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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category international environmental governance.
  • Rising Seas Threaten Military Installations, and Elevating Human Rights to Mitigate Geoengineering Risks

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    Reading Radar  //  December 16, 2016  //  By Sreya Panuganti

    UCSA roughly three-foot increase in sea level will threaten 128 coastal military installations in the United States, valued at $100 billion, according to a study from the Union of Concerned Scientists. The report, The U.S. Military on the Front Lines of Rising Seas, argues that the growing exposure to storm surge and sea-level rise puts vital infrastructure, training and testing grounds, and housing for thousands of personnel at risk.

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  • Planetary Security Conference Convenes Amidst “Unsettling New Normal”

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    December 14, 2016  //  By Schuyler Null

    Environmental security? Climate security? How about planetary security. Last week at the venerable Peace Palace in The Hague, nearly 300 experts from around the world met for the somewhat dramatically named Planetary Security Conference, a new initiative aimed at bringing together people working on all things related to the environment, climate change, and their security implications.

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  • Planet at the Crossroads: Insights From IUCN’s World Conservation Congress

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    From the Wilson Center  //  December 12, 2016  //  By Anam Ahmed
    Hawaii

    At this year’s International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) World Conservation Congress, more than 10,000 scientists, activists, and leaders from around the world committed to finding “nature-based solutions” to reversing environmental declines and securing a healthy, livable planet.

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  • Green Leadership From a Divided South? China and India’s Divergence Shape Outlook for International Negotiations

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    Guest Contributor  //  December 5, 2016  //  By Leah Stokes, Noelle Selin & Amanda Giang
    delhi-air

    Last month, headlines around the world heralded a breakthrough for international environmental cooperation. During ongoing ozone treaty negotiations in Rwanda, China broke with the developing world, agreeing with the United States to aggressively phase out hydrofluorocarbons, a significant global warming pollutant found in refrigerators and air conditioners. These changes are expected to make a big difference in combating climate change, mitigating half a Celsius degree of warming.

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  • Building a Climate-Resilient Caribbean: Grenada Hosts National Adaptation Planning Workshop

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    Guest Contributor  //  November 22, 2016  //  By Christian Ledwell
    Grenada-workshop

     For island nations already dealing with more frequent and intense extreme weather events, climate change is an imposing burden. But many island states are responding and becoming “incubators of resilience,” as Lynae Bresser recently wrote.

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  • After the Landslide: A Closer Look at Loss and Damage in Nepal

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    Guest Contributor  //  November 17, 2016  //  By Kees van der Geest & David Hewitt
    Nepal_0270a

    It had been raining for two full days when the landslide came. Nirjala Adhikari vividly remembers the instant it hit her village in Sindhupalchok District, Nepal. “It was a very scary moment, and I couldn’t think of anything else than grabbing my mobile phone and my school certificate before I ran out of the house,” she recalled. “I secured my certificate because only this will help me establish a bright future.”

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  • 5 Insights and Recommendations for Loss and Damage at COP-22 and Beyond

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    November 10, 2016  //  By Roger-Mark De Souza
    HurricaneSandy

    Over the past four years, I have been a member of the Resilience Academy, an initiative of the United Nations University, International Center for Climate Change and Development, and Munich Re Foundation bringing together thinkers from 29 countries to gather insight on climate change resilience and “loss and damage.” Loss and damage has many definitions, but broadly refers to the impacts of climate change that cannot be addressed via adaptation (adjusting to the effects) or mitigation (preventing them from happening at all).

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  • Strategic Ambiguity: How Loss and Damage Became a Part of Global Climate Policy

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    Guest Contributor  //  November 8, 2016  //  By Lisa Vanhala
    Marrakech

    As the international community meets in Marrakesh for the climate change negotiations at COP-22, one of the most delicate issues on the table is the review of what’s called the Warsaw International Mechanism for Loss and Damage, or WIM.

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