There’s loads of analysis on the market to point that the Syrian refugee disaster originated, partly, from local weather change. A big scale drought starting in 2006 – the worst in 900 years, most likely as a consequence of local weather change – stimulated large-scale rural-urban migration, and, by 2011, an estimated 1.5 million folks had deserted their farms for the cities
. This, mixed with an inflow of Iraqi refugees, produced supreme situations for social unrest, subsequent repression by the Assad regime, and, finally, civil warfare.
Individuals discuss local weather refugee crises as in the event that they’re some form of future phenomenon, however, in fact, we’re already experiencing them, to a sure extent.