Tuesday, June 16, 2026 | Dhu al-hijjah 29, 1447 H
clear sky
weather
OMAN
22°C / 22°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Almost all of world's children exposed to climate hazards, UN agency says

No Image
minus
plus

 Almost all of ⁠the world's children are exposed to at least one climate hazard, with ​as many as 1.8 billion ​put in danger by droughts and 1.2 billion by extreme heat, the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) said in a report on Tuesday.


UNICEF said children were "disproportionately affected" by a range of intensifying climate-related risks and governments urgently needed to invest in infrastructure, adaptation and disaster ⁠management capabilities to reduce their exposure. Here are some of the details ⁠of UNICEF's Children's Climate Risk Report.


* The report looked at a broad range of climate hazards, as well as the impact of air pollution and the risks ‌of vector-borne diseases like malaria. It also ​factored in data about access ⁠to water, healthcare and social services across the world.


* ​As many as 1.1 billion ‌children globally were exposed to at least three overlapping climate risks, the report said, warning of a "dangerous ​cascade of multiple, overlapping hazards" that could overwhelm governments and social services.


* "It's not just the exposure to the single hazards like floods or droughts or heat waves and extreme heat that children face, but it is the exposure to ‌multiple hazards," said Rohini Sampoornam Swaminathan, UNICEF statistics manager and one of ​the authors of the report.


* As many as 662 million children were ​at ‌risk ⁠from tropical storms, 337 million from riverine floods and 33 million from coastal floods, with 1 billion children also exposed to malaria, mostly in Africa.


* ​In 2024, 242 million children in 85 countries ⁠saw their schooling disrupted ​by climate hazards.


* UNICEF identified Somalia, Madagascar, Myanmar, Cambodia and Pakistan as the most vulnerable countries.


* The highest numbers of drought-exposed children live in agriculture-dependent economies like Bangladesh, Indonesia, Nigeria, Pakistan and Tanzania.


* Children in ​landlocked nations were also facing "disproportionate" risks of drought, desertification, ​heat stress and flash floods, with water stress set to intensify in countries like Botswana and Burkina Faso. 



SHARE ARTICLE
arrow up
home icon