The shifting sands of the Sahel
Part of Child survival in a changing climate

Borneo, Indonesia - 2014
Artisanal gold mining

Gobi desert, Mongolia - 2012
Besieged by the Gobi

Dadaab, Kenya - 2012
The hidden focus

Dadaab, Kenya - 2012
Environmental Refugees

Dhule, India - 2011
Blown away

Tsho Rolpa Glacial Lake, Nepal - 2011
Glacial lake outburst flood

Chirindu-Zambia - 2014
Thriving mosquitoes

Bengal Bay, Bangladesh - 2010
Coastal flooding in Bengal Bay
Sahel is the region separating the Sahara Desert from the most fertile grounds of the ‘Black Africa’, a long semi-desert strip stretching from the Atlantic to the Red Sea. Sahel has the second highest population growth rate in the world. According to the United Nations, it is estimated that its population will exceed 93 million inhabitants in 2050. Climate change continues to significantly affect this area, causing a decrease in agriculture, a change in the flowing of rivers and watercourses and their continuous silting up, the intensification of desertification, and the massive movement of populations as climate refugees. Currently, this region is one of the most affected by desertification, that shall not be seen only as an ecological problem but also as a social one, taking into account it generates internal riots among inhabitants, increases migration and it is home to approximately 50 million people whose survival is at risk. (text by Luca Catalano Gonzaga).







































