>>3896950>more severe climate changeRefugees for one.
Rural Bangladesh is becoming too hot and flooded, and the ability of the already dense Dhaka to sustain its denizens is being tested to the brink. Many such cases.
Soon, much of the Sahel will become too hot to sustain the already struggling nations therein, and millions more will flee north, to the Arab world and Europe.
The European solution to this has become quite clear as of late: the total numbers of deaths in migrations to Greece (popular entry point) for 2023 was as high as in 2015, despite 2023 having only about 5% of the number of migrants as record-breaking 2015.
Ethnic conflicts in the Sahel will likely worsen, as the ethnic groups that rely on herding will have fewer and fewer grazing lands, and the bandit conflicts already destabilizing north Nigeria will get even worse.
Water is running out in Iran, among others.
The Soviets effectively destroyed the Aral Sea, leaving a puddle in its stead. Parts of the lake became a dumping ground for toxic waste, and with the water gone, huge sandstorms have arisen, filling the air with swirling dust and poison. Drinkable water is running out there, some see war over the horizon.
The Biblical Tigris and Euphrates evaporate in the baking heat in Iraq.
Deserts like the Sahara are growing, encroaching on already scarce arable land.
An entire city in South Africa had run out of water, but refugee still run there. Where else could they go?
Some of the locals are blaming migrants for the problems of their clusterfuck country with the trainwreck government. They sing, burn the foreigner.
Temperatures in India reach the high 40s in the summer, and it's worse in West Asia.
Weather here is increasingly unpredictable. I have never felt such heat, despite the rain.
It's hot in Pakistan now, but very recently, up to a tenth of the country was underwater.
I like this album, Music for People in Trouble by Susanne Sundfor. It's soothing but not vacuous.