Climate Change Impact on Rural Indians
• Climate change is causing widespread migration to urban areas due to climate-related disasters.
• This migration, often involuntary, is eroding social structures and worsening living and working conditions for migrants.
• Bundelkhand, a region in Central India, is characterized by steep hills, scant rainfall, and frequent droughts.
• Farmers in the region are most affected, struggling to make ends meet and falling deeper into debt.
• Agricultural workers have taken on other jobs, leading to migration to cities like Surat, Ahmedabad, Delhi, Bangalore, and Chennai.
Climate Change and Land Depletion in Bangladesh’s Charpauli Village
• Climate change has led to increased flooding and erosion in Charpauli village, a region along the banks of the Jamuna river.
• Climate change can exacerbate seasonal migration in areas like Vidarbha and Marathwada, two drought-prone regions of Maharashtra.
• Migrant labourers in these regions face precarious conditions and worsening wages.
• Migrants are given dirty and shabby patches of land for their homes.
Migration and Adaptation in Bundelkhand
• Migrants from Bundelkhand face harsh conditions, working as daily-wage construction workers, security guards, and in slums.
• Remittances from migrants can take up to six months to arrive, causing financial struggles for families.
• Women and children are particularly affected, becoming increasingly vulnerable to sexual assault.