UNESCO warns 2.5 billion people will live in extreme conditions in 2050

  • aplicacion - banner 728px

Barcelona (Spain).- A report by Unesco and the Spanish La Caixa Foundation warns of the "unequal" impact of warming in different territories and warns that 2.5 billion people could be exposed to extreme weather conditions in 2050.

The study further points out that 239 million of them are in conditions of extreme poverty, "with no or little chance of overcoming their precarious socioeconomic situation in increasingly threatening climate scenarios," which will make it necessary to protect the most vulnerable.

This is one of the findings from the report 'Who Bears the Cost? How to Address Inequalities Arising from Climate Change and Climate Action', presented this Wednesday in Barcelona (east of Spain).

The report aims to highlight and address the "deep inequalities" social and economic that have been "aggravated" by climate change and that have been introduced into current climate policies.

Read more: Popular donates national heritage books to UNESCO for schools

Results 

The lead author of the report, Rodolfo Lacy, has explained that the research presents a set of composite indices that assess how different sectors and populations will be affected in the climate scenarios of the mid-century.

The results indicate that there are "significant inequalities" in terms of exposure to climate risks and the capacity to adapt, especially among marginalized and low-income groups.

In fact, the analysis indicates that the global south bears an "unequal" burden in the face of climate change, based on data such as the fact that 3.6 billion people live in areas highly vulnerable to the effects of climate change or that 2.5 billion people could be exposed to extreme heat in 2050, of whom 239 million are in conditions of "extreme poverty" and with temperatures above 35 degrees for more than 12 weeks a year.

According to the study, indigenous peoples, children, informal workers, and women, of whom 1.4 billion will be directly affected between 2040 and 2060, suffer a "higher" risk.

"If equity and justice are not placed at the center of climate agendas, there is a serious risk of exacerbating current inequalities, undermining global stability, and hindering the shared goal of sustainable development. The imperative for inclusive and equitable climate action has never been more pressing," Lacy has argued.

A "just and inclusive" transition

In this sense, the director of Social Policies of UNESCO, Gustavo Merino, has explained that the study proposes to integrate equity, social justice, and human rights into climate policies to guarantee a "fair and inclusive" transition.

"The initial effects of global climate change disproportionately affect countries and communities that have barely contributed to the crisis, but are extremely vulnerable to its effects," Merino indicated.

According to the study, the richest 10% of countries are responsible for almost 50% of global emissions, while the most vulnerable countries (Chad, South Sudan, Niger, Central African Republic, and Somalia) face complex crises of poverty, lack of infrastructure, and climate stress.

In the spotlight

  • aplicacion - banner 300px

  • banner altices 300x250 junio 2025

Explore more

Thousands march in Latin America this March 8 to demand justice and equality

Thousands of women mobilized this Sunday, March 8, in various cities in Latin America to commemorate International Women's Day, a day marked by protests, marches, and symbolic acts demanding equal rights, justice, and an end to gender-based violence in the region. The mobilizations of the so-called 8M were carried out under the slogan “Rights, justice […]

Canada removes generational limit to pass on citizenship to descendants in the United States

The most extensive modification to Canada's immigration legislation in decades allows millions of U.S. citizens to automatically access Canadian citizenship and the right to a passport, without the need for prior residency in the country. The new law, known as Bill C-3, eliminates historical restrictions, which —according to the immigration portal CIC News— is already […]

A U.S. jury finds Pakistani man guilty of conspiring in a plot to assassinate Trump

New York .- A jury found Pakistani Asif Merchant guilty this Friday of conspiring in an attempt to assassinate American politicians, including now-President Donald Trump, on behalf of the Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), after a trial of just over a week in a federal court in New York. Three names were given to […]

Israel launched a new large-scale attack against Iran

At the beginning of the seventh day since the start of the conflict in the Middle East, aerial bombings by Israel reached the capitals of Iran and Lebanon, while United States attacked an Iranian ship at sea, in an escalation of the offensive against the naval fleet of the Islamic republic. During the early hours […]

Delcy Rodríguez says she resumes relations with the U.S. out of friendship and with intelligence

Caracas.- The acting president of Venezuela, Delcy Rodríguez, said this Friday that the reestablishment of relations with the United States is done "with friendship and with intelligence", after both countries confirmed on Thursday the resumption of the relationship broken since 2019, a fact that had been gestating after the capture in January of Nicolás Maduro. […]

Petro asks Trump to distance himself from Netanyahu because "he leads him and humanity to the abyss"

Bogotá.- The Colombian president, Gustavo Petro, urged this Friday his counterpart in the United States, Donald Trump, to distance himself from the Israeli prime minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, whom he held responsible for missile attacks in the escalation of war in the Middle East. Petro made those statements during an intervention in Chicago (USA), where he […]