The United Nations today announced the creation of five new resettlement zones across three continents, marking the first coordinated international effort to manage the growing wave of climate refugees. The zones, located in Canada, Norway, Argentina, New Zealand, and Zambia, will eventually house up to 10 million people displaced by rising seas, desertification, and extreme weather events.
This decision comes after the International Displacement Monitoring Centre reported that over 40 million people were internally displaced by climate-related disasters in the past year alone. The UN projects that the number could reach 200 million by 2050.
"We are moving from mitigation to adaptation on a global scale," said UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi. "The climate crisis has created a humanitarian emergency that cannot be addressed by existing asylum frameworks. These zones represent the first step toward a new international system for climate relocation."
The zones are designed as semi-autonomous regions with dedicated infrastructure for housing, healthcare, and employment. Host countries will receive substantial compensation from a newly established Climate Relocation Fund, capitalised at \$500 billion by donor nations.
Critics have already raised concerns about the zones becoming "climate camps" that concentrate vulnerable populations in isolated areas. But climate scientists argue that controlled resettlement is preferable to the chaotic migration patterns already being observed.
"The physics of the situation is clear," said Dr. Raj Patel, lead author of the IPCC's Special Report on Climate and Migration. "For every degree of warming, we lose approximately 10% of the habitable land in low-lying coastal zones. The only question is whether we plan for this or allow it to unfold as a series of crises."
The first zone, in Canada's Churchill region, is expected to receive up to 500,000 refugees from Bangladesh and the Maldives over the next five years. Canada has committed to building housing units, schools, and medical facilities in the sparsely populated area.
Norway's zone in Svalbard will focus on Arctic communities displaced by thawing permafrost, while Argentina's Patagonian zone will absorb populations from the Andes and the Amazon basin. New Zealand has designated the Canterbury Plains for Pacific islanders, and Zambia's zone in the northern province will host refugees from East Africa.
Legal experts note that the zones operate under a new classification of "climate refugee" which does not exist in international law. The 1951 Refugee Convention does not recognise environmental displacement, leaving millions without legal protection.
"We are creating a new category of person defined not by persecution but by physics," said Dr. Vance. "The irony is that these zones may become permanent if we fail to reduce emissions. They could be the first of many such experiments in managing the unmanageable."
The success of the zones depends heavily on funding. The Climate Relocation Fund is currently a fraction of what experts say is needed. A recent study in Nature estimated that the total cost of relocating 200 million people could exceed \$10 trillion.
"In the long term, it will be cheaper to build world-scale climate adaptation than to manage perpetual crisis," said Dr. Vance. "But we are not on that path. We are building lifeboats while the ship sinks."
The first flights carrying refugees to Canada's Churchill zone are scheduled to arrive in three weeks. The UN has appealed for additional host countries to come forward, warning that the current zones can absorb only 5% of the projected need.
For now, the world watches as we shift from trying to save the planet to trying to save each other.








