Content sections

Climate-induced water insecurity poses one of the biggest threats to humanity and will lead to more hunger, disease and displacement

“Countries across Asia will be affected more by sea-level rise, potentially over half a meter by 2100. Along with surface run-off and glacier melt, this will affect fresh groundwater aquifers, especially in coastal areas where hundreds of millions of people live. The report also signals more heatwaves in Asia (8%) and a decline in labour productivity, by 7%, leading to more poverty and migration. It says diseases like malaria and dengue could rise by a staggering 183%.”

Contact information:

Oxfam has an expert spokesperson on Water and Sanitation available for comment and interviews. Please contact:

Nesrine Aly | Oxfam News Manager | nesrine.aly@oxfam.org | +447503989838

Notes to editors:

Read Oxfam’s “Water Dilemmas” report. The report builds on existing scientific literature and climate models, along with witnessed and anecdotal evidence, to highlight the impacts of climate-driven water insecurity on food insecurity, conflicts, displacement and migration, gender inequality and disease in four regions (Asia; Middle East; West Africa; Horn, Eastern and Central Africa or HECA).