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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category Guest Contributor.
  • No Room for Waste: Honolulu’s Sludge Plant Points Toward More Sustainable Urban Development

    ›
    Choke Point  //  Guest Contributor  //  June 23, 2017  //  By Codi Kozacek
    HPower01W

    HONOLULU – Sludge. The final, unwanted byproduct of a toilet flush. The semi-solid stuff that even wastewater treatment plants send packing to the landfill. Unseen in the steel pipes snaking high on the exterior of Honolulu’s H-POWER plant, sludge is injected into a massive boiler where it joins the city’s trash in a roaring inferno. From the gravel lot outside, it all seems very antiseptic and smells less than a stroll past the neighborhood dumpster. But the 70-megawatt waste-to-energy facility is a workhorse, processing as much as 2,000 tons of refuse each day from Oahu’s 1 million residents. All told, it generates up to 10 percent of the electricity needed to power this Pacific island.

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  • Citizen Science Is Making it Harder for China’s Biggest Polluters to Hide

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  June 21, 2017  //  By Elizabeth Tyson
    riverwatcher

    In 2016, the Environmental Protection Agency charged its federal advisory committee with exploring how citizen science and crowdsourcing should be integrated into the agency’s mission. The resulting report eloquently describes how if the environment is to be protected then it’s the duty of all – the government, institutions, and citizens – to work together to achieve this.

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  • Lessons From International Water Sharing Agreements for Dealing With Climate Change

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  June 19, 2017  //  By Shlomi Dinar & Ariel Dinar
    Dead-Sea

    Scientists agree that many countries in tropical, subtropical, and arid regions should expect changes to water availability and supply from climate change. The U.S. intelligence community has likewise warned of water-driven challenges not only for countries directly affected by water changes, but indirectly to various U.S. national security interests. Perhaps not surprisingly then, the popular literature has been quite clear about prophesizing wars over water.

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  • 8 Rules of Political Demography That Help Forecast Tomorrow’s World

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    Guest Contributor  //  June 12, 2017  //  By Richard Cincotta
    In a world rapidly churning out unpredictable political shocks, intelligence analysts occasionally need to clear their heads of the daily barrage of newsworthy events and instead work with simple theories that discern the direction and speed of trends and help predict their outcomes. Political demography, the study of population age structures and their relationships to political trends and events, has helped some analysts predict geopolitical changes in a world that, from time to time, appears utterly chaotic.
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  • Historic Drought Prompts Water Innovation in California – Can It Be a Model?

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    Guest Contributor  //  June 9, 2017  //  By Scott Houston
    Central-Valley

    Pray for rain. Mega-drought. Winter salmon run nearly extinguished. Sierra snowpack dismal. These were just some of the headlines in California newspapers over the last five years during a historic drought that elevated water security to the top of everyone’s minds.

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  • Social Justice or Forest Conservation? Cross-Regional Comparisons Reveal a False Trade-Off

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    Guest Contributor  //  June 5, 2017  //  By Prakash Kashwan
    forest-line

    The original version of this article appeared on the Oxford University Press’s Academic Insights for the Thinking World.

    The present understanding of the relationship between environmental conservation and social justice, two of the greatest challenges of our times, is fraught with multiple confusions, especially in the context of developing countries.

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  • Food Violence Shows Need for Both Development and Climate Resilience

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    Guest Contributor  //  May 31, 2017  //  By Benjamin T. Jones, Eleonora Mattiaci & Bear F. Braumoeller
    Kenya-tea

    In March, the Trump Administration released a new budget proposal that would cut funding to the Department of State and U.S. Agency for International Development by 28 percent. The proposal also reduces funding to the United Nations for ongoing climate change efforts. At the same time, the White House is publicly considered withdrawing from the Paris Climate Accords, with a final decision anticipated any day. Critics both outside the administration and within have pointed to the drawbacks of these moves, but the sum of the policy changes could have an even greater impact than the individual parts.

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  • The Deadly “Humanitarian Ping-Pong” of Refugee Rescue at Sea

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    Guest Contributor  //  May 29, 2017  //  By Chris Psarra
    Lesvos_rescue

    In 2013, a boat capsized 61 miles from the Italian island of Lampedusa killing 268 refugees including 60 children. It was another horrific example of the risks taken by so many families fleeing violence in the Middle East and Africa. But recently released tapes of conversations with coast guard authorities reveal a deeper tragedy.

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