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Climate Migration: Europe Braces for Southern Mediterranean Displacement
Scientific projections warn of hundreds of millions potentially displaced by climate change across Africa and the Middle East, with Europe as the primary destination.
The Coming Wave: Climate Migration and Europe's Existential Challenge
A joint report by the European Environment Agency, the EU's Global Health Security team, and external researchers from leading European universities published in February 2026 presented projections for climate-driven migration pressure on European borders over the coming decades that are generating significant political and policy debate across the continent. The report's central scenario projects that rising temperatures, prolonged droughts, agricultural collapse, and sea-level rise across sub-Saharan Africa, North Africa, and the Middle East could displace between 200 and 400 million people from currently inhabited areas by 2060, with Europe representing the closest and most economically attractive destination for a large fraction of those displaced.
The political implications are profound. Europe's political landscape has already been significantly shaped by migration pressures that, in absolute numerical terms, are modest compared to what the report projects could be coming. The arrival of approximately 1.3 million asylum seekers in 2015-2016 generated a political convulsion that weakened mainstream parties, strengthened nationalist and anti-immigration movements, and created lasting divisions between EU member states. Migration projections an order of magnitude larger in scale demand a qualitatively different policy response — one that addresses root causes rather than simply managing symptoms at the border.
The report authors emphasise that climate migration is not inevitable destiny — it is a consequence of policy choices that are still available to be made. Aggressive global action to limit warming to 1.5 or 2 degrees Celsius would dramatically reduce the displacement projections. Development investment that builds resilience and economic opportunity in regions most at risk would reduce the incentive for migration. Climate adaptation investment that makes currently threatened areas viable for continued habitation — through improved irrigation, heat-resistant crop varieties, coastal protection, and urban cooling — could enable millions to remain in their home regions despite changing conditions.