Climate change is likely to worsen conflicts in fragile and war-torn states, resulting in higher death rates and greatly reduced GDP, an International Monetary Fund report says.
Subscribe now for unlimited access.
$0/
(min cost $0)
or signup to continue reading
The World Bank each year revises a list of countries classed as "fragile and conflict-afflicted states", of which there are currently 39 - 21 of them in Africa.
The IMF report released on Wednesday covers all 61 countries that have been on the list since 2006.
It found climate shocks do not cause conflicts but do worsen existing unrest and exacerbate other underlying fragilities, such as hunger and poverty.
Deaths from conflict as a share of the population could increase by close to 10 per cent in fragile countries by 2060, the IMF said, adding climate change could push an additional 50 million people in fragile states into hunger by 2060.
Even though evidence of climate change is mounting after record temperatures across the world in recent months, the political will to take action has been eroded by economic weakness.
African leaders have said richer countries should provide more money to help them adapt to climate change and transition to greener energy, given most African countries have produced a relatively tiny share of the emissions that cause global warming.
They are expected to try to reach a unified climate negotiating position at the African Climate Summit from September 4-6, ahead of the COP28 UN climate summit in the United Arab Emirates starting at the end of November.
Australian Associated Press