Report
Published:
Climate, Peace and Security Fact Sheet: Central African Republic
Written by
Ingvild Brox Brodtkorb
Junior Research Fellow
Katongo Seyuba
Research assistant, SIPRI
Thor Olav Iversen
Senior Researcher
Kheira Tarif
Research assistant, SIPRI
Nadine Andersen
Research Assistant, SIPRI
Minoo Koefoed
Senior Researcher
Ed.
Cedric H. de Coning
Research Professor
Florian Krampe
Senior Researcher, SIPRI
Summary:
The Central African Republic (CAR) is highly exposed to the impacts of climate change due to socioecological vulnerabilities and ongoing insecurity. Drivers of vulnerability include the absence of state authority, natural resource mismanagement, and low household and community resilience. Although the security situation has improved in recent years, it remains volatile; factions of the Coalition of Patriots for Change (CPC), self-defence groups and bandits regularly clash with government forces, allies and mercenaries such as the Wagner Group (now Africa Corps) in rural areas. A changing climate and the deteriorating security situation in the Sahel and the Great Lakes region have driven transhumant pastoralists further into CAR earlier in the transhumance season, creating tensions. Additionally, the spillover effects of the war in Sudan have put added pressure on the humanitarian situation in CAR, particularly in the Vakaga and Haute-Kotto prefectures.
Written by
Ingvild Brox Brodtkorb
Junior Research Fellow
Katongo Seyuba
Research assistant, SIPRI
Thor Olav Iversen
Senior Researcher
Kheira Tarif
Research assistant, SIPRI
Nadine Andersen
Research Assistant, SIPRI
Minoo Koefoed
Senior Researcher