Nearly half the world’s children exposed to three or more climate risks: UNICEF
UNICEF says drought, extreme heat and heat waves are the most common trio, affecting 296 million children worldwide.
- UNICEF reported Monday that 1.1 billion children worldwide face at least three overlapping climate hazards, with half of all children globally now living amid multiple threats shaping their daily lives.
- Researchers cross-referenced locations of roughly 2.4 billion children against eight common climate impacts including coastal flooding, drought, and heat waves. Impacts remain disproportionately concentrated in Sub-Saharan Africa and parts of South Asia.
- A combination of drought, extreme heat, and heat waves affects 296 million children, with Nigeria reporting 74 million exposed, followed by 34 million in Pakistan and 32 million in India.
- "Children are at the forefront of the impact of climate change," UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell stated. Without urgent emission reductions, frequent hazards will strain government systems and threaten children's wellbeing.
- Governments must fulfill international commitments by reducing emissions and investing in climate-resilient services, UNICEF urged. Strengthening health and education systems with children in mind can mitigate current risks and secure their future.
77 Articles
77 Articles
Climate threats do not spare even children in high-income countries.
'Climate threat looms over children'
More than one billion children face at least three overlapping climate hazards, with 34 million in Pakistan, UNICEF warned Monday, while highlighting the disproportionate impact in some regions of the world. For the report, the UN agency cross-referenced data showing where the roughly 2.4 billion children on the planet live with the geographic distribution of the eight most common climate impacts. They are coastal flooding, river flooding, droug…
Nearly every child on Earth now faces fossil-fueled climate danger
A new UNICEF report finds that nearly every child worldwide is exposed to at least one climate hazard, while nearly half are already living with three or more overlapping threats to health, education, water, housing, and survival.
Nearly half the world’s children exposed to three or more climate risks
UNITED NATIONS — More than one billion children face at least three overlapping climate hazards, Unicef warned Monday (Tuesday in Manila), while highlighting the disproportionate impact in some regions of the world.For the report, the UN agency cross-referenced data showing where the roughly 2.4 billion children on the planet live with the geographic distribution of the eight most common climate impacts. They are coastal flooding, river flooding…

Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 42% of the sources lean Left
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium



























