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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Justa Joe
July 1, 2014 7:25 am

This report is a pretty cynical piece of climate agitprop. Since the squares (conservatives & middle Americans) stereotypically “hate immigrants” or so the story goes they want to try to sell totalitarian energy/carbon controls to the squares by as AlGore would put it, ‘playing on their fears.’

Jimbo
July 1, 2014 7:27 am

Here is something to cheer you all up. Some birds flews into Germany last year in March to start their Spring. They soon left and headed back south. They do tell us that global warming is disrupting bird migrations.

15 March 2013
Migrating birds leave frozen Germany
….Huge flocks of migratory birds, such as cranes, lapwings and golden plovers, have been returning to Germany over the last couple of weeks after spending the winter in warmer climes. Many of them have now turned around and left thanks to the cold weather. ….
http://www.thelocal.de/20130315/48551

They should have stayed and fought climate change.
I live in the tropics and the last couple of weeks has been a scorcher. I simply turn on the fan and have a refreshing drink. I have no intention of moving anywhere. In fact I left cold London over a decade ago to enjoy the heat, and it’s lovely. Every winter hordes of Europeans arrive and for some odd reason lie down on the hot beach. This is bizarre behaviour indeed. We must act now, and tackle the causes of people changing their climate.

July 1, 2014 7:42 am

…Then why in Hell are people moving down here to Texas. It is HOT during the summer, although this year not so bad…low nineties with an occasional blip to 100. One would think that NJ and NY would be gaining in population….

Jimbo
July 1, 2014 7:53 am

Why Australian expats are hightailing it home from Europe
….Australian expats are based throughout Asia, with similar proportions in Hong Kong, Vietnam, Singapore and Indonesia, the survey found.
Vietnam and Indonesia, in particular, are on the rise as hot-spots for Australians…..
http://www.heraldsun.com.au/travel/world/why-australian-expats-are-hightailing-it-home-from-europe/story-fnjjva7c-1226750664159?nk=5c9729163c892eadac77c449bdd99542

If the study asked people why they left certain Indonesian provinces, I doubt very much the answer would be:
“I left West Sumatra because this year it is 28C, 1C higher than normal.”
Maybe economics, high population density, and other factors are more important than 1C. If it was 5C higher then I might pay attention. Every single day I experience 10C temperature fluctuation, it’s called night and day, and I love every bit of it. A 2C rise held for 10 whole year would not make any difference to me.

Jimbo
July 1, 2014 8:08 am

Before I go, I see that one of the authors is Michael Oppenheimer.
WUWT
Another Michael Oppenheimer FAIL – 2010 claim on Mexican ‘climate refugees’ evaporates once his paper is corrected.
I commented here to show that net migration between Mexico and USA was now ZERO. I also commented here to show Mexico’s fertility rate in freefall and stands at 2.28. Ditto with many Latin American countries.

Resourceguy
July 1, 2014 8:28 am

The Chicago Way and NJ Way drives a lot of people away and the Detroit Way already shows obvious results.

Robert W Turner
July 1, 2014 9:29 am

I remember this “researchers” precious paper on human conflict being the result of hot weather. Laughable, is the only descriptor I can use to describe this person and have it be appropriate.
The Onion should seriously start feeding off this guys research. I could imagine the fake quotes from Indonesian farmers. “We were forced to abandon our home in the country because it was just too hot. We packed up our entire family and moved 87.4 meters higher into the mountains where it is 1.2 degrees cooler and now our family is worth 14% more.”
On a more serious note, if I were associated with Princeton in any way I’d request the data used on this garbage research. The data has to be junk or entirely fabricated for this. A simple search will show that the largest cities in Indonesia all have annual average temperature of over 27 degrees, Jakarta (the largest) has an average of about 31. Since 1970 urban population has increased from 15% to 44%. The only areas with average temperatures less than 27 degrees are the rural mountain areas, where people have been moving from, not to. This research is obvious fraud and there should be consequences.

Robert W Turner
July 1, 2014 9:31 am

*previous* paper….not precious…though it may have been precious too.

July 1, 2014 9:36 am

Why don’t the AGW crowd hold their hootenannies in Nuuk, Greenland, Longyearbyen, Svalbard, Eureka, Nunavut or Murmansk, Russia? No they go to uncomfortable climes like Bali, Brazil, Doha….Hey, they number in the 10s of thousands, they might accidentally get counted as climate refugees when they return home.

July 1, 2014 12:05 pm

Jim Brock says:
July 1, 2014 at 7:42 am

…Then why in Hell are people moving down here to Texas. It is HOT during the summer, although this year not so bad…low nineties with an occasional blip to 100. One would think that NJ and NY would be gaining in population….

Two words: air conditioning.
Many years ago I lived in Texas and there and in other southern states it was common to see bumper stickers and such featuring the Confederate battle flag with the assertion “The South Shall Rise Again!”. My comment then an now is “yes, but only because some Damn Yankee invented air conditioning”.
The wealthy have wintered in Florida for years (see history of Winter Park for example); the average person couldn’t afford the travel and months away from a job. Permanent residents just suffered through the summer heat in exchange for getting rid of all the seasonal invaders, or because they had no choice. My uncle described what it was like before air conditioning in Austin Texas and what a huge difference the first consumer window units made (you could sleep at night).
Now as long as people can survive the walk from their air-conditioned cars to the air-conditioned mall and then back to their air-conditioned houses, they can live quite comfortably year round in Texas, Florida and other places where it can get brutally hot.
Significant advances in mosquito control and consequent malaria reduction certainly didn’t hurt.
Also public dress codes have relaxed (many would say disappeared). Look at pictures from the 40’s, 50’s and early 60’s and you will see men wearing coats, ties and hats in the summer and women wearing dresses, hats, hose and white gloves. Combine no A/C with much less comfortable dress and staying in the South through the summer was something to be avoided if possible. Now shorts, tee-shirts and flip-flops are accepted most places most of the time. I even see some people dressed that way for a regular season Symphony performance, which supports the notion that dress codes have disappeared rather than relaxed.
In a nutshell: increased wealth and the technology it promoted tamed the worst aspects of tropical locations, at which point people were more inclined to follow their preference for warmth over cold. I left Chicago a long time ago and devoutly hope I never again have to shovel a driveway. Stocking up on tonic to mix with gin to sip outside by the pool is much easier.

Reply to  Alan Watt, Climate Denialist Level 7
July 2, 2014 8:40 pm

I didn’t read through all of the posts on this article. So this may be redundant. What’s implied here is, “did they do a study on how many people move on account of the cold?” There may be a motive for people in a warm climate to move to a slightly less warm place, but I can assure you that people definitely move from a cold climate to a warmer one, and will tell you that is their sole reason for moving. When, not when.. IF I want to see snow and ice again, I’ll take a vacation to go see it.

July 1, 2014 1:55 pm

Any indication that they noted where the families moved TO, and what the conditions were there?

Mike T
July 1, 2014 5:54 pm

Interesting to see how many people here have moved to warmer climes, and some of those of northern European origin complaining about it. I’ve spend much of a lifetime traipsing around the Australian outback (desert and wet tropics included) and have come to the conclusion that people’s heat tolerance is extremely variable. People from Scotland move here and revel in the heat, people who grew up in sub-tropical Brisbane get sick of the humidity and move to Tasmania. Some places I’ve lived in have had hordes of tourists, mainly in winter but a few diehards come in summer (at my current location, which is coastal, it still tops 40C quite regularly) and when one asks “why on earth did you come here in summer” they say “we’re from [insert northern hemisphere country in the grip of winter] and it -10C and icy and snowy and horrible, this is so much better”. I’m convinced that northern Europeans have some weird ability to soak up sunshine for the coming winter- some of the ones I see locally get around semi-naked with their skin burned nearly black. My wife’s from SE Asia and absolutely hates hot humid weather. When she goes home she goes from a/c car to cooled house to airconned shopping malls. Airconditioning is the key to settlement in disgustingly hot places, as has been noted in many earlier posts. It may play a part in the increased wealth of places where there was already a population “used to the heat” but who did very little since lifting an arm meant breaking into a muck sweat 🙂

Power Grab
July 2, 2014 12:05 pm

LOL! I had some retired relatives who had 3 cheap residences. They had a mobile home in Arizona (for them to use in the winter), a hand-built cabin in the mountains near Taos (for them to use in the summer), and another mobile home in Oklahoma (for them to use when the weather was more clement). I’m guessing they spent very little on utilities.
So, I’m thinking that if people can and will migrate (even temporarily) to find mild weather, they will. Or if they have the wherewithal to build a climate-controlled environment and stay put, they will.
It seems to me that societies will invent and invest in infrastructure because they HAVE TO, to stay alive. So, well-populated places where there is minimal infrastructure are places where conditions are livable at least most of the year. It won’t usually kill you to sit around and sweat a bit during warm weather – as long as there is plenty of water nearby. But if you can’t heat your house in the depths of winter, it could very kill you.
I think it’s myopic of us (North Americans) to assume that all undeveloped places in the world are hellholes. Maybe they’re not.

Power Grab
July 2, 2014 12:11 pm

>Gary Pearse says:
>July 1, 2014 at 9:36 am
>Why don’t the AGW crowd hold their hootenannies in Nuuk, Greenland, Longyearbyen, >Svalbard, Eureka, Nunavut or Murmansk, Russia? No they go to uncomfortable climes like Bali, >Brazil, Doha….Hey, they number in the 10s of thousands, they might accidentally get counted as >climate refugees when they return home.
Heh…I find myself wondering if they’re simply scouting places to take over when the next ice age arrives.
I have grown to resist the message of the MSM so strongly that I find myself believing the opposite of the scenario they try to hard to convince you of.

lonie
July 2, 2014 6:09 pm

Now i realize why so many people live above 60 degrees north or south , the love of six months of snow and ice .

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