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Environmental Security Weekly Watch: March 9-13, 2026
›A window into what we’re reading at the Stimson Center’s Environmental Security Program
As Gulf Conflict Widens, So Does Its Environmental Footprint (Dialogue Earth)
The Conflict and Environment Observatory identified at least 120 incidents of environmental harm across 11 countries since the start of U.S. and Israelis began attacks on Iran, as both sides have made oil infrastructure, military facilities, and strategic sites primary targets. The burgeoning conflict poses nuclear, chemical, and long-term carbon risks, as strikes on refineries, tankers, and storage sites degrade air quality, contaminate water contamination, and harm marine ecosystems. And other serious catastrophes loom as the war develops. The IAEA warns that any radioactive release from strikes that target nuclear sites could require evacuating areas the size of major cities.
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Environmental Security Weekly Watch: March 3-6, 2026
›A window into what we’re reading at the Stimson Center’s Environmental Security Program
US Pressure Adds to the Suffering in Cuba’s Worst Economic Crisis (The New Humanitarian)
Cuba is on the brink of a total humanitarian collapse as its people bear the brunt of cascading crises driven by the Trump administration’s decision to block Venezuelan oil shipments to the island. It is a crisis compounded by a decades-long US embargo and years of economic mismanagement. The power blackouts which previously lasted for 12 to 14 hours now exceed 20 hours, thus further crippling hospitals, food storage, and water systems. Without new fuel deliveries, the island might reach complete fuel depletion this month amidst its worst economic crisis since the 1930s.
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Environmental Security Weekly Watch: February 23-27, 2026
›A window into what we’re reading at the Stimson Center’s Environmental Security Program
UN Report: One in Five Fish Products Tied to Fraud (Inside Climate News)
A new UN Food and Agriculture Organization report finds that up to 20% of fishery and aquaculture products worldwide are mislabeled. The $195 billion industry is especially vulnerable due to supply chains involving over 12,000 traded species. The study is the first of its kind for the organization, and describes a pattern of fraud that takes many forms, from coloring tuna to appear fresher, to selling farmed fish as wild-caught, to substituting cheap species for expensive ones entirely. In the US alone, as much as a third of seafood may be mislabeled, yet less than 1% of imports are ever tested.
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Environmental Security Weekly Watch: February 16-20, 2026
›A window into what we’re reading at the Stimson Center’s Environmental Security Program
Rapid Central Asia Glacial Melt Threatens Water Security (The Diplomat)
A recent study projects that the Tian Shan mountains, the primary freshwater source for millions across Central Asia and China’s Xinjiang region, will lose approximately one-third of their glacier area before 2040. Already, the region has seen a 27% drop in glacial mass and an 18% drop in areas over the last 50 years. The Tian Shan’s smaller glaciers respond more rapidly to warming temperatures, as rising temperatures reduce the snowfall that historically replenishes glacial mass. These glacial and meteorological conditions create a compounding effect that makes the Tian Shan more vulnerable than the larger, slower-responding glaciers of the Karakoram, Pamir, and Himalaya ranges.
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Environmental Security Weekly Watch: February 9-13, 2026
›A window into what we’re reading at the Stimson Center’s Environmental Security Program
Reconciling Mineral Demand in Greenland with Arctic Realities (Yale e360)
President Donals Trump’s recent push to access Greenland’s critical minerals faces severe logistical and environmental challenges. While the island possesses 25 of the 60 minerals in high demand in Washington, Greenland has fewer than 100 miles of roads, a tiny labor force, 16 small ports, and inconsistent electricity. Its unique geography and harsh conditions—including minus 40°F temperatures, high winds that ground helicopters, and pack ice which hinders ships—will require potentially costly new extraction technologies. (Indeed, present conditions already make extraction five to ten times more expensive than in temperate regions.
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Environmental Security Weekly Watch: February 2-6, 2026
›A window into what we’re reading at the Stimson Center’s Environmental Security Program
Final Version of Global Critical Minerals Treaty Stripped of Traceability Measures (Mongabay)
At the seventh U.N. Environment Assembly in December 2025, Colombia and Oman jointly proposed a legally binding international treaty to create traceability and due diligence mechanisms across global mineral supply chains. Their proposal faced resistance from multiple countries including Saudi Arabia, Russia, Iran, Chile, and Uganda, and ultimately resulted in a watered-down nonbinding resolution on mineral governance that excluded traceability provisions entirely.
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Environmental Security Weekly Watch: January 26-30, 2026
›A window into what we’re reading at the Stimson Center’s Environmental Security Program
High Seas Treaty Takes Effect as Global Ocean Protection Framework (Associated Press)
The High Seas Treaty is the world’s first legally binding agreement to protect marine life in international waters, and its broad impacts began when it entered into force on January 17, 2026. The treaty governs the nearly half the planet’s surface comprised of vast ocean areas beyond any individual country’s exclusive economic zone—an area which faces threats from destructive fishing, shipping, plastic pollution, overfishing, and potential deep sea mining.
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Environmental Security Weekly Watch: January 19-23, 2026
›A window into what we’re reading at the Stimson Center’s Environmental Security Program
Community Forests Are the Frontline of a Minerals Race in the DRC (Mongabay)
In the Democratic Republic of Congo’s copper-cobalt belt, local communities are establishing community forest concessions to secure land titles and prevent eviction by mining companies. Sparked by previous displacement incidents, these concessions allow communities to hold up to 50,000 hectares in perpetuity. This region holds approximately 70% of the world’s cobalt reserves, which has attracted intense competition from Chinese companies, the United States, and the DRC state-owned Gécamines to obtain minerals essential to high-tech, weapons, and clean energy industries. Between 2001 and 2024, 1.38 million hectares of tree cover in Lualaba and Haut-Katanga provinces were lost due to mining activities.
Showing posts by Madelyn MacMurray.




