Millions displaced by climate impacts face mounting obstacles entering the United States. Recent immigration restrictions have closed pathways once used by those fleeing environmental disasters. Advocates say the changes leave little room for those affected by floods, droughts and storms.
Neither US nor international law recognizes climate related displacement as grounds for asylum. This gap has grown sharper under expanded enforcement measures that limit entry from multiple countries.
Personal accounts illustrate the effects. Evelyn, who arrived after Hurricane Mitch devastated Honduras in 1998, described worsening restrictions. “Every day it’s more barriers,” she said. A doctor from Sudan and a man from Somalia reported similar fears after entry bans and asylum limits took hold.
Felipe Navarro of the Center for Gender and Refugee Studies noted that climate factors receive little consideration in current policy. He added that doors closed to certain nationalities leave displaced people without options, even as global numbers affected by environmental shocks continue to rise.