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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category foreign policy.
  • Don’t Panic US: China’s Nuclear Power Ascendancy Has Its Limits

    ›
    China Environment Forum  //  Vulnerable Deltas  //  May 16, 2024  //  By Matthew Willis

    Like bamboo sprouts after the rain, nuclear reactors are going up quickly across China. There are 36 reactors under development, and Beijing can approve as many as 10 new ones a year. Within a decade, China will likely pass the United States—which has 93 operating commercial nuclear reactors at 54 power plants—as the world’s biggest generator of nuclear power.

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  • Climate Priorities in the Middle East and North Africa: Takeaways from a New Occasional Paper

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    From the Wilson Center  //  April 22, 2024  //  By Claire Doyle

    In a new Occasional Paper published by the Wilson Center’s Middle East Program and ECSP, journalist Taylor Luck examines the climate priorities of wealthy and middle-income countries in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA). Luck analyzes the policies adopted by MENA states, highlighting gaps and offering recommendations to strengthen climate action in a region strained by both instability and climate change.

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  • Beyond Complicity, Obstruction and Geopolitics: Military Forces and Climate Security

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    Guest Contributor  //  April 15, 2024  //  By Anselm Vogler

    The contentious and ambiguous entanglement that military forces have with their natural environment inevitably sparkles public interest and academic research. So how does the existing scholarly work inform our assessment of this convergence?

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  • ECSP Weekly Watch | March 11 – 15

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    Eye On  //  March 15, 2024  //  By Angus Soderberg

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

    China is Leading the World on Renewable Energy (Yale 360)

    In November, Chinese and U.S. climate envoys pledged to triple global renewable energy by 2030, signaling renewed cooperation between the top two greenhouse gas emitters. However, the two countries are not quite on equal footing when it comes to renewable energy.

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  • New Security Broadcast | Sarah Ladislaw on US Climate Security and “Mutually Assured Resilience”

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    New Security Broadcast  //  March 5, 2024  //  By Wilson Center Staff

    220428-A-BI463-0003In today’s episode of New Security Broadcast, ECSP Program Director Lauren Risi speaks with Sarah Ladislaw, Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director for Climate and Energy at the National Security Council (NSC). In the conversation, Special Assistant Ladislaw describes her role at the NSC and the most pressing climate security challenges facing the US. She also reflects on her recent address at the Munich Security Conference, and her vision for achieving “mutually assured resilience.”

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  • ECSP Weekly Watch: February 19 – 23

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    Eye On  //  February 23, 2024  //  By Eleanor Greenbaum
    A window into what we are reading at the Wilson Center’s Environmental Change and Security Program

    Progress—and Room for Improvement—in UNEP’s Annual Report (United Nations Environment Programme)

    How effective is the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP)’s work on the fight against climate change? Its Annual Report analyzed the work it has done over the past year to do so. The UNEP supports key areas in which progress has been made, including waste reduction through the Global Framework on Chemicals and global instrument on plastic pollution, biodiversity protection efforts through various frameworks, and loss and damage mobilization through COP28.

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  • Relief, Recovery, and Peace: A Follow-up Interview with DAS Iris Ferguson

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    New Security Broadcast  //  February 16, 2024  //  By Wilson Center Staff

    220428-A-BI463-0003In today’s episode of New Security Broadcast, ECSP Program Director Lauren Risi follows up with Iris Ferguson, the US Department of Defense’s (DoD) Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Arctic and Global Resilience, on their previous conversation previewing the DoD delegation to COP28.

    Deputy Assistant Secretary Ferguson discusses her takeaways from COP28 and the importance of listening to stakeholders outside the Pentagon. She also outlines some of DoD’s key energy and climate security priorities in 2024.

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  • ECSP Weekly Watch: February 12 – 16

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    Eye On  //  February 16, 2024  //  By Eleanor Greenbaum

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

    Food, Climate, and Conflict Nexus a Priority at the UN Security Council (Food and Agriculture Organization)

    The United Nations Security Council’s High-Level Open Debate takes place in Guyana this week, and the signature event of that nation’s presidency is “The Impact of Climate Change and Food Insecurity on the Maintenance of International Peace and Security.” Several briefers have emphasized the interconnectedness between climate change and conflict, including Secretary-General António Guterres and UNFCCC Chair Simon Stiell.

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