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Climate change will hurt us all but it’s already hurting China’s poor, a new report out by Greenpeace and Oxfam reveals.

When the rains came two years ago, mudslides completely buried the E Mu’s home in China’s Sichuan province. They lost everything. 

The family of seven – two parents and five children – had no choice but to trek out of the mountains and set up home in Zhang You Fang village where they now grow rice on a tiny plot of land of about 4 Mu (0.3 hectares).

They have virtually no savings so all the food they grow has to support all their family, including the rent for their new home and land. 

"if we don't farm well, we don't have enough to eat" the eldest son told Greenpeace. "We want to go to school, but we don't have any money."    


 

Climate Change strikes China’s poor

China has been struggling for decades to help people out of poverty. But now there is a new hurdle to helping the country’s desperately poor – climate change.

A new report by Greenpeace China and Oxfam Hong Kong has found that climate change is hurting China’s poor the hardest

Climate change is causing extreme weather to occur more frequently and more intensely. The people who suffer the most from these natural disasters are the people least able to cope – China’s poor.

Just like the E Mu family. Their home was completely destroyed by flood-induced mudslides, the kinds of floods that climate scientists say can now be definitively linked to climate change.

Climate change will worsen China’s poverty

Climate change is destroying homes, crops, buildings, roads and hurting people’s livelihoods.

It is causing drought, pest outbreaks and can make it more likely for disease to spread.

Climate change is making it more and more difficult for China’s poor to climb out of poverty and causing some people to sink back into poverty.

And because China’s poor have such few resources they are struggling both to cope and recover from the damage inflicted by climate change.

Climate change, says the report, is going to make poverty much worse in China and will make it much more difficult for China to alleviate poverty.  

 

The greatest challenge of the 21st century is combating global climate change. The greatest threat to mankind is climate poverty.

Hu An'gang, Tsinghua University professor of economics 

China needs to take climate change action


Greenpeace China is urging China to make climate change a top priority and take a leadership role at key United Nations climate change negotiations at Copenhagen in December.

While developing countries should not be expected to make greenhouse gas cuts they should start to take action to limit their growth.

China and other developing countries need to reduce their projected emissions growth by 15-30% by 2020.”

On helping China’s poor, the report recommends that the government rework its poverty alleviation policy by taking the affects of climate change into account.

Such action might include helping poverty stricken areas better able to deal with climate-related natural disasters and to put climate change policy top of their agenda when considering poverty.

Everyone’s talking about climate change, but China’s poor are already struggling to survive because of global warming.

Become a climate activist and sign up to Greenpeace e-news letters. As we get closer to Copenhagen we will be calling on our climate activists to take action with us.

Return to Countdown to Copenhagen main page.