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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category environment.
  • REDD+ Progress: Forests and Solving the Climate Change Challenge

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    On the Beat  //  October 11, 2017  //  By Namita Rao
    REDD+

    From 1870 to 2015, the CO2 concentration in the atmosphere  increased significantly, said Professor Maria Sanz, scientific director at the Basque Center for Climate Change in a recent webinar organized by WWF Forest and Climate. Forests have been responsible for global greenhouse gas emissions through forestry and other land use activities. However, she noted that forests also absorb nearly one-third of the emissions generated from fossil fuels.

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  • One Country, Two Water Systems: The Need for Cross-Boundary Water Management in Hong Kong and Guangdong

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    China Environment Forum  //  Guest Contributor  //  October 6, 2017  //  By Robert Gottlieb & Simon Ng
    hong-kong-195331

    In 2011, a group of Hong Kong water activists and researchers traveled the length of the Dongjiang (East) River, which stretches from northeast Guangdong Province into Hong Kong’s New Territories, to investigate the challenges facing the watershed. The Dongjiang basin, which provides nearly 80 percent of Hong Kong’s water supply, has suffered water shortages due to the region’s increasing urbanization and industrialization. They found unchecked wastewater discharges—from agriculture, poultry farms, chemical plants, tanneries, and even an open-air quartz quarry—were dangerously degrading  water quality.

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  • Top 5 Posts for September 2017

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    What You Are Reading  //  October 4, 2017  //  By Julianne Liebenguth
    Rohingya-camp-feature

    Myanmar’s inter-ethnic disputes undermine an otherwise favorable backdrop for a peaceful democratic transition, write Rachel Blomquist and Richard Cincotta in New Security Beat’s most read story last month. Their analysis was published in April 2016, but it presciently foreshadows the current crisis. Through their multi-dimensional assessment of the demographic tension in Myanmar, the authors show that “[t]he path to democracy seems to cut directly through the Rohingya issue.”

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  • Overlooked and Misunderstood: Stories About Climate, Conflict, and Migration

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    October 3, 2017  //  By Bethany N. Bella
    Drought-Ethiopia

    Barbuda—an island once full of people—has been rendered completely uninhabitable by Hurricane Irma. Every single resident was evacuated from the island, and some are not planning to return. Climate-induced migration and displacement is not usually this dramatic, but it is not uncommon: Since 2008, UNHCR estimates that an average 21.5 million people each year have been forcibly displaced by weather-related natural disasters, like floods, storms, and wildfires.

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  • Backdraft #9: Joshua Busby on Mapping Hotspots of Climate and Security Vulnerability

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    Backdraft podcast  //  Friday Podcasts  //  September 29, 2017  //  By Gretchen Johnson

    Podcast-thumb9-ReducedMaps help us to grasp complex ideas, such as patterns of risk and vulnerability, but the stories they tell can have significant implications. “It’s very difficult to validate that what you’re capturing in the maps is representative of real-world phenomenon,” says Joshua Busby in this week’s “Backdraft” episode, describing his efforts to map climate and security hotspots in Africa and Asia. “You have to be modest in what you think the maps can tell policymakers, but also realize there is some seductive power in the way maps simplify complex reality.”

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  • The Arctic: In the Face of Change, an Ocean of Cooperation

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    From the Wilson Center  //  September 28, 2017  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    Coast Guard Barrow

    “The United States and Russia… have found ways to continue to cooperate in the Arctic—particularly, but not only—through the Arctic Council, despite the difficulties on other issues relating to other parts of the world,” said Ambassador David Balton, deputy assistant secretary for oceans and fisheries at the U.S. Department of State at a recent Wilson Center forum on the Arctic.

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  • What Is Loss and Damage from Climate Change? First Academic Study Reveals Different Perspectives, Challenging Questions

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    Guest Contributor  //  September 25, 2017  //  By Rachel James, Richard Jones & Emily Boyd
    St-Maarten-Hurricane-Damage

    Following a series of recent devastating extreme weather events – mudslides in Sierra Leone, flooding in south Asia, and severe storms hitting the Philippines and the Gulf of Mexico, many have called attention to the role of climate change in these disasters. The string of Atlantic hurricanes that has devastated the Caribbean has prompted fresh calls to make nations and communities more resilient to the effects of climate change, and especially to address “loss and damage” in island nations.

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  • Can Caribbean Islands Really Adapt to Extreme Hurricanes?

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    Guest Contributor  //  September 22, 2017  //  By Judi Clarke
    Hurricane-Irma-Damage

    “A monster”… “wreaking havoc”… “ripped through” the Caribbean and part of Florida: I heard these words as Hurricane Irma, the strongest Category 5 Atlantic hurricane on record, decimated the entire island of Barbuda and destroyed the four “most solid” buildings on St. Martin. And as I write this from the relative safety of Barbados, Hurricane Maria is on a similar path, leaving similar destruction in its wake. With winds of more than 160 miles per hour, Maria was the strongest storm to make landfall in Dominica. In a matter of hours, it devastated the country, regained its strength, and continued its onslaught on Puerto Rico and beyond.

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