BERKELEY — Climate
change could increase the likelihood of civil war in sub-Saharan Africa
by over 50 percent within the next two decades, according to a new
study led by a team of researchers at University of California,
Berkeley, and published in today's (Monday, Nov. 23) online issue of
the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).
The
study, conducted by researchers at UC Berkeley as well as at Stanford
University, New York University and Harvard University, provides the
first quantitative evidence linking climate change and the risk of
civil conflict. It concludes by urging accelerated support by African
governments and foreign aid donors for new and/or expanded policies to
assist with African adaptation to climate change.
"Despite
recent high-level statements suggesting that climate change could
worsen the risk of civil conflict, until now we had little quantitative
evidence linking the two," said Marshall Burke, the study's lead author
and a graduate student at UC Berkeley's Department of Agricultural and
Resource Economics. "Unfortunately, our study finds that climate change
could increase the risk of African civil war by over 50 percent in 2030
relative to 1990, with huge potential costs to human livelihoods."
"We
were definitely surprised that the linkages between temperature and
recent conflict were so strong," said Edward Miguel, professor of
economics at UC Berkeley and faculty director of UC Berkeley's Center
for Evaluation for Global Action. "But the result makes sense. The
large majority of the poor in most African countries depend on
agriculture for their livelihoods, and their crops are quite sensitive
to small changes in temperature. So when temperatures rise, the
livelihoods of many in Africa suffer greatly, and the disadvantaged
become more likely to take up arms."
Understanding the causes
and consequences of civil strife in much of the African continent has
been a major focus of the social sciences for decades, said Miguel, as
monumental suffering has resulted from it. In the case of the
Democratic Republic of Congo's, the International Rescue Committee
estimates that at least 5.4 million people have died from fighting,
hunger and disease during that country's ongoing civil unrest over the
past 10 years.
In the study, the researchers first combined
historical data on civil wars in sub-Saharan Africa with rainfall and
temperature records across the continent. They found that between 1980
and 2002, civil wars were significantly more likely in
warmer-than-average years, with a 1 degree Celsius increase in
temperature in a given year raising the incidence of conflict across
the continent by nearly 50 percent.
Building on this historical
relationship between temperature and conflict, the researchers then
used projections of future temperature and precipitation change to
quantify future changes in the likelihood of African civil war. Based
on climate projections from 20 global climate models, the researchers
found that the incidence of African civil war could increase 55 percent
by 2030, resulting in an additional 390,000 battle deaths if future
wars are as deadly as recent ones.
All climate models project
rising temperatures in coming decades, said David Lobell, study
co-author and an assistant professor of environmental earth systems
science at Stanford.
"On average, the models suggest that
temperatures over the African continent will increase by a little over
1 degree Celsius by 2030," he added. "Given the strong historical
relationship between temperature rise and conflict, this expected
future rise in temperature is enough to cause big increases in the
likelihood of conflict."
To confirm that this projection was
not the result of large effects in just a few countries or due to
overreliance on a particular climate model, the researchers
recalculated future conflict projections using alternate data. "No
matter what we tried — different historical climate data, different
climate model projections, different subsets of the conflict data — we
still found the same basic result," said Lobell.
It's easy to
think of climate change as a long way off, said the researchers, but
their study shows how sensitive many human systems are to small
increases in temperature, and how fast the negative impacts of climate
change could be felt.
"Our findings provide strong impetus to
ramp up investments in African adaptation to climate change by such
steps as developing crop varieties less sensitive to extreme heat and
promoting insurance plans to help protect farmers from adverse effects
of the hotter climate," said Burke.
Applying findings from this
study could prove useful to policy makers at the upcoming Copenhagen
negotiations in December in determining both the speed and magnitude of
response to climate change, the authors said.
"If the
sub-Saharan climate continues to warm and little is done to help its
countries better adapt to high temperatures, the human costs are likely
to be staggering," said Burke.

