Climate Migrants Lack a Clear Path to Asylum in the US – InsideClimate News
With crossings expected to surge when the Covid-related closure of the U.S.-Mexico border to migrants ends, activists are pushing for a new immigration pathway for people who are impacted by climate disasters.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has called climate change a threat multiplier that puts compounding pressure on people to move within or outside country borders, and the activists are calling on the Biden administration and Congress to recognize this growing reality by supporting legislation and other efforts to expand legal pathways for climate-displaced people to migrate into the U.S.
Under current law, people impacted by climate may apply for asylum or refugee status in the U.S. only if they can show that the central reason they are fleeing their home country is that they faced or have reason to fear future persecution due to race, religion, nationality, political opinion or membership in a particular social group.
The ideal solution is a complementary system of protection in addition to refugee and asylum law enacted through Congress that would guarantee a path to citizenship for people impacted by climate disasters, said Julia Neusner, associate attorney of refugee protection at Human Rights First, a non-profit policy center based in New York City and Washington.
She notes, however, that efforts through Congress are slow and that the passage of a bill that expands refugee protections to people impacted by climate is unlikely to happen soon.
In the absence of legislation, 75 immigration policy experts asked the Biden Administration last year to use its executive authority to offer aid and protection to those fleeing the effects of climate change worldwide by granting parole to otherwise ineligible migrants and allowing them to remain in the country legally on humanitarian grounds.
It is getting to the point where, around the world, we see the climate change impacts overriding a lot of peoples ability to adapt, whether its because they dont have access to what they need, or because things are so severe that there really are not solutions to the challenges theyre facing, said Rebecca Carter, the acting director of climate resilience practice at the World Resources Institute, a global research non-profit based in Washington.
The border crisis isnt new. Central Americans, Haitians, Mexicans and others have been making their way to the U.S. border voluntarily and involuntarily due to worsening violence and persecution for years, and Covid-19 exacerbated the need for people to uproot their lives and migrate. But research shows that the conditions motivating migration to the U.S. are deepening from the impacts of climate change in migrants home countries, inevitably resulting in growing displacement across international borders.
Since the U.S. closed its land ports of entry to almost all migrants more than two years ago, the countrys backlog of pending immigration cases grew to its largest size in history. More than 1.7 million people have been expelled without due process under Title 42, a protocol that allows the Center for Disease Control and Prevention to block non-residents from entering the U.S. under certain conditions to protect public health.
The CDC announced in April that it planned to lift the order, saying that it was no longer necessary for mitigating the spread of Covid-19. After the announcement, more than 20 Republican-led states filed lawsuits in federal court in Louisiana in an attempt to keep the rule in place. On Friday, the judge blocked the Biden administration from ending the order for now.
Proponents of the rule argue that lifting it will lead to an influx of illegal immigration. Mayors in U.S. cities along the border have expressed concerns over the health and safety risks from a surge in migrants as they continue to try to recover from the pandemic as well as deal with an inability to provide shelter to the many asylum seekers they expect to settle on the U.S. side of the border.
The Department of Homeland Security is preparing for upwards of 18,000 migrants a day without Title 42 in place.
The public health order was enacted by the Trump administration in 2020 to mitigate the spread of Covid-19, despite pushback from some CDC officials citing no scientific basis to justify the order. The order prompted human rights advocates to argue that it was used as an excuse to limit immigration and that the halt in immigration doesnt align with the increasing reality of climate change, which has only exacerbated the forces driving people to seek asylum.
The number of people attempting to migrate into the U.S dipped at the beginning of the pandemic and has generally been increasing since. They reached a record high last year at the U.S.-Mexico border. Most of the migrants were from Mexico and the Northern Triangle countries of Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador.
Many of the people migrating north try to cross the border illegally, trekking through the increasingly hot southwestern desert. At least 650 people died last year, many from harsh environmental conditions, while attempting to cross the U.S.-Mexico border, the highest death toll along the border since the International Organization for Migration started tracking the number in 2014.
Thousands of people from Central America and Haiti are waiting along the Mexican side of the border in makeshift campsites and migrant shelters. Some of them have been waiting for more than two years. Some have faced violence and discrimination in Mexico as they wait.
The term climate refugee refers to those displaced by climate change but isnt recognized in international law. The U.N. Refugee Agency refers to them as persons displaced in the context of disasters and climate change, and the International Organization on Migration defines them as environmental migrants or environmentally displaced people.
Their numbers are vast and growing. An IPCC report released earlier this year stated that more than 3.3 billion people live in areas highly vulnerable to climate hazards. In the most extreme climate scenarios, more than 30 million migrants would head toward the U.S. border over the course of the next 30 years, according to a 2020 report by the New York Times Magazine. East and Southeast Asia are seeing more tropical cyclones, the Pacific Islands are quickly being submerged as sea level rises and frequent, intensifying hurricanes are striking Central America. About 21.5 million people relocate as a result of suddenly onsetting weather hazards every year.
Rep. Nydia Velazquez (D-N.Y.) and Sen. Edward Markey (D-Mass.) reintroduced a bill last year aimed at addressing climate-driven displacement and supporting people displaced by global warming.
Women, children, Indigenous people, and people of color are the most likely to be affected by climate migration, making them even more vulnerable to conflict, violence, and persecution, said Sen. Markey in a statement introducing the proposed bill for the first time in 2019. The United States needs a global strategy for resilience and a plan to deal with migration driven by climate change. We cannot allow climate-displaced persons to fall through the cracks in our system of humanitarian protections simply because they do not meet the definition of refugee.
The bill has been sitting in committee since April, and its passage is unlikely any time soon, according to Carrie Rosenbaum, an immigration law professor at the University of California Berkeley. The immigration crisis is treated as a national security problem and not a humanitarian one, and both Republicans and moderate Democrats dont want more immigration, period, said Rosenbaum, one of the immigration attorneys who signed the letter to the Biden administration last year.
Elizabeth Keyes, the director of the University of Baltimores Immigrant Rights Clinic, said that while the proposed legislation known as the Climate Displaced Persons Act is a worthy pursuit, the challenge will be that migrants dont fit neatly into definitions of a climate displaced person.
Determining who meets that definition is complex. Research shows that peoples decisions to migrate arent sudden, said Robert McLeman, a professor of environmental studies and geography at Wilfrid Laurier University in Waterloo, Ontario, noting that they often come after years of slow-onset disasters.
Most do not want to migrate. If they do end up displaced, the relocation is usually within country borders, and they often return to their homes, said McLeman, who coauthored an IPCC report released in March dealing with climate change impact, adaptation and vulnerability.
The Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre estimated that of the 38 million displacements within country borders worldwide last year, 23.7 million of them resulted from climate disasters, including extreme temperatures, storms, cyclones, hurricanes and wildfires. The centre noted that not all of the environmental events in these categories were caused by climate change. Upwards of 216 million people around the world are expected to move within their country borders for climate-related reasons by mid-century, according to a report by the World Bank.
It is only after people try to adapt and are still left with no other options that they consider migrating abroad, researchers said. Sea level rise submerging the Pacific Islands is one of the few cases where climate change is the sole factor prompting migration into other countries, according to a report by the Brookings Institution, a nonprofit public policy organization based in Washington, D.C.
Hein de Haas, a Dutch sociologist and one of the founding members of the International Migration Institute at the University of Oxford, warned that there is no direct correlation between climate change and mobility. The poorest populations in the poorest countries are less likely to move than those who are slightly better off, and climate and weather are not the only factors that determine peoples decision to migrate, he told the EUobserver.
Carter, of the World Resources Institute, said that climate change is rarely the only factor for migration. Data shows that the impacts of climate change can be a real push for people and can lead to greater instability and violence, she said.
In Honduras, for example, weather extremes have caused a chain reaction of pressures to migrate. Farmers in Honduras that are part of Central Americas dry corridor are battling droughts that have disastrous impacts on cultivation, Inside Climate News reported. This leads to dwindling food supplies, creating destabilization and conflict inside the country and in surrounding countries.
Keyes, one of the 75 experts who signed the letter, said that she also sees the linkage of climate change with instability and violence in Central America, where a majority of her clients are from, as resources and arable land in the region diminish due to drought, hurricanes and other extreme climate events. She started seeing more cases that involved climate issues about three or four years ago.
Its not that people are not coming to me saying Im affected by climate, but when you dig around the context, climate is driving a lot of either general violence or specific land disputes, so land-related asylum claims are becoming much more common, said Keyes.
Organized crime heightened by tensions over natural resources is a big driver of migration in the region, said Neusner, of Human Rights First. Farmers who are extorted to give a portion of their income to violent gangs, for example, find themselves in life-or-death situations when droughts and floods devastate their farms, which is happening more frequently and more intensely as a result of climate change. According to the International Committee of the Red Cross, 60 percent of the most climate-vulnerable countries in the world are also affected by armed conflict, including violence from organized crime.
Because organized crime controls so much of many peoples lives, especially in the northern triangle and in Mexico, there are many people whose persecution has been made a lot worse by climate disasters, said Neusner.
In the absence of an asylum process for climate migrants, Keyes said that the U.S. could expand eligibility to more countries to apply for Temporary Protective Status, a designation that enables citizens of certain nations torn by armed conflict or devastated by hurricanes, earthquakes and other environmental disasters to legally remain in the U.S. until it is deemed that they can return home safely.
But Keyes said that while such protective status could help, it is not a solution to the bigger problem of climate-displaced migrants being unable to seek long-term protection in the U.S. in a safe and fair way. Temporary Protective Status doesnt provide a path for permanent residency or citizenship, she said, and is only available to people already in the U.S. In 1998, the U.S. designated Hondurans and Nicaraguans as eligible for Temporary Protective Status after Hurricane Mitch, a storm that killed more than 8,600 people, struck the two countries.
Biden has expanded temporary protection since he took office, and there have been legislative efforts to provide a path for permanent residency and citizenship to TPS holders, but they have been unsuccessful so far.
The 75 immigration experts who wrote to Biden last year also called for an expansion of Temporary Protective Status and a process called Deferred Enforced Departure in which climate-displaced persons would not be subject to removal from the U.S. for a specific period of time. But the experts also noted the temporary nature of Bidens executive powers under current law.
Because the U.S. refugee system was not necessarily designed to receive climate-displaced persons, existing U.S. refugee mechanisms do not adequately meet their needs, the experts wrote. In the United States, current executive powers lend themselves only to temporary solutions. These temporary solutions can help meet urgent immediate need for protection, but we emphasize that climate-displaced persons need statutory protection that recognizes the long-term nature of their displacement.
ICN provides award-winning climate coverage free of charge and advertising. We rely on donations from readers like you to keep going.
Following two executive orders by President Biden to address the climate crisis impacts in the U.S. and abroad, the National Security Council released a report in October that recognized the relationship between climate change and migration, and they highlighted the importance of supporting efforts that enable people to stay as safe as possible in their home countries.
The report mentions the need to fund resilience and adaptation projects in countries that are also those most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change. These also happen to be the countries that have contributed the fewest greenhouse gas emissions, and ultimately are the least responsible for the impacts of climate change.
In their letter to Biden, the 75 experts clearly focused on what the U.S. should be doing for climate migrants, as opposed to adaptation and mitigation efforts in their countries of origin. The experts called on the Biden administration to put climate migrants among others with top priority in the asylum process. And they recommended that the U.N. revise its own resettlement criteria to also give higher priority to climate migrants.
These measures would not only signal to other nations that the United States stands ready to do its part in the fight against climate change, they wrote, but they would also improve our relationships with nations disproportionately affected by climate change and related disasters.
Aydali Campa covers environmental justice as a Roy W. Howard investigative fellow at Inside Climate News. She grew up on the U.S.-Mexico border in Arizona and taught third and fourth grade in Oklahoma City before pursuing a masters degree in investigative journalism from Arizona State University. As a bilingual reporter with experience in multimedia, she has covered education, Covid-19 and transborder issues. Her previous work can be seen in The Wall Street Journal, The Arizona Republic and Arizona PBS.
More:
Climate Migrants Lack a Clear Path to Asylum in the US - InsideClimate News
- Migrant crisis: Michelle Dewberry erupts over Britain's 'direction of travel' with taxpayers set to shell out for rent - GB News - May 5th, 2025 [May 5th, 2025]
- 'Labour want to reimpose free movement by stealth and make the migrant crisis worse' - GB News - April 30th, 2025 [April 30th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: Number of small boat migrants hits TEN THOUSAND in 2025 with PM's 'smash the gangs' plan in tatters - GB News - April 30th, 2025 [April 30th, 2025]
- Keir Starmer's answer to the migrant crisis is to pay their rent, council tax and energy bills - Kelvin MacKenzie - GB News - April 30th, 2025 [April 30th, 2025]
- Trump official calls for Americans to be paid reparations over trauma caused by Biden's migrant crisis - Daily Mail - April 25th, 2025 [April 25th, 2025]
- Top Donald Trump ally calls for US citizens to receive reparations for Biden's migrant crisis trauma - GB News - April 25th, 2025 [April 25th, 2025]
- Keir Starmer issued firm warning over very foolish act as PM sweats over migrant crisis - Totally irrational - GB News - April 25th, 2025 [April 25th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: HUNDREDS more migrants arrive in Britain on Good Friday as record week for crossings grows again - GB News - April 25th, 2025 [April 25th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: Somali criminal asylum seeker allowed to stay in Britain as deportation would 'stress him out' - GB News - April 14th, 2025 [April 14th, 2025]
- Britain will be 'unrecognisable in 10 years' if migrant crisis continues, Brooks claims - GB News - April 14th, 2025 [April 14th, 2025]
- The bombshell move that could end the Channel migrant hotel crisis - Daily Express - April 8th, 2025 [April 8th, 2025]
- France FINALLY admits it can do more to stop Channel crossing crisis after pocketing 500m for migrant 'taxi service' - GB News - April 8th, 2025 [April 8th, 2025]
- NYC Hotel That Symbolized Migrant Crisis to Fire Most Workers - Bloomberg - March 30th, 2025 [March 30th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: Albanian criminal allowed to stay in Britain as his son could have a learning disability - GB News - March 26th, 2025 [March 26th, 2025]
- Migrant Hotel Crisis to Drag On for Years, Treasury Confirms - The Global Treasurer - March 26th, 2025 [March 26th, 2025]
- Trump takes 'nuclear option' at southern border to solve America's migrant crisis once and for all - Daily Mail - March 26th, 2025 [March 26th, 2025]
- Migrant Crossings Surge Over 5000 This Year Amid Crisis - Evrim Aac - March 26th, 2025 [March 26th, 2025]
- 'Labour has finally acknowledged that a space elsewhere is required to solve the migrant crisis' - GB News - March 26th, 2025 [March 26th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: Tourists from Trinidad and Tobago BANNED from Britain without visa amid soaring asylum applications - GB News - March 15th, 2025 [March 15th, 2025]
- POLL OF THE DAY: Should Labour concentrate on the Channel migrant crisis rather than Ukraine? - GB News - March 15th, 2025 [March 15th, 2025]
- The Roosevelt Hotel Closure: A Wake-Up Call for Blue Cities to Rein In the Migrant Crisis - Independent Women's Forum - March 5th, 2025 [March 5th, 2025]
- AOC asks host to clarify when he refers to the migrant crisis as a 'problem' for Democrats - Fox News - March 5th, 2025 [March 5th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: French government to do more to stop Channel crossings as Macron set to lift ban on stopping boats at sea - GB News - March 5th, 2025 [March 5th, 2025]
- Trumps DOJ to toss NYC Mayor Eric Adams historic bribery case, agrees with Dem charges were politically motivated by Biden admin over migrant crisis -... - February 14th, 2025 [February 14th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: Asylum seeker on the run for 18 years finally caught after police pulled car over - GB News - February 12th, 2025 [February 12th, 2025]
- One in four people in UK set to be a migrant by 2035 with taxpayers to fund 234billion crisis, study reveals - GB News - February 9th, 2025 [February 9th, 2025]
- Canadas Migrant Crisis Spills Over to US, Raising Concerns: The BorderLine - Daily Signal - February 7th, 2025 [February 7th, 2025]
- NYC Mayor Eric Adams begs Albany for $1.1B more to combat migrant crisis and says Big Apple needs it in 12 weeks - New York Post - February 5th, 2025 [February 5th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: Britons fume at growing numbers five years on from Brexit - 'Invasion of rubber dinghies!' - GB News - February 5th, 2025 [February 5th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: Failed asylum seeker wins right to stay in UK because of wife's kids fathered by another man - GB News - January 27th, 2025 [January 27th, 2025]
- Promise kept: How Trumps border orders are reversing the migrant crisis - New York Post - January 24th, 2025 [January 24th, 2025]
- Chicago resident who sued city over migrant crisis says 'change is on the horizon' after Trump's inauguration - Fox News - January 24th, 2025 [January 24th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: More than 1,000 migrants have crossed Channel since New Year - GB News - January 24th, 2025 [January 24th, 2025]
- Active-duty troops begin arriving at US-Mexico border in Texas and California to combat migrant crisis - Fox8tv - January 24th, 2025 [January 24th, 2025]
- Massachusetts Migrant Crisis: Governor Healy Ignores the Elephant in the Room - Federation for American Immigration Reform - January 19th, 2025 [January 19th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: Albanian criminal allowed to remain in Britain despite being convicted of smuggling migrants into UK - GB News - January 19th, 2025 [January 19th, 2025]
- Migrant crisis: Germany's AfD pledge 'total closure of borders for 100 days' and mass deportations of immigrants as election draws closer - GB News - January 19th, 2025 [January 19th, 2025]
- How we searched for solutions to our migrant crisis hundreds of miles to the north in Toronto - Chicago Sun-Times - December 30th, 2024 [December 30th, 2024]
- NYC migrant crisis: For a migrant father and his sons, a year of struggle, fear and hope in New York - Newsday - December 30th, 2024 [December 30th, 2024]
- Operation Sluice and the migrant crisis as preparation for full-scale aggression - StopFake.org - December 30th, 2024 [December 30th, 2024]
- Adams says Dems missed the memo on migrant crisis and it hurt the party - PIX11 New York News - December 22nd, 2024 [December 22nd, 2024]
- 'I welcome the border czar in Chicgao': Activist sounds off on illegal migrant crisis in the Windy City - Fox News - December 22nd, 2024 [December 22nd, 2024]
- The real cause of the migrant crisis is neither migrants nor smuggling gangs - William Clouston - GB News - December 22nd, 2024 [December 22nd, 2024]
- Fox News finds a way to tie UnitedHealthcare CEO shooting to migrant crisis in New York City - The Independent - December 10th, 2024 [December 10th, 2024]
- GOP lawmaker on migrant crisis: The left is being mugged by reality - MSN - December 10th, 2024 [December 10th, 2024]
- GOP lawmaker on migrant crisis: The left is being mugged by reality - Fox Business - December 10th, 2024 [December 10th, 2024]
- Eric Adams may be New Yorks best hope for tackling the migrant crisis - UnHerd - December 10th, 2024 [December 10th, 2024]
- NYC Mayor Eric Adams will meet Trump's border czar and discuss migrant crisis next week - MSN - December 10th, 2024 [December 10th, 2024]
- Fox anchor baselessly ties the shooting of the United Healthcare CEO to the migrant crisis - Media Matters for America - December 10th, 2024 [December 10th, 2024]
- Battenfeld: Michelle Wu the new national face of the migrant crisis, but could she pay a price? - Boston Herald - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- Lefty Mass. gov to phase out hotel rooms for illegal immigrants to address over $1B migrant crisis costs - New York Post - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- Exclusive | NYPD classes canned over migrant crisis budget cuts to be reinstated adding 1.6K cops by next fall - New York Post - November 24th, 2024 [November 24th, 2024]
- Laken Riley's alleged killer Jose Ibarra flew from 'ground zero' of migrant crisis to Georgia - Fox News - November 19th, 2024 [November 19th, 2024]
- Migrant crisis in the Canary Islands: A record-breaking year - Murcia Today - November 19th, 2024 [November 19th, 2024]
- Not a chance in HELL it works! Keir Starmer told to forget new plan to tackle migrant crisis - GB News - November 19th, 2024 [November 19th, 2024]
- Battenfeld: Massachusetts will get no relief from migrant crisis thanks to Maura Healey - Boston Herald - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Is Italy's plan to outsource migrant crisis to Albania falling through? - Firstpost - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Channel migrant crisis on course for 40,000 by year's end - as almost 33,000 cross so far in 2024 - GB News - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Smash the gangs is just Keir Starmers version of stop the boats. It wont solve the migrant crisis - The Guardian - November 12th, 2024 [November 12th, 2024]
- Migrant crisis as 600 risk everything to cross Channel so far this month - Express - November 5th, 2024 [November 5th, 2024]
- Fox Business anchor pushes Trump's lie that "the illegal migrant crisis ... has taken over" Aurora, Colorado - Media Matters for America - October 12th, 2024 [October 12th, 2024]
- Nantucket's migrant crisis handling called out after quiet island rocked by wave of violent attacks - AOL - October 12th, 2024 [October 12th, 2024]
- FITZPATRICK: Migrant Crisis Forcing Small-Town Americans To Take Matters Into Their Own Hands - Daily Caller - October 11th, 2024 [October 11th, 2024]
- Spanish centre-right at odds with government over migrant crisis in the Canaries - EURACTIV - October 11th, 2024 [October 11th, 2024]
- New York Closes Randalls Island Migrant Shelter, a Symbol of the Crisis - La Voce di New York - October 11th, 2024 [October 11th, 2024]
- Its time to break the stranglehold on the migrant crisis debate - The Spectator - October 4th, 2024 [October 4th, 2024]
- Gilbert Bigio: Israels Man in Haiti and the Architect Behind the US Migrant Crisis - Mintpress News - October 4th, 2024 [October 4th, 2024]
- Putting up barriers will not solve the migrant crisis - EURACTIV - October 4th, 2024 [October 4th, 2024]
- Kamala Harris Shoves the Migrant Border Crisis in Trumps Face - The Daily Beast - October 3rd, 2024 [October 3rd, 2024]
- Opinion | How the Migrant Crisis Strains Whitewater, Wis. - The Wall Street Journal - October 3rd, 2024 [October 3rd, 2024]
- What will happen to Europe if it cant control the migrant crisis? - The Spectator - October 3rd, 2024 [October 3rd, 2024]
- Israel's invasion of Lebanon could spark another toxic European migrant crisis - Evening Standard - October 3rd, 2024 [October 3rd, 2024]
- Top Adams aide overseeing migrant crisis response hit with federal subpoena: reports - amNY - September 21st, 2024 [September 21st, 2024]
- Vivek Ramaswamy to host town hall in Springfield, Ohio on migrant crisis - Fox News - September 21st, 2024 [September 21st, 2024]
- Follow The Money: Funding The Biden-Harris Migrant Crisis - The Daily Wire - September 16th, 2024 [September 16th, 2024]
- Investigation will expose Biden-Harris admin over migrant crisis: AFLs Gene Hamilton - Fox Business - September 16th, 2024 [September 16th, 2024]
- JUST IN - Netherlands To Declare State Of Emergency Amid Illegal Migrant Crisis And Will Ask For Opt-out From EU Migration Policy - GreekCityTimes.com - September 16th, 2024 [September 16th, 2024]
- Ohio residents plead for help amid migrant crisis: 'I want out of this town' - KEYE TV CBS Austin - September 12th, 2024 [September 12th, 2024]
- Residents of Springfield, Ohio attend city council meeting to share frustration about migrant crisis hitting their community - Fox News - September 12th, 2024 [September 12th, 2024]
- Exclusive | The US migrant crisis, explained: Special NY Post video report breaks down how we got here from the border to the Big Apple - New York... - August 25th, 2024 [August 25th, 2024]