-
Environmental Security Weekly Watch: June 1-5, 2026
›
A window into what we’re reading at the Stimson Center’s Environmental Security Program
As Trump Administration Defunds Ocean Monitoring, the E.U. Fills Gaps (The New York Times)
The Trump Administration’s decision to dismantle the National Science Foundation (NSF)’s decade-long $368 million deep-ocean observation system has led the European Union to bolster its own monitoring of the seas. The now-shuttered NSF program had kept tabs on marine ecosystems and measured the effects of climate change since 2016. NSF spokesman Michael England observed that the move “aligns with NSF’s wider strategy to have a nimbler approach to prioritizing support for evolving scientific priorities and emerging technologies.”
-
Environmental Security Weekly Watch: May 25-29, 2026
›A window into what we’re reading at the Stimson Center’s Environmental Security Program
As the Dead Sea Recedes, Local Ecology and Economies are at Risk (CNN)
A mix of human activity and climate change impacts shrink the Dead Sea by around four feet each year. The result is that over the past five decades, its surface area has shrunk by approximately a third, creating an unappealing landscape of sinkholes and salt-encrusted shorelines. Former resorts have been closed, and freshwater has seeped into the ground to dissolve ancient layers of salt and create underground cavities that can cause erosion and sudden ground collapse. The Dead Sea’s 6,000 sinkholes now threaten business and residents with no simple solution in sight.
-
Environmental Security Weekly Watch: May 18-22, 2026
›A window into what we’re reading at the Stimson Center’s Environmental Security Program
Climate Health Risks Spur Public Support for Action (Climate Change News)
Climate Opinion Research Exchange’s late 2025 survey of over 30,000 respondents across Brazil, India, Japan, and South Africa found that more than 80% of respondents expressed concern about climate impacts. Those surveyed also backed government measures to address the public health risks associated with climate change. While researchers believe that framing these questions as public health issues is particularly effective at building broad support, the survey also revealed that the most resonant health messages vary by country. Water scarcity draw attention in South Africa, while mental health has significant resonance in Brazil. Those in Japan see extreme heat as a key issue.
-
Environmental Security Weekly Watch: May 11-15, 2026
›
A window into what we’re reading at the Stimson Center’s Environmental Security Program
AI Energy Demand Outpaces Its Climate Solutions (Eco-Business)
A new International Energy Agency report finds that AI’s significant promise in improving energy efficiency and grid reliability may not match the energy sector’s inability to keep pace with the explosive growth of AI’s physical infrastructure.
-
Environmental Security Weekly Watch: May 4-8, 2026
›A window into what we’re reading at the Stimson Center’s Environmental Security Program
Mexico City’s Rapid Land Subsidence is Visible from Space (CNN)
The foundation of much of Mexico City sits atop an ancient aquifer supplying over 60% the drinking water for the capital’s 22 million residents. Now a series of startling new images from space have revealed just how over-extraction of the aquifer and the added weight of urban development land in Mexico City to subside.
-
Environmental Security Weekly Watch: April 27-May 1, 2026
›A window into what we’re reading at the Stimson Center’s Environmental Security Program
Disaster Response Aid: Data Argues for New Focus on Inequality (Dialogue Earth)
When a 2019 oil spill and the COVID-19 pandemic struck coastal fishing communities in north-eastern Brazil back-to-back, researchers tracked 402 small-scale fishers across three states to assess the impacts. What they found was that fallout from these crises was were not uniform. The oil spill’s contamination of nearshore mangroves disproportionately harmed the women who make up the bulk of the workforce that harvests shellfish, while men fishing offshore for open-water species retained more of their income.
-
Environmental Security Weekly Watch: April 20-24, 2026
›
A window into what we’re reading in the Stimson Center’s Environmental Security Program
The Bolivian Cacao Farmers Taking on the Gold-Mining Industry (The Guardian)
Cacao farmers in Bolivia’s Alto Beni and Palos Blancos municipalities successfully pushed for local mining bans in 2021, protecting their organic agroforestry land from the destructive gold rush sweeping the region. Gold prices are up over 64% since 2020—intensifying illegal and legal mining across Bolivia, driving deforestation, mercury poisoning, flooding, and encroachment into protected national parks. Communities near active mining zones report polluted rivers, declining fish populations, and mercury-related illnesses.
-
Environmental Security Weekly Watch: April 13-17, 2026
›A window into what we’re reading at the Stimson Center’s Environmental Security Program
Green Corridor Addresses Conflict Economies in Virunga National Park (Mongabay)
In the Eastern Congo, Virunga National Park faces an intertwined crisis of conflict and environmental destruction rooted in economic desperation. Communities residing within the park rely on charcoal production and forest clearing for survival. Simultaneously, armed militias exploit these same resources to finance ongoing violence. In response, Virunga administrators have developed an integrated model using renewable energy as the foundation for an alternative economy.
Showing posts from category Eye On.




