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Another month of extreme weather uproots hundreds of thousands across the globe

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As world leaders meet at COP26 to make commitments for climate action, displacement associated with disasters and the impacts of climate change continues to threaten homes, livelihoods and lives, warns the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre.

Geneva, 4th November 2021 -- Floods and storms forced hundreds of thousands of people from their homes across all regions of the world in October. Despite an end to monsoon and rainy seasons in Asia, intense rainfall triggered severe flooding and landslides. Storms hit parts of the United States and Europe still recovering from summer wildfires, which destroyed vegetation -- a natural flood defence.

"Displacement in the context of disasters and climate change is one of the defining global challenges of our generation, affecting high and low-income countries alike," said Alexandra Bilak, Director of the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC). "In 2020, disasters, primarily triggered by weather-related hazards, resulted in 30.7 million forced movements. This is more than three times the number prompted by conflict and violence."

Following a summer of heatwaves, drought and wildfires across parts of the United States and Europe, flooding brought about by storms in October led to evacuations in Evia, Greece and California. The same phenomenon occurred in Australia at the beginning of 2021, as widespread flooding followed an unprecedented bushfire season, forcing tens of thousands into displacement.

Extreme weather also continued across south-east Asia. In China, floods uprooted more than 330,000 people in the provinces of Sichuan, Shanxi and Shaanxi in the first week of October alone. Shanxi experienced its worst flooding since records began, with average rainfall 13-times higher than normal. Heavy rainfall driven by a late monsoon caused severe flooding and landslides in India and Nepal. An estimated half a million people were displaced to relief camps in India's West Bengal state.

A high intensity storm in the Mediterranean wrought destruction in Algeria, Italy and Tunisia, while tropical cyclone Kompasu left a trail of destruction across China, Hong Kong, Macau, the Philippines, Taiwan, and Viet Nam. Cyclone Shaheen uprooted around 5,000 people in Oman in early October, and Mexico was struck by hurricanes Pamela and Rick. More severe weather and further displacement is expected in the coming months as the typhoon and cyclone season has only just begun in south-east Asia and the Pacific.

"The scale of this type of displacement worldwide is certainly a cause for concern, as is the very real risk that global warming will lead to more frequent and intense weather events that can upend people's lives," said Alexandra Bilak.

"Solutions do exist, however, to prevent, reduce and address displacement in a changing climate, but more reliable data is needed to focus our actions and investments. By understanding who is at risk of being displaced and where, governments and the international community will be better equipped to plan ahead, respond and support those in need," added Bilak.

IDMC calls on leaders at COP26 to invest in robust information on the number of people displaced, their conditions, needs and aspirations, the duration and severity of their displacement and the risk of future forced movement.

Notes to editors:

About IDMC:

Every day, people flee conflict and disasters and become displaced inside their own countries. The Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre provides data and analysis and supports partners to identify and implement solutions to internal displacement.

At COP26:

IDMC is participating in the following side-events on effective practises and policy responses to displacement and human mobility in the context of climate change:

*Saturday, Nov. 6: Effective practices and perspectives of actors across sectors in regions vulnerable to climate change *

Joint event with the Government of Bangladesh, Government of Fiji, Arab Network for Environment and Development (RAED), Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC), the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC) and a representative from IOM/UNHCR/UNU (tbc).

Tune in online here.

*Thursday, Nov. 11: Climate impacts as drivers of displacement: science, human rights and policy response *

Joint event of the European Commission's Joint Resource Centre (JRC), European Commission's Directorate-General for International Partnerships (INTPA), UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) and the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC).

More information and registration.

*Thursday, Nov. 11: From Science to Policy and Action: Human Mobility in Times of Climate Change *

Joint event with the Platform on Disaster Displacement (PDD), International Youth Federation, Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research, Youth4Nature and the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC).

More information and registration.

For interviews, please contact:

Frankie Parrish, Communications Specialist

Email: frankie.parrish@idmc.ch

Mobile: +41 78 630 16 78