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In Today’s News: Climate Adaptation Can Risk Displacement; Refugees on Frontline of COVID-19 Response; Is Global Warming Driving Dengue in Latin America?; NASA Sounds Alarm on Global Sea Level Rise

Climate Adaptation Risks Displacing Vulnerable Communities, If Not Done Right

In a new report, the University of California, Berkeley’s Urban Displacement Project and the nonprofit EcoAdapt term displacement - whether temporary, permanent, forced or voluntary - as an issue rooted in inequity, now exacerbated by climate change. They warn that climate resilience measures must take into account the needs of disadvantaged populations. Thus building more green space or aligning residential and transit development, for example, may achieve long-term climate objectives but also drive up real estate, and in the process, displace low-to-middle income families through gentrification. Efforts are underway in Los Angeles and Atlanta, where historically marginalized communities have borne the brunt of Atlanta’s flooding and ensuing displacement, to address inequities and address displacement caused by climate-related challenges. Local residents have been consulted, which helps to better inform policy and future strategies (Scientific American) 


Refugees are on the Front Line of the COVID-19 Pandemic. Let's Give Them the Rights They Deserve

From the Iraqi cardiologist in Atlanta, the Syrian teacher cleaning hospital wards in London, the Venezuelan doctor saving lives in Lima’s ambulatory service teams, to all those making soap, personal protection equipment, cooking free meals for health workers and volunteering in so many fields, refugees, asylum-seekers and migrants are among the heroes answering the Covid-19 response call. And in so doing, all of a sudden, some people’s concerns over borders and legal statuses are supplanted by the skills, knowledge and experience these populations bring to their foreign homes, showcasing that when people are empowered to contribute, everyone gains. Usually, populations forced to flee are caught in a labor trap, where highly trained professionals’ accreditations go unrecognized in their new homes and credential conversions remain elusive due to bureaucratic hurdles, costs or access to education, which refugees are often denied. As International Workers’ Day approaches and the pandemic refocuses meaning on the “essential worker”, the strengths of refugee contributions should be welcomed into the whole labor market, and not just the health sector. With plans to “build back better”, the vital contributions of refugees should now be made obvious as are the mutual benefits to society they offer. (World Economic Forum) 


Is Global Warming Driving the Spread of Dengue Across Latin America?

The World Health Organization (WHO) and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) have been warning for years that rising temperatures are altering the distribution of species such as mosquitoes, allowing them to live in higher altitudes such as the Andes, and with it, serving as vectors for infectious diseases. In 2019, dengue infections reached new records in Latin America, with over 3 million confirmed cases, a sixfold increase from the previous year. Over 1,300 people died but experts believe the death toll to be far higher in worst-affected rural communities where health services are scarce. Now, as the novel coronavirus enters the region, many dengue epidemics are already underway in several countries with Bolivia and Honduras among the hardest hit. IPCC research has shown that it only takes an average temperature rise of between one and two degrees Celsius to allow conditions for mosquito-borne dengue to transmit. The average yearly temperature across Latin America have risen between one and 1.5 degrees Celsius since 1980. Dengue was first identified in Thailand and the Philippines in the 1950’s but by 1970, nine countries had experienced outbreaks, while the disease is now present in over 100 countries in almost every continent. (The New Humanitarian)


A New Way of Measuring Ice Melt in Antarctica, Greenland Sounds Alarm About Global Sea Level Rise

According to NASA satellite imagery, since 2003, global sea levels have risen 0.55 inches due to climate change-driven ice melt in Antarctica and Greenland. Record melting in 2019 from rising temperatures saw Greenland’s ice sheet contribute to a sea level rise of 1.5 millimeters, and at this pace, sea levels will rise 2 to 6 feet by 2100, mainly by Greenland and Antarctica, which scientists warn will have dire consequences for coastal residents. Sea level rise will not only destroy coastal property values but also displace people - more than 40% of the US population - and have massive impacts on global markets ($7.9 trillion in US GDP alone) unless measures are taken to curb greenhouse gas emissions all across the world. (CNBC)