General Information
- Project Name: CAMINO
- Title: Climate and Migration Insights and Outlooks
- Grant Agreement: 101289535
- Programme: Horizon Europe (HORIZON-CL2-2025-01-TRANSFO-11)
- Duration: June 2026 – November 2028 (30 months)
Description
The CAMINO project addresses one of the most pressing and complex global challenges: the relationship between climate change, environmental degradation, and human mobility. These interactions are highly context-specific and span a wide spectrum, from voluntary and planned migration to forced displacement or immobility, posing significant challenges for policymakers seeking to anticipate and respond effectively to future migration dynamics.
CAMINO aims to integrate climate-related migration considerations into EU and Member State policies, strengthening governance frameworks and improving preparedness. The project will develop a dynamic knowledge base and collaborative platform connecting researchers, policymakers, and practitioners. It will also co-create a strategic roadmap defining key research priorities and policy directions. Finally, it will deliver policy briefs and actionable recommendations to enhance EU preparedness and foster cooperation with third countries.
The Elcano Royal Institute leads the project work on research and policy gap‑analysis by identifying, validating, and prioritizing key climate–migration gaps to shape future research and policy.
Research Team
- Rut Bermejo (coordination).
- Maria Camila Gutierrez (Research Assistant).
- Andrea Briones y Lara Lázaro (ad‑hoc collaboration based on the project’s needs).
Consortium
- Radar Europe B.V. (Coordinator).
- ECDPM.
- ADELPHI RESEARCH GEMEINNÜTZIGE GMBH.
- Real Instituto Elcano.
- Universidad Rey Juan Carlos.
- Danish Refugee Council.
- GOPA Com.
- Joint Research Centre – European Commission (associated partner).

Funded by the European Union under the Grant Agreement ID: 101289535. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Commission. Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.
