Native Alaskans are among the hardest hit of the millions of people suffering the effects of climate change. Photo by Zeke Tucker via Unsplash.LOUISVILLE — A webinar put on last week by Presbyterians for Earth Care featured the travels and insights provided by two men reporting on the effects that climate change is having on migration. Watch the 69-minute webinar featuring journalist the Rev. Gregg Brekke, the former editor of Presbyterian News Service, and Andrew Kang Bartlett, the Presbyterian Hunger Program’s Associate for National Hunger Concerns, by clicking here.More than 20 years ago, Brekke visited the Nogales, Arizona, area along the Borderlands. “I was struck by how difficult it was for people to move” as they were seeking economic opportunity, especially farming opportunity, in central Mexico, he said. He since has traveled to more than 55 countries, “working with different organizations in places that were experiencing climate disasters or climate-related themes,” Brekke said. In his work, “it’s important to see how and why people are moving and relate that to the family context.”At about 280 million people, the global migrant population includes more than 32 million people internally displaced due to climate-related issues, Brekke said. Within the United States, 3.2 million people have been internally displaced and have relocated due to climate considerations in the last decade. “The movement tends to go toward coastal places, which have also faced climate-related disasters,” Brekke said.Most news articles “portray migrants as issues rather than people,” Brekke said. “Reporters are only now beginning to ask questions that would shed light on climate migration.”Learn more from Brekke’s presentation to PEC here.He closed his talk with this quote from Amali Tower, founder and executive director of Climate Refugees: “We’ve got to approach climate displacement as a human security issue and not a border security issue.”“I have the pleasure of bringing you a little of the good news,” said Kang Bartlett. One recent bit of good news is the reforestation of Ekvn-Yefolecv, the Maskoke eco-village in Alabama, told here and here. Kang Bartlett’s slide presentation is here.“It is an intentional community to revitalize their lifeways on ancestral lands in rural Alabama,” Kang Bartlett explained. Fundraising has led to acquiring 4,000 acres of endangered forest that was to have been used for graphite mining.“They do amazing green building. They bless trees before they fell them,” Kang Bartlett said of the Maskoke. Living off of the grid, the Maskoke derive most of their energy from geothermal and solar sources.Native Alaskans are being hit as hard as anyone by climate change, Kang Bartlett noted. “Melting sea ice compromises their hunting and foraging,” he said. “It is hard on community cohesion.”Kang Bartlett touched on the work of Nenana Land Back and Calypso Farm near Fairbanks, which pu