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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category climate change.
  • New Analysis by Peter Schwartzstein: How Water Strategizing is Remaking the Middle East

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    Water Security for a Resilient World  //  October 27, 2022  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    Elazig,-,Turkey.,08.28.2019,Panoramic,View,Of,The,Elazig,Keban

    In the run up to COP 27 in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt, the first summit of its kind to be hosted in the region, water is rising on the agenda, and for good reason. In a new essay for the Wilson Center, Global Fellow Peter Schwartzstein explores how governments across the Middle East are approaching a world with less water – and to what effect. Drawing on a decade of environmental reportage from the Middle East, Schwartzstein sketches out how, why, and with what consequences states have adopted often dramatically divergent strategies.

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  • Flood of Inequity: Confronting Climate Vulnerability Risk in China and Beyond

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    China Environment Forum  //  October 20, 2022  //  By Julia Teebken

    Children running in the countryside (wheatfields)

    2022 was a summer of climate extremes across the globe. Multiple heat events simmered across China and Europe, also in regions that are not “supposed to be this hot,” such as the United Kingdom. The western United States also baked in unusual heat, but perhaps the most damaging episode of the season occurred when extreme precipitation caused major flooding in Jackson, Mississippi. This untimely deluge exacerbated a pre-existing water infrastructure crisis in that city, leaving its 150,000, predominately black, residents without access to safe water for days. 

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  • Mary Hellmich, Tobias Bernstein, Transatlantic Climate Bridge

    Transatlantic Subnational Climate Cooperation: Opportunities for Implementation

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    October 14, 2022  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    luca-bravo-_QdFx92MO2U-unsplash
    This article, by Mary Hellmich and Tobias Bernstein, originally appeared on Transatlantic Climate Bridge (TCB).

    Diplomacy between cities, counties, states and regions is critical to ensuring that diplomatic doors between countries are left open throughout changing political cycles at the national level. Such efforts are more important now than ever, especially for the climate crisis. As we head into COP27 with the message “from ambition to implementation,” cities have a critical role to play as the venues where many of the policies discussed at international climate negotiations will play out.

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  • Sharon Guynup, Mongabay

    2022: Another consequential year for the melting Arctic

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    September 27, 2022  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    BANNER-IMAGE-SHARON-GUYNUP-1200x727This article, by Sharon Guynup, originally appeared on Mongabay.

    In August, I traveled aboard the icebreaker Kinfish to the Svalbard archipelago, north of the Arctic Circle. Invited to the bridge as we cruised fjords near the 80th parallel, I was transfixed by towering blue glacier walls, but was confused by the map displayed on one of the ship’s screens. It showed our vessel sailing across a non-navigable frozen sheet.

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  • The Powerful Policy Ripples of Washington State’s CETA

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    Guest Contributor  //  September 19, 2022  //  By Stephanie Celt & Leah Missik
    13607436043_78b9e1edf7_o

    States are sometimes overlooked as drivers of climate action, yet some of them have been true leaders that bring significant influence. In Washington State, for instance, a strong coalition has worked to develop a smart, foundational climate policy for decarbonization in all sectors of the state’s economy.

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  • Food Security as a Driver for Sustainable Peace in Kenya

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    From the Wilson Center  //  September 12, 2022  //  By Yiran Ning
    47008004181_c1f81e4cc2_o

    “The food system is complex; it is not just about food production,” said Florence Odiwuor, a Kenyan Southern Voices for Peacebuilding Scholar, at a recent event on the role of food security systems in sustainable peacebuilding in Africa hosted by the Wilson Center’s Africa Program. As a lecturer at the School of Agriculture, Natural Resources, and Environmental Studies at Rongo University, Odiwour observed that given the food system’s interconnectedness with issues like education, gender, finance, and labor, “disruptions or failures in the [food] system have caused a lot of conflict in [Kenya].”

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  • Bolivia and Lithium: Can slow and steady win the race?

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    Guest Contributor  //  September 2, 2022  //  By Kathryn Ledebur & Erika Weinthal
    Screen Shot 2022-09-02 at 12.16.38 PM

    Este ensayo ha sido actualizado con una traducción al español, disponible después de la versión en inglés, a continuación.

    The looming 27th meeting of the Conference of the Parties (COP) of the UNFCCC in Egypt in November 2022 brings with it a moment of truth for many nations. They must intensify decarbonization efforts to meet their share of global commitments agreed upon at the Paris COP. Yet, the already significant challenges also have intensified. Disruptions of oil and gas flows caused by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine are slowing a global green energy transition—at least in the short-term. The depth of the crisis means countries are even scrambling to keep coal-powered plants working.

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  • Climate Security at USAID: (Re)defining an Integrative Issue

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    Guest Contributor  //  August 30, 2022  //  By Daniel Abrahams & Allison Brown

    BULENZI VILLAGE, LWABENGE SUB-COUNTY, KALUNGU DISTRICT, UGANDA: March 26, 2019 - Justine Nitele, 36, fetches water, a task that was difficult and embarassing to undertake before fistula repair surgery.  Justine is a mother of seven and a fistula survivor. Justine got fistula during a problematic labor of her fifth child. She suffered from the condition for three years. She was informed of treatment for fistula by a midwife. Justine attended Kitovu Hospital in 2014 to have treatment under the USAID Fistula Care Plus program. Justine has recovered completely and is now proudly raising awareness of fistula and its dangers as well as how to prevent it amongst the community. Photo by: Carielle Doe

    Climate security is an essential conceptual framework to understand the global interplay of biophysical and socioeconomic forces that threaten our planet. Indeed, it is so important that new currents of science, politics, and advocacy make refining definitions a necessity.

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