HomeAfricaAlmost all of world's children exposed to climate hazards, UN agency says

Almost all of world’s children exposed to climate hazards, UN agency says

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SINGAPORE, June 16 (Reuters) - Almost ‌all of the world's children are exposed to at least ​one climate hazard, with as many as 1.8 billion put in danger by droughts and 1.2 billion ⁠by extreme heat, the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) said in a report on Tuesday.

UNICEF said children were "disproportionately affected" by a range of intensifying climate-related risks and governments ​urgently needed to invest in infrastructure, adaptation and disaster management capabilities to reduce their exposure.

Here are ‌some of the details of UNICEF's Children's Climate Risk Report.

• The report looked at a broad range of climate hazards, as well as the impact of air pollution ⁠and the risks of vector-borne diseases like malaria. It also factored ⁠in data about access to water, healthcare and social services across the world.

• As many as 1.1 billion children globally were exposed to at least three overlapping climate risks, the report said, warning of a "dangerous cascade of multiple, overlapping hazards" that could ‌overwhelm governments and social services.

• "It's not just the exposure to the single hazards ⁠like floods or droughts or heat waves and extreme heat ‌that children face, but it is the exposure ​to multiple hazards," said Rohini Sampoornam Swaminathan, UNICEF statistics manager and one of the authors of the report.

• As many as 662 million children were at risk ‌from tropical storms, 337 million from riverine floods and 33 ​million from coastal floods, with ⁠1 billion children also exposed to malaria, mostly in Africa.

• In ‌2024, 242 million children in 85 countries saw ⁠their schooling disrupted by climate hazards.

• UNICEF identified Somalia, Madagascar, Myanmar, Cambodia and Pakistan as the most vulnerable countries.

• The highest numbers of drought-exposed children live in agriculture-dependent ​economies like Bangladesh, Indonesia, ‌Nigeria, Pakistan and Tanzania.

• Children in landlocked nations were also facing "disproportionate" risks of drought, desertification, ⁠heat stress and flash floods, with ​water stress set to intensify in countries like Botswana and Burkina Faso.

(Reporting by ​David Stanway; Editing by Jamie Freed)

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