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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category extreme weather.
  • The Next Feminist Wave: Heat

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  November 7, 2023  //  By Emily Hardy
    Karen,Tribe,Women,With,Paddy,Rice,Terraces,With,Water,Reflection,

    The summer of 2023 featured some of the hottest days ever recorded. Feminists should be alarmed. 

    Climate change may not seem like a feminist issue on its face. A warming planet poses a cross-cutting and common threat. But the perception that climate impacts result in uniform harm produces partial solutions that neglect the world’s most vulnerable populations. This alone makes environmental justice a gender justice issue as well.

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  • Introducing “The Arc”

    ›
    New Security Broadcast  //  The Arc (Podcast Series)  //  November 3, 2023  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    THE ARC (1)

    On today’s episode of New Security Broadcast, ECSP is launching a new series called The Arc, focused on the connections between climate change, equity, justice, and identity. We will cover a wide range of topics – from food and water systems to the energy transition, migration, and climate finance – and talk with practitioners, advocates, professors, and community leaders to discover where these topics intersect with issues related to climate impacts and justice.

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  • ECSP Weekly Watch | October 23 – 27

    ›
    Eye On  //  October 27, 2023  //  By Angus Soderberg
    ECSP Weekly Watch Graphic (Email Background)

    A window into what we are reading at the Wilson Center’s Environmental Change and Security Program

    DRC Mining Project Displaces a Local Community

    Kolwezi is the “cobalt capital of the world.” But residents of this city in the Democratic Republic of Congo are being compelled to relocate under questionable circumstances in order to make room for a new mine sponsored by the Chinese mining company COMMUS.

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  • All You Can Eat: Unlocking Greenhouse Gas Mitigation Potential in China’s Agri-food System

    ›
    China Environment Forum  //  Cool Agriculture  //  Guest Contributor  //  October 26, 2023  //  By Meian Chen & Diego Montero
    Deyang,,Sichuan,,China,-,May,11,,2023:,Villagers,Plant,Rice
    China’s power sector makes up the lion’s share of the country’s greenhouse gas emissions, but rising methane emissions from rice farming and livestock, nitrous oxide emissions from fertilizers, and CO2 from food transport could all hinder China’s progress toward its 2060 carbon neutrality goal. Chinese policymakers could rein in agri-food emissions by modifying existing climate plans and policies. Climate-smart agriculture is not only a mitigation strategy, but also an adaptation strategy to intensifying extreme weather events like heatwaves and typhoons.
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  • New Global Health & Gender Policy Brief: Climate Change and Maternal and Newborn Health Outcomes

    ›
    Dot-Mom  //  October 25, 2023  //  By Maternal Health Initiative Staff
    Barpeta,,Assam,,India.,July,12,,2019.,People,Wade,Through,Flooded

    The growing climate crisis presents one of the largest public health threats of the century. However, its countless impacts on maternal and newborn health outcomes (as well as health disparities worldwide) have only recently gained global attention.

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  • ECSP Weekly Watch | October 9 – 13

    ›
    Eye On  //  October 13, 2023  //  By Angus Soderberg
    ECSP Weekly Watch Graphic (Email Background)

    A window into what we are reading at the Wilson Center’s Environmental Change and Security Program

    Organizing Regional Action on Climate Change, Health, and Environment

    As the 2030 deadline for the Sustainable Development Goals looms, the World Health Organization has proposed a new regional framework that aims to build climate-resilient and sustainable health systems, improve the health sector’s access to climate funding, and build an evidence base for policymaking.

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  • US and Chinese Farmers Adapting to a New Climate

    ›
    China Environment Forum  //  Cool Agriculture  //  Guest Contributor  //  October 12, 2023  //  By Abigail Ordillas
    Smart,Farm.,Beautiful,Farmer,Use,Tablet,To,Control,Her,Farm
    Extreme heat from climate change threatens food security in the world’s two food-producing superpowers. Climate adaptation for agriculture is a must. The US and China have much to share on climate-smart farming practices to help us both weather the storms and droughts. 2023 brought scorching heat waves that baked crops and livestock in China and the United States. In China, farm animals and fish died from extreme heat in June with some provinces enduring weeks of temperatures above 40°C (104°F). In one farm, a heatwave-triggered power outage resulted in hundreds of pigs suffocating to death after shed fans stopped working.
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  • From Floods To Disaster: A Conflict- And Climate-Sensitive Recovery Pathway For Libya

    ›
    Guest Contributor  //  October 10, 2023  //  By Sinéad Barry, Alexandra Steinkraus & Benjamin Pohl
    Due,To,The,Flood,,The,Bridge,Between,The,East,And

    More than 11,300 people are confirmed to have died in the floods that struck eastern Libya on September 11, 2023, far surpassing many estimates of the death toll in the country’s 2011 civil war. Thousands are still missing. Flooding has washed away approximately 25% of the city of Derna, and damage to roads and bridges is curtailing emergency service access. A rapid attribution study estimated that the extreme rain was at least a “1-in-300 year event.” This is far beyond previously recorded incidents, yet such incidents are now up to 50 times more likely—and up to 50% more intense—when compared to a 1.2°C cooler climate. 

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