Poverty and the climate crisis affect millions of children worldwide.
This is the highly topical theme at the centre of Save the Children's new report Generation Hope: 2.4 billion reasons to end the global climate crisis and inequality, a snapshot of the consequences of the two phenomena on the youngest children from which it emerges that 80% of children in the world are affected by at least one extreme weather event each year.
Some are particularly at risk because they also face poverty and, consequently, have a reduced capacity to protect themselves and recover.
The survey reveals that some 774 million children globally are experiencing the effects of the dual impacts of poverty and high climate risk: across the globe, inequalities are compounding the climate emergency and its effects, particularly for girls, children and low-income families. The country with the highest percentage of children affected by this twin risk is South Sudan, with 87%, followed by the Central African Republic (85%) and Mozambique (80%).
India has the highest total number of children who live in poverty and are burdened by the climate crisis (223 million), followed by Nigeria (58 million) and Ethiopia (36 million).
The report is available on the Save the Children website in the "Publications" section.
Other materials and news can be found on this website under the topics Poverty and the Environment, which can be found under the "Topics" navigation menu.