PRESS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 16, 2023
PRESS CONTACT
Ryan Plano (ryanplano@climate-refugees.org)
Climate Change causing widespread loss and damage in Kenya’s Great Rift Valley, as highlighted by new report from Climate Refugees
(New York, NY, USA) - A new report from NGO Climate Refugees, “Climate Change is Controlling Everything, Let Them Compensate Us”: Stories of Loss & Damage in Kenya, details stories that demonstrate the severe and wide-ranging climate change losses and damages communities are experiencing in Kenya’s Great Rift Valley. Site visits to 10 distinct locations and discussions with nearly 100 affected individuals demonstrates how prolonged drought and major flooding of lakes is causing displacement, human rights losses, and development setbacks for communities who are least responsible for climate change and are often overlooked by existing policies, funding arrangements and humanitarian interventions.
“Kenya is being devastated by climate change, and now some of the poorest communities have lost their sources of livelihood, even becoming climate refugees,” said Amali Tower, Founder and Executive Director of Climate Refugees, who conducted the visits in late 2022 in Kenya’s Baringo, Turkana and Nairobi counties. “In the absence of adequate climate adaptation, these are already marginalized Indigenous groups and ethnic minorities that are fending for themselves in the shadows.”
The report situates displaced and impacted people’s stories in the foreground, recognizing that affected communities are not heard nearly enough, although they play a key role in developing effective policies for addressing the harms caused by climate change. Discussions with local organizations and government leaders also offer an important opportunity to situate loss & damage as a threat to human rights and development gains, showing that urgent action and significant new funding is required.
Ahead of the annual UN climate conference, COP28, in November, the report provides valuable recommendations to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), as well as regional organizations and government actors. Expanded and strengthened legal protections for displaced people, adequate and accessible grant-based climate finance, and implementation of locally-based preparedness and resilience-building measures are just a few of the solutions proposed. All of these solutions must be informed by the experiences of impacted people.
On the whole, it is abundantly clear that climate change-affected communities are struggling to survive, let alone thrive. Communities, and especially marginalized individuals and groups within them, are being left behind with ever fewer options to pursue livelihoods, move or remain with agency, and care for their loved ones. Listening to and amplifying their stories - as this report attempts to do - is the first step towards a more secure and sustainable future.
“Climate Change is Controlling Everything, Let Them Compensate Us”: Stories of Loss & Damage in Kenya can be accessed here.
###
Climate Refugees is a non-profit founded in 2015 to bring attention and action to help people displaced as a result of climate change, through field reports, research, and advocacy. At Climate Refugees, we believe the time has come to take bold and immediate action to ensure the international community stands ready to protect those who are forced to flee their homes or even their countries because of our changing climate.