpopulation in Africa, the Middle East, & by Bing+Tsher+E · · Score: 2, Informative

    Starvation is not a very ethical means of contraception. And yet that appears to be what you are advocating.

  12. Rising temperatures? by DontBeAMoran · · Score: 2

    Come to Canada, we'll give you our snow! Just take it off our streets and it's yours!

    --
    #DeleteFacebook
  13. Re:Translation by Jason+Levine · · Score: 2

    Just as they were in the United States in the past when "those Jews/Irish/Chinese" were "flooding" in and going to destroy our country if we didn't keep them out. Our country was fine - and arguably better for absorbing new groups of people - and this "wave" of immigrants (in quotes because immigration is actually down) won't destroy our country either. However, racist xenophobes in the US might destroy our country in their efforts to protect us from those scary immigrants.

    --
    My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
  14. Bangladesh production *down* by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    From your link, the headline:
    "Bangladesh’s food production [i.e. in total] dropped by 943,000 tonnes in fiscal 2016-17"

    "past year was not warmer weather, but flooding"
    Yeh right, flooding, the predicted affect of global warming, so what's your point?

    " so why would people be refugees from Bangladesh based on crop yields when they are up"
    Because they're hungry, and your attempt to mislead people here by lying doesn't fill their stomachs. I mean really SuperKendall, were you hoping nobody would google the actual stats or read the link you provided?

  15. Re:Plenty of cold in Russia by Oligonicella · · Score: 2

    No, they *aren't* the reason for the migrations. The migrants themselves don't mention it and *do* mention better jobs, freedom, etc. The presumption of crop failure is injected by the GW factions simply to stir shit up.

  16. Re:This means wealthy countries who have polluted. by Oligonicella · · Score: 3, Informative

    Don't quote a poem as a source of your national stance. That's just stupid. Stupid also is to let in those who vocally call for the destruction of your country, refuse to assimilate and *become* your neighbor and who actively call for *their* law (you know, from where they came) to replace *your* law.

  17. Correlation? Causation? Too complicated! by mveloso · · Score: 2

    Let's blame everything on climate change, because why not?

  18. Re:Overpopulation in Africa, the Middle East, & by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    When you're living in a [borderline uninhabitable place] you shouldn't be bringing children into the mix.

    Good advice to those people.

    Now, let's talk about everyone else, the people who don't live in those places. Let's say someone over there ignores your advice and brings children into the mix. What should you do about it?

    Kill them? That would fix the problem.

    Leave them alone, but kill them if they come to our, more-inhabitable area?

    Let them migrate with all the same freedom that we have to migrate, and compete with them in a free market? (e.g. Me and my children might lose out and suffer the consequences of living in an uninhabitable area, because someone over there came and "took my job" so I have to move. But that's fair, because I had no more rights to this region of the world than anyone else, and my terms from birth were always "may the best man win" and I just happened to not measure up.)

    Dump money into technological development and/or military force, to try to cause those less habitable places to become more habitable? (Thereby relieving the pressure on the people over there, to move over here.)

    Fight against mysticism and anything else that persuades people to eschew birth control?

    Something else? There are people over there with incentive to come here. They shouldn't make more people, but for whatever reason they do and we have to deal with the consequences that has on us. You can't just give "don't have kids" advice and then pretend that you magically got people to follow it. If they ignore your advice, you can blame them but that doesn't solve anything. You have to do something, or else accept the consequences of not doing something. You can't get out of it.

    Republicans and Democrats have both shown they don't have a clue what to do. Do you?

    What's worse is how the political left tries to use "political correctness" and false accusations of "racism" to try to shut down any discussion regarding this extremely important issue.

    There is no evidence that these "political left" people that you're talking about, have successfully made any credible move to shut down any discussion. If you are convinced that they have really tried to do this, then you must be laughing your ass off right now, since you know for sure that they definitely failed and didn't achieve even 1% of their goal. Because here we are, talking about it. Complete mission failure, "political left"!!

    Therefore, what you just said is completely irrelevent. That's like someone is attacking an enemy infantry position with howitzers and the guy in charge of the artillery says "they are trying to train mosquitos to block the incoming artillery shells." It's a hilarious thing to say, but that's what you're saying. If someone is doing what you're saying they're doing, every single person knows that plan wouldn't ever have a chance of working even a little bit.

    Maybe just stop worrying about it, and learn to enjoy their utterly futile attempts. Or accept that maybe you're wrong, and nobody is really trying to stop discussion, precisely because attempting to stop it is so futile. As you can see above, they didn't stop me. And I don't have some kind of magic keyboard. They didn't stop you, either.

    The only solution to these problems is a significant decrease in the birth rates in places like Africa, the Middle East, and India. And it can't happen later.

    Ok, here's the problem. We know for sure, without any speculation or guesswork or mysticism, that asking people to decrease their birth rates has failed. Past perfect tense, got it? This isn't something you're suggesting we try; it is a think we have tried but for some reason, we didn't get the result we wanted. They didn't take your "don't reproduce"

  19. Re:Just don't come to the US, plz by gatkinso · · Score: 2

    There is no comparison between Mexicans coming into the US, and Africans and Middle Easterners flooding into Western Europe.

    Mexicans come for jobs and are productive. Many of them already have family here. A very large chuck of the US was once Mexico. Our nations are very intertwined.

    The refugees in Europe on the other hand have zero context there. They are strangers, and immediately land in slums and start looking for handouts.

    --
    I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
  20. Re:Grenade attacks in Sweden since 2014. by XXongo · · Score: 2

    We only need to look to Sweden to see what happens when illegal aliens (commonly, and wrongly, referred to as "refugees" by some) are allowed to violate the borders of a civilized Western nation.=Sweden has seen a huge increase in grenade attacks, of all things, since the start of the illegal alien disaster around 2014. During 2015 and 2016 there was a grenade attack almost every week!

    ...and nevertheless, Sweden's murder rate, grenades and all, is less than a quarter the rate of America. The answer seems to be that despite all the refugees, if you're afraid of crime, you should flee America to go to the much safer Sweden.

    Oh, and the rate of crime in Sweden hasn't changed over the last 20 years. Apparently the "illegal alien disaster" of refugees actually isn't the problem. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

  21. Re:For those of you wondering why this is so bad by The+Cynical+Critic · · Score: 4, Informative

    Ummm... The only problem with this is that now that countries have had the time to process most of the mass that arrived in Europe during 2015, it's become clear that actual refugees only make up a minority of those masses. Massive amounts of people saw an opportunity for a better life in Europe and simply hitched a ride with the actual refugees. Even Sweden, having a reputation of being very welcoming to immigrants, has been rejecting about 70% of all asylum applications and the deportation of immigrants who have finally exhausted all of their options is becoming a bigger and bigger problem across Europe.

    Not only is it becoming harder and harder to get the countries to take back all of their citizens, Iraq being particularly difficult, a lot of the immigrants have decided to simply not accept that their asylum application got denied. Instead they've either gone underground, thinking if they stay long enough they can eventually get permanent residence, or have started roving around Europe applying for asylum in multiple countries using false identities (as per the Dublin process if you have your asylum application denied in one country other EU countries will not even consider any further applications by you).

    --
    "Why should I want to make anything up? Life's bad enough as it is without wanting to invent any more of it."
  22. Re:Overpopulation in Africa, the Middle East, & by GameboyRMH · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's either starvation or actual contraception, which the right can't get behind because it would upset the "every sperm is sacred" crowd. So they ignore the contraception option...

    --
    "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel