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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category security.
  • Going Beyond “Conflict-free”: Transition Minerals Governance in DRC and Rwanda

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    Africa in Transition  //  July 31, 2024  //  By Neeraja Kulkarni

    Resource-rich nations such as the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and Rwanda—which produce minerals ranging from coltan, cobalt, gold, tungsten, and tantalum, to tin (3TG)—hold tremendous importance in the global supply chains. The DRC produces 70% of global cobalt production, while its neighbor, Rwanda, generates around 30% of Tantalum.  

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  • Earlier Assessments of Conflict Damage Can Spur Timely Relief

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    Guest Contributor  //  July 29, 2024  //  By Erika Weinthal

    The widespread destruction of infrastructure has been a calamitous and common feature across many of the recent wars in the Middle East and North Africa and Ukraine—and urban landscapes such as Aleppo, Raqqa, Kharkiv, Mariupol, and Gaza City have borne the brunt of attacks. Without clean drinking water, electricity, treated sewage, food supplies, and medical services, cities become uninhabitable, disrupting the infrastructure upon which populations depend for basic services, and often leading to their forcible displacement. Civilians are also at risk of malnutrition, starvation, and preventable diseases that spread from dirty water and raw sewage in urban centers.

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  • ECSP Weekly Watch | July 22 – 26

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    Eye On  //  July 26, 2024  //  By Neeraja Kulkarni

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

    Worsening Health Conditions in War-Torn Gaza (BBC) 

    Water infrastructure in Gaza was already weak before the beginning of the war in 2023, but intensified conflict and siege of critical infrastructure the damage wreaked by Israel’s military forces on critical infrastructure (including water, energy, and food), has left 70% of the people in Gaza exposed to salinated and contaminated water. Traces of polio have been found in wastewater flowing both between displacement camp tents and in inhabited areas, and experts suggest that this water might be circulating. 

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  • ECSP Weekly Watch | July 15 – 19

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    Eye On  //  July 19, 2024  //  By Neeraja Kulkarni

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

    Shedding Light on Imperial Oil’s Dark Waters (Mongabay) 

    Canada has the fourth-largest tar sands (oil deposits) in the world. Separating the bitumen used in industries and construction creates large volumes of toxic wastewater, which is stored in tailings ponds that now cover a staggering 270 square kilometers. Unresolved infrastructure mishaps at one such site in Alberta operated by Imperial Oil means that contaminants have polluted nearby waters so significantly that it has affected public health and the livelihoods of indigenous communities in downstream areas.

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  • No, the Panama Canal is Not Running Dry

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    Guest Contributor  //  July 17, 2024  //  By Penelope Mitchell & Erin Menzies Pluer

    Earlier this year the media made much ado about drought conditions constraining traffic through the Panama Canal. But is it really all they’re making it out to be?

    The most recent drought conditions started with below-average rainfall in late 2022, and by January 2024 were being described as the worst drought in Canal history. The Panama Canal Authority (ACP) ranked 2023 as the second driest year since 1950. News articles reported cargo traffic was reduced by nearly 40% and that the world faced a $270 billion traffic jam in Panama.

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  • Reinvigorating US Development Assistance

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    Eye On  //  July 16, 2024  //  By Angus Soderberg

    Americans often hear arguments demagoguing exorbitant and wasteful development assistance spending. In an election year, these voices multiply.  And they have influence. Past polls have shown that Americans believe that their government spends roughly 25 percent of the federal budget on foreign aid. The real total actually hovers around less than 1 percent.

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  • Environmental Cooperation in the Middle East: A Conversation with Dr. Tareq Abu Hamed

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    New Security Broadcast  //  July 12, 2024  //  By Wilson Center Staff

    In today’s episode of New Security Broadcast, Wilson Center Global Fellow and environmental journalist Anneliese Palmer speaks with longtime leader in regional environmental diplomacy and Executive Director of the Arava Institute for Environmental Studies, Dr. Tareq Abu Hamed. In their conversation, Dr. Hamed unpacks the opportunities and challenges of climate and environmental diplomacy, environmental peacebuilding efforts in Gaza and the Middle East, as well as his role in Jumpstarting Hope, a project that works to provide essential services such as safe drinking water and sustainable electricity to communities in Gaza. 

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  • ECSP Weekly Watch | July 8 – 12

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    Eye On  //  July 12, 2024  //  By Neeraja Kulkarni

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

    Climate Security and Canada’s Promises to NATO  (Global News) 

    As a founding member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), Canada has been influential in the integration of climate change policy with the alliance’s mission. It supported the development of NATO’s Climate Change and Security Action Plan aligning with the alliance’s core tasks of deterrence and defense, crisis prevention and management, and cooperative security. Following the Canadian proposal 2021, Global Affairs Canada and the Department of National Defense jointly lead NATO’s Climate Change and Security Centre of Excellence (CCASCOE) to research and identify best practices to address climate change and security-related challenges.  

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