Claim: 'heat more than natural disasters will drive people away'

From Princeton University

With climate change, heat more than natural disasters will drive people away

Although scenes of people fleeing from dramatic displays of Mother Nature’s power dominate the news, gradual increases in an area’s overall temperature — and to a lesser extent precipitation — actually lead more often to permanent population shifts, according to Princeton University research.

The researchers examined 15 years of migration data for more than 7,000 families in Indonesia and found that increases in temperature and, to a lesser extent, rainfall influenced a family’s decision to permanently migrate to another of the country’s provinces. They report in the journal the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences that increases in average yearly temperature took a detrimental toll on people’s economic wellbeing. On the other hand, natural disasters such as floods and earthquakes had a much smaller to non-existent impact on permanent moves, suggesting that during natural disasters relocation was most often temporary as people sought refuge in other areas of the country before returning home to rebuild their lives.

The results suggest that the consequences of climate change will likely be more subtle and permanent than is popularly believed, explained first author Pratikshya Bohra-Mishra, a postdoctoral research associate in the Program in Science, Technology and Environmental Policy (STEP) in Princeton’s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. The effects likely won’t be limited to low-lying areas or developing countries that are unprepared for an uptick in hurricanes, floods and other natural disasters, she said.

“We do not think of ‘environmental migrants’ in a broader sense; images of refugees from natural disasters often dominate the overall picture,” Bohra-Mishra said. “It is important to understand the often less conspicuous and gradual effect of climate change on migration. Our study suggests that in areas that are already hot, a further increase in temperature will increase the likelihood that more people will move out.”

Indonesia’s tropical climate and dependence on agriculture may amplify the role of temperature as a migration factor, Bohra-Mishra said. However, existing research shows that climate-driven changes in crop yields can effect Mexican migration to the United States, and that extreme temperature had a role in the long-term migration of males in rural Pakistan.

“Based on these emerging findings, it is likely that the societal reach of climate change could be much broader to include warm regions that are now relatively safe from natural disasters,” Bohra-Mishra said.

Indonesia became the case study because the multi-island tropical nation is vulnerable to climate change and events such as earthquakes and landslides. In addition, the Indonesian Family Life Survey (IFLS) conducted by the RAND Corporation from 1993 to 2007 provided thorough information about the movements of 7,185 families from 13 of the nation’s 27 provinces in 1993. The Princeton researchers matched province-to-province movement of households over 15 years to data on temperature, precipitation and natural disasters from those same years. Bohra-Mishra worked with co-authors Michael Oppenheimer, the Albert G. Millbank Professor of Geosciences and International Affairs and director of STEP, and Solomon Hsiang, a past Princeton postdoctoral researcher now an assistant professor of public policy at the University of California-Berkeley.

People start to rethink their location with each degree that the average annual temperature rises above 25 degrees Celsius (77 degrees Fahrenheit), the researchers found. The chances that a family will leave an area for good in a given year rise with each degree. With a change from 26 to 27 degrees Celsius (78.8 to 80.6 Fahrenheit), the probability of a family emigrating that year increased by 0.8 percent when other factors for migration were controlled for. From 27 to 28 degrees Celsius (80.6 to 82.4 Fahrenheit), those chances jumped to 1.4 percent.

When it comes to annual rainfall, families seem to tolerate and prefer an average of 2.2 meters (7.2 feet). The chances of outmigration increased with each additional meter of average annual precipitation, as well as with further declines in rainfall.

Landslides were the only natural disaster with a consistent positive influence on permanent migration. With every 1 percent increase in the number of deaths or destroyed houses in a family’s home province, the likelihood of permanent migration went up by only 0.0006 and 0.0004 percent, respectively.

The much higher influence of heat on permanent migration can be pinned on its effect on local economies and social structures, the researchers write. Previous research has shown that a one-degree change in the average growing-season temperature can reduce yields of certain crops by as much as 17 percent. At the same time, research conducted by Hsiang while at Princeton and published in 2013 showed a correlation between higher temperatures and social conflict such as civil wars, ethnic conflict and street crime.

In the current study, the researchers found that in Indonesia, a shift from 25 to 26 degrees Celsius resulted in a significant 14 to 15 percent decline in the value of household assets, for example. Precipitation did not have a notable affect on household worth, nor did natural disasters except landslides, which lowered assets by 5 percent for each 1 percent increase in the number of people who died.

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The article, Nonlinear permanent migration response to climatic variations but minimal response to disasters, by Pratikshya Bohra-Mishra, Michael Oppenheimer and Solomon Hsiang, was published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences online on June 23, 2014.

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Speed
June 30, 2014 5:08 pm

In the current study, the researchers found that in Indonesia, a shift from 25 to 26 degrees Celsius resulted in a significant 14 to 15 percent decline in the value of household assets, for example.
Replace “resulted in” with “was associated with.” Until they do a controlled experiment and prove the link, it’s just statistical inference.
The full article is available here …
http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2014/06/18/1317166111.full.pdf+html
Evidence for an Economic Mechanism by Which Environmental Factors
Influence Migration. Of all of the environmental factors, temperature
had the most significant effect on migration. There are
multiple channels through which temperature can influence migration
behavior. Studies establishing a negative effect of temperature
on agriculture productivity (16–19) have shown, for
example, that each 1 °C increase in growing-season minimum
temperature in the dry season resulted in 10% decline in rice
yield in Philippines (18). Similarly, each degree increase in average
growing season temperature resulted in 17% decline in
yields of corn and soybeans in the United States (19). Research
has also shown that in response to higher temperature, economic
output losses in the nonagricultural sector can even exceed
losses occurring in agricultural sectors, and these losses
grow nonlinearly near 25 °C (12). Furthermore, each degree
increase in annual temperature has been shown to reduce annual
economic growth by as much as 1.1% points (20). Temperature
increases are also shown to be associated with increase
in the risk of violent conflicts (21–23). A rising temperature
could therefore increase outmigration through a negative effect
on income in agriculture as well as nonagricultural sectors and
potentially over time by creating a less stable social environment.
Prior work suggests there is evidence that temperature
affects migration through its influence on agricultural productivity.
(13–15).

JimS
June 30, 2014 5:08 pm

Science making fantasies – this seems to be occurring more and more as the Pause continues.

beng
June 30, 2014 5:10 pm

Today, 85F, warm, very humid & a couple rumbles of thunder. Love it.

Mike T
June 30, 2014 5:11 pm

A ridiculous study, on many levels. Where is the data to support the hypothesis that temperatures across Indonesia have even changed? Then there is the clothing aspect: instead of a sarong, many Indonesian women now wear clothing fashionable a millenium ago, in a galaxy far, far away.

DDP
June 30, 2014 5:13 pm

Moving from one province to another will result in what? It’s Indonesia, it’s hot everywhere. I can guarantee you 99.9% of people can not tell the physical difference between 26°C and 27°C.
Of course, population movement could absolutely have nothing to do with employment into growth industries over that same time period. It’s boomed since 1999, rebounding from a financial crash in 1997 just as we had a nice big El Nino and a peak in global temperatures. Indonesia now has the biggest economy in SE Asia, 16th largest economy in the World and is predicted to be the 7th by 2030. People move to where the jobs are by necessity, not because it’s a degree warmer.
And how the hell do the value of a household’s assets drop 15% due to it being a degree Celsius warmer? Gee…do you think maybe they couldn’t afford as many luxuries when times were tough?

June 30, 2014 5:13 pm

In the actual paper (link above in my comment above, chart at the top of page four) the “Change in Annual Migration Probability” went up with a fall in temperature as well. It’s a little like Goldilocks and the Three Bears — not too hot, not too cold but just right.

June 30, 2014 5:20 pm

With a change from 26 to 27 degrees Celsius (78.8 to 80.6 Fahrenheit), the probability of a family emigrating that year increased by 0.8 percent when other factors for migration were controlled for.
The entire study rests on this statement. The slightest error, and I do mean SLIGHTEST given the small sample size and time frame, would invalidate the results. Further, I didn’t bother to read the paper, but it doesn’t sound like they bothered to actually CONTACT those 7,000+ families and ask them why they moved. Further, I am betting that had they done so, the near universal answer would have had to do with job opportunities. That is almost exclusively the reason people relocate voluntarily, and has been for centuries.

David Chappell
June 30, 2014 5:27 pm

They seem to very carefully avoid any mention of where these people migrated to – I suspect a lot of it was rural to urban and economically driven. I would also guess that Indonesia being plagued by serious earthquakes and volcanic eruptions that might also have a significant bearing on the issue.

June 30, 2014 5:30 pm

the probability of a family emigrating that year increased by 0.8 percent
Well perhaps someone from Indonesia can comment on the area being studied because I know it just isn’t like the modern western world, but gee…. Who uproots their entire family without considerably planning? I’d expect the move would LAG temp increases by the amount of time it takes a family to decide that they ARE going to move, WHERE they are going to move to, SELL any local property etc, and THEN move. Even in poor countries there ought to be a major lag between the driving event and the actual moving.

June 30, 2014 5:33 pm

This explains why nobody lives in California, Texas, or Arizona and Alaska is our most populous state.

June 30, 2014 5:44 pm

Quote from a friend’s 12 year old, on her first “take your girl to work” day: “They PAY adults to do THIS?”

michael hart
June 30, 2014 5:50 pm

Hmmm…So when Barack Obama emigrated from Indonesia back to Hawaii was that because of climate-change?
Just kidding.

Lichanos
June 30, 2014 5:53 pm

Seek (for evidence to support your pre-conceived notions) and you shall find!

June 30, 2014 6:04 pm

Please enlighten us all, Princeton University, at what time in history did human activity change Sahara from rainfall and green valleys to the dry sand desert we have today.
Had you at Princeton University done your homework which include Natural changes in weather and climate due to Earth’s history, the wobbling as well as the movement of Tectonical Plates to name a few of the 40 most important factors for changing of climate, had you done that, you wouldn’t have made such a fool of a good University which in the past never ever would have forgotten the Theories of Science for usage of the worst Fallacies in argumentation
Btw. You better read Science 2006, the July 21 issue
as well as
Recherches sahariennes / Groupement d’intérêt scientifique “Sciences humaines sur l’aire
ISBN 2-222-02537-0 Paris 1979
Essai sur le climat de montagne au Sahara, l’Ahaggar. Travaux de l’Institut de recherches Sahariennes / Université d’Alger, 0372-3836 ; 27, Dissertation Paris 1965

DesertYote
June 30, 2014 6:15 pm

“… with co-authors Michael Oppenheimer … ”
Says all one needs to know.

H.R.
June 30, 2014 6:17 pm

I don’t think this study was intended to be read. I think the expectation was that you buy a copy, roll it, and smoke it, ideally in a car with the windows rolled up. Now that makes sense. The study? Not so much.

June 30, 2014 6:26 pm

I just wonder if this is the junk that the science department at Princeton is putting out what sort of idiocy is taking place in say the gender studies departments of public colleges?

Tom J
June 30, 2014 7:06 pm

I don’t know why, exactly, the authors find it unnecessary to tell us the size of these 7,000 families but I have a suspicion. There are about 7,000,000,000 people on this planet and I’m going to guess those 7,000,000,000 people initially came from some kind of family regardless of how teensy, fatherless, or dysfunctional it may have been (although those in the political classes may have hatched out of eggs). Since a sample size of 7,000 people, in a world of 7,000,000,000 people, is so ridiculously, and vanishingly small as to be utterly useless in deriving a trend something, somehow must be done to camouflage the pointlessness of the exercise. I know, call the study groups “families” so that the reader can fantasize that the sample size, in relationship to the whole, may somehow, if one uses their imagination, possibly be a tad representative. Just think, if each of those families comprises ma, pa, and 998 children, then our sample size creeps up to one in a thousand. Voila, we can now plot the movement of humanity on this Earth!

June 30, 2014 7:21 pm

It must be the intense heat in the northeast of the US that drive all those people into the relative coolness of Florida. That explains it. I suppose he didn’t study any thing that was happening with migration of people within the US…. I wondered why sunbelt states were gaining population and northern cities were losing people. The only variable there was temperature change? Nobody moved because there were better opportunities elsewhere? If temperature were the case India would be deserted. I can assure you that without frequent trips away from Princeton during the winter, the only thing most anyone that has to tolerate winter there thinks about is moving someplace warmer. And Princeton for the most part is a wonderful place to live.

Alan Robertson
June 30, 2014 7:54 pm

Well, all you wiseacres have already said it, so I’ll just say that it’s been fun and great minds think alike.

MattS
June 30, 2014 8:18 pm

NEWS FLASH!
Poor people with little to no access to indoor heat or air conditioning tend to move away from extreme climates (hot or cold) towards more moderate climates when they have the opportunity.
This news flash was brought to you by the office of Captain Obvious.

Louis
June 30, 2014 8:44 pm

This explains why when people retire and are loosed from the chains that hold them to their jobs, they choose to migrate north to live in cooler climates. No wonder there are so many retired Floridians who move to Buffalo, NY. /Sarc

Editor
June 30, 2014 9:09 pm

They should study some folks with a northern set of genes. I’m 3/4 Swedish. The biggest problem I have with New Hampshire are the SW winds in the summer bringing in 90F temps and 70F dew points. (35C temp and 20C dewpoints.) Okay, the winters are a bit long, but that could be fixed trading November for a repeat of October.

June 30, 2014 9:24 pm

In the U.S., we seem to like it hotter: http://www.cato.org/blog/some-it-hot
-Chip

Scott
June 30, 2014 9:55 pm

It’s true, look at all the people fleeing Mexico to come to the cool of the USA, same with Syria, going to turkey where they get snow.

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