"Climate change is not a future problem - it's here and now"
By Mary Friel, resilience and climate policy and advocacy manager, 台灣uu直播
Last updated 4 August 2023
The IPCC's report, authored by more than 200 climate experts, including Maarten van Aalst, director of the , reaffirms the key principles that we at the Red Cross have been calling for to tackle climate change
In March 2022, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) released its latest report on climate change impacts, adaptation, and vulnerability.
For the first time, the IPCC stated that climate change is already contributing to humanitarian crises in vulnerable contexts.

PHOTO:聽Bangladesh Red Crescent volunteers reaching flood-affected remote communities in Tangail district with dry food packs, supported by American Red Cross, German Red Cross along with IFRC
PHOTO: Bangladesh Red Crescent
Climate change is happening now and already impacting the lives of billions
It confirmed what the Red Cross has been seeing for many years - climate change is not a future problem, it鈥檚 here and now.
We are experiencing more frequent and intense extreme weather events - stronger storms, rising floods, unprecedented heatwaves, and withering droughts 鈥 we are no longer talking about the future impacts of climate change it is already impacting the lives of billions, particularly the world鈥檚 poorest who have contributed the least to it.
"[The report] shows all the human and natural systems that are already adversely affected. In other words, many more people have lost their lives and livelihoods than originally thought."
The IPCC report's key findings
The IPCC report on climate change warns that between 3.3 and 3.6 billion people live in areas that are highly vulnerable to the impacts of climate change.
The latest science also confirms, with very high confidence, that climate impacts and risks increase vulnerabilities and socio-economic inequalities.
It reports that between 2010 and 2020, 15 times more people died from floods, droughts, and storms in regions that live in highly vulnerable areas, compared to other parts of the world. This includes parts of Africa, South Asia, and Central and South America.
The percentage of the population exposed to what the IPCC calls 鈥榙eadly heat stress鈥 is projected to increase from today鈥檚 30 per cent to up to nearly 80 per cent by the end of the century, depending on future warming.
In addition, the report highlights that climate-related weather extremes are increasingly driving displacement. These are just a few examples of some of the day-to-day problems people are facing because of climate change.

PHOTO: IFRC/台灣uu直播
"鈥淎ny further delay in concerted global action will miss the brief, rapidly closing window to secure a liveable future鈥. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)
What can we do about climate change now?
But the IPCC report also shows that it is not too late yet. The IPCC also underscores that working with communities to adapt and prepare for climate change impacts in the future, does work.
We can still reduce emissions to avoid the worst impacts by staying below 1.5oC warming, but we also need to manage the climate changes happening now that we can no longer prevent.
However, progress on climate adaptation has been uneven, with the gaps between what is needed and what has been achieved being starkly felt by those living in lower-income countries.
We must raise our ambition to adapt to critical climate risks, focusing on the most vulnerable people, to avoid devastating consequences.
We must scale up climate action which reaches the most vulnerable.
The IPCC has warned, 鈥渁ny further delay in concerted global action will miss the brief, rapidly closing window to secure a liveable future鈥.
The Red Cross is calling for urgent local action and funding, particularly for those most vulnerable, to combat the devastating humanitarian impacts of the climate crisis confirmed in the IPCC鈥檚 latest report.
In 2021 at COP26 in Glasgow, world leaders agreed to double adaptation funding, but the outcomes of this saw the promise to deliver $100 billion in climate finance delayed until 2023.
Responding to disasters after they happen is no longer enough. We need urgent action now, and to see the promise of that investment in locally-led adaptation, early warning and anticipatory action systems, nature-based solutions, to save lives and livelihoods.
Here is the and eight humanitarian insights from the Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Centre enhanced through cartoons.
- Learn more about the impacts of climate change
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More on our work with people impacted by climate change

鈥淚 know my family will always have a home-grown, nutritious meal鈥
In a region hit by climate crisis, the Red Cross is supporting mothers and mothers-to-be to grow nutritious food in sustainable gardens