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The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
Showing posts from category Gabon.
  • Heather McGray & Kathleen Mogelgaard, World Resources Institute

    Not Just Mitigation: National Climate Plans Raise Adaptation’s Profile

    ›
    August 13, 2015  //  By Wilson Center Staff
    Amhara-Ethiopia

    The original version of this article, by Heather McGray and Kathleen Mogelgaard, appeared at the World Resources Institute.

    As the world prepares for a pivotal climate conference in Paris this December, countries are offering their national plans to tackle a changing climate. These plans, known as intended nationally determined contributions (INDCs), contain details of what each country is prepared to do as part of a new global climate agreement. While the public focus is often on mitigation – how much countries are willing to reduce emissions, by when, and with what degree of transparency – adaptation to the impacts of climate change demands the same level of attention. In fact, the last round of international climate talks in Lima invited parties to include adaptation in their INDCs.

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  • Forests on Film: New Stories From Nepal and the Congo Basin

    ›
    From the Wilson Center  //  April 14, 2014  //  By Donald Borenstein

    Given growing awareness about environmental change and how it affects human life, it is perhaps not surprising there is also a growing audience for environmental filmmaking. At the 2014 Environmental Film Festival in the Nation’s Capital on March 25, the Wilson Center premiered ECSP’s latest documentary, Scaling the Mountain: Protecting Forests for Families in Nepal. Together with Heart of Iron, a recent film on mining in the Congo Basin, the event took viewers into some of the world’s most remote forests to see how their inhabitants are adapting to rapid changes in the natural resources on which they depend.

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