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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category Asia.
  • Cleo Paskal and Uttam Sinha on the Geopolitical Implications of Climate Change for India and China

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    Eye On  //  February 27, 2013  //  By Maria Prebble

    India and China – “the two most important countries going forward in this century” – will both experience domestic concerns as a result of environmental change, but they are responding very differently, said Cleo Paskal, an associate fellow at Chatham House, in an interview with the Environment, Conflict, and Cooperation (ECC) Platform.

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  • Janani Vivekananda on Strengthening Resilience to Climate Variability in South Asia

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    Friday Podcasts  //  February 22, 2013  //  By Carolyn Lamere

    “Building resilience should help address the root causes of vulnerability, creating increased capacity to be able to adapt to a range of possible climate futures, not just cope with… specific climate impacts,” says International Alert’s Janani Vivekananda. Otherwise, if the specific impacts don’t play out, “in a fragile context that could be quite destabilizing and seen as a wasted opportunity.”

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  • Mapping China’s Massive West-East Electricity Transfer Project [Infographic]

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    China Environment Forum  //  February 20, 2013  //  By David Tyler Gibson

    The Wilson Center’s China Environment Forum is proud to announce that we are launching our first interactive infographic: a map of China’s West-East Electricity Transfer Project. The map underscores China’s energy and water imbalances and the looming choke point China faces in terms of water, food, and energy security. The map also illustrates how consumer goods made in China’s factories along its eastern coast are powered by coal and hydropower in the country’s western provinces.

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  • Aging in the 21st Century: A Celebration and a Challenge

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    From the Wilson Center  //  February 15, 2013  //  By Maria Prebble

    “We are in the midst of a silent revolution,” said Ann Pawliczko, a senior technical advisor in the population and development branch at the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), quoting former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan. “It is a revolution that extends well beyond demographics, with major economic, social, cultural, psychological, and spiritual implications.”

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  • Sam Eaton on Food Security, Family Size, and Family Planning in the Philippines

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    February 13, 2013  //  By Graham Norwood

    “We chose the Philippines because we really wanted to do a story that looked at population growth,” reporter Sam Eaton says of his two-part contribution to the Food for Nine Billion project, which aired last year on PBS’ NewsHour and American Public Media’s Marketplace. Eaton recently visited the Wilson Center to discuss his experiences in the Philippines, describing the heavy toll overcrowding and poor resource management is taking on the country’s ecosystems and highlighting how access to family planning may hold the key to a better future.

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  • Fishing for Families: Reporting on Population and Food Security in the Philippines

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    From the Wilson Center  //  On the Beat  //  February 11, 2013  //  By Carolyn Lamere

    “My income is just right to feed us three times a day,” Jason Bostero told Sam Eaton in the rural Philippine village of Humayhumay. “It’s really, really different when you have a small family.” Eaton traveled to the Philippines to report on the connections between food security and population for Homelands Productions, creating a short film and radio piece that ran on NewsHour and Marketplace as part the Food for Nine Billion series last year. [Video Below]

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  • Managing Mountains for Ecological Services and Environmental Security

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    From the Wilson Center  //  January 16, 2013  //  By Caroline Boules

    High mountain regions face grave environmental challenges with climate change impacts already as severe as any place on earth. Temperature increases are expected to be greater at higher altitudes than at sea level, and glaciers and snowfields are retreating in many areas, increasing the risk of catastrophic glacial lake outburst floods, affecting fresh water supplies for hundreds of millions of people, and exacerbating territorial and natural resource disputes.

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  • Super Typhoon Bopha Shows Why Developing Countries Are Most Vulnerable to Climate Change

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    January 15, 2013  //  By Carolyn Lamere

    If Hurricane Sandy was a wake-up call for many in the United States to the kind of extreme weather that climate change is expected to bring, Typhoon Bopha, which struck the Philippines a month later, is a reminder of what makes developing regions even more vulnerable to these changes.

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