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New briefs examine the links between climate change and human mobility

Two new science for policy briefs by the Joint Research Centre (JRC) explore how climate change shapes human movement through sudden disasters and through its interaction with conflict and fragility.

  • News | 01 Jun 2026

1. Emergency Preparedness, Disaster Displacement and Climate Migration

As climate hazards intensify, emergency preparedness increasingly determines whether displacement is chaotic or safe and planned:

  • Anticipatory systems that link early warning to pre-arranged funding reduce losses and distress migration.
  • Inclusive evacuation planning and trusted risk communication are essential to protect vulnerable groups and those unable to move.
  • Fast housing recovery and shock-responsive social protection prevent displacement from becoming protracted.
  • For slow-onset hazards such as drought or sea-level rise, adaptation in place and safe migration pathways should be treated as complementary strategies.

2. Climate security, migration and fragility

Climate change rarely causes violence or displacement directly, but acts as a risk multiplier that amplifies existing political, economic and social vulnerabilities — a dynamic recognised in the 2023 EU Joint Communication on the Climate and Security Nexus:

  • Two main risk pathways are identified: climate stress contributing to conflict that drives displacement, and climate-induced migration heightening tensions in receiving areas.
  • Conversely, remittances, labour mobility and shock-responsive social protection can strengthen resilience, particularly in fragile settings.
  • Strong institutions, inclusive governance and political representation substantially weaken the climate–conflict–displacement nexus.

Policy implications:

Across both briefs, the evidence points to the need to:

  • Embed mobility foresight into EU anticipatory systems, including the Copernicus Emergency Management Service and the EU Climate Risk Assessment.
  • Scale up shock-responsive social protection to cushion households from climate shocks and reduce incentives for distress migration or unrest.
  • Develop safe and planned migration pathways as a complement to in-place adaptation, enabling mobility to function as a resilience strategy rather than a last resort.
  • Promote conflict-sensitive adaptation and inclusive urbanisation to prevent climate action from inadvertently reinforcing grievances or displacement pressures.

The briefs are part of the JRC’s series on climate migration and displacement, which distils current evidence to support EU policymaking.

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