Climate change is killing migrants crossing the US border: study
“Access to sufficient amounts of drinking water to support the high rates of water loss experienced during the journey likely makes the difference between life and death for many migrants,” said Ryan Long, a senior author of the study.
By
Shirin Ali | Dec. 17, 2021
The border barrier between the U.S. (L) and Mexico runs down a hillside on May 20, 2019 as taken from Ciudad Juarez, Mexico. Getty
Story at a glance
Researchers examined the physiological stress associated with undocumented migration between Nogales, Mexico and Three Point, Ariz.
The results found that migrant deaths are disproportionately clustered in areas with the greatest predicted evaporated water loss.
Researchers say that no matter how much water a typical migrant may carry it won’t be enough to prevent severe dehydration.
Thousands of migrants trek to the U.S. southern border in a journey that’s considered incredibly dangerous – and now a new study has found that it’s becoming deadlier as climate change makes travel conditions more severe.
Researchers published a new study in Science this week that found as climate change has increasingly made regions of the world inhabitable it’s also making conditions for migrants more deadly. The results of the study found that undocumented migrants are disproportionately dying in harsh desert conditions that have been exacerbated from climate change.
https://thehill.com/changing-america/resilience/smart-cities/586359-climate-change-is-killing-migrants-crossing-the-us