Like I always say, the climate cult will inject themselves into any issue, and make it all about the Cult Of Climastrology
The Climate Blind Spot in Europe’s New Migration Pact
It might as well be 2015 all over again, at least for some in the EU institutions.
Even though increased political polarization, divergence from EU and international law, and persistent human rights abuses at European borders have made it clear that a new policy is needed, the Pact on Migration and Asylum that goes into effect on June 12, 2026, remains defined by a refugee influx from more than ten years ago.
The pact has a massive blind spot: the acceleration of the climate crisis in the intervening years. While offering a fleeting nod to climate change, it makes no concrete policy recommendations to address the consequent impacts on human habitability, displacement, and migration.
This siloed approach lacks foresight and misses an opportunity to better align migration and development strategies with climate policy. While it’s impossible to predict the size of migrant flows, we know that crises like conflict, famine, and extreme weather—all exacerbated by climate change—affect the decision to migrate.
And to feed even more money into the cult NGOs and companies and such. Weirdly, you never hear about Warmists taking the illegal aliens/fake asylum seekers into their own homes, eh?
Europe will need new ideas, integrated strategies, and better cooperation if it is to build a migration and asylum policy that reckons with climate change’s impacts on where we live today.
The new pact itself offers the opportunity to align the policy targets of comprehensive migration frameworks and climate-resilient development. Only a migration protocol explicitly aligned with robust agreements to fund adaptation and resilience in countries of origin could truly seek to mitigate climate as a driver of displacement.
And, all these “refugees” always seem to come to 1st world countries which will pay for their entire lives while refusing to assimilate. Go figure.

It might as well be 2015 all over again, at least for some in the EU institutions.
