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Climate, Peace and Security Fact Sheet: Abyei (2025)

This Climate, Peace and Security Fact Sheet is focused on Abyei and the series of conflict- and climate-related issues that face the country. The fact sheet offers a range of recommended actions for the international community to address these issues effectively. The Abyei Administrative Area, a disputed territory that lies between Sudan and South Sudan, faces complex interconnected challenges. Communities in Abyei largely depend on climate-sensitive livelihoods such as cattle herding, farming and seasonal migration. Increased flooding and prolonged dry spells in recent years have reduced crop yields, affected livestock rearing and displaced households, which has deepened existing livelihood and security challenges. Limited basic services and poor infrastructure, combined with weak governance, constrain the coping capacities of local communities and increase their need for humanitarian assistance. Yet funding cuts and insecurity have led some humanitarian organizations to scale back operations, while the civil war in Sudan continues to increase humanitarian needs in Abyei. The territory’s disputed status further impedes long-term development planning to address interconnected challenges, including climate-related security risks.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR(S)/EDITORS

Katongo Seyuba is a Researcher in the SIPRI Climate Change and Risk Programme.
Dr Thor Olav Iversen is a Senior Researcher in NUPI’s Climate, Peace and Security Risks Project. 
Kheira Tarif is a Researcher in the SIPRI Climate Change and Risk Programme.
Dr Andrew E. Yaw Tchie is a Senior Researcher in the Research group on peace, conflict and development at the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs (NUPI).
Ingvild Brodtkorb is a Junior Research Fellow at NUPI and works on Africa–Nordic cooperation in the Research Group for Peace, Conflict and Development.
Jules Duhamel is an independent cartographer and geospatial analyst consultant.