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NewSecurityBeat

The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
  • Pig Disease is Creating a Mountainous Solid Waste Problem

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    China Environment Forum  //  February 20, 2020  //  By Karen Mancl
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    This article originally appeared on U.S.-China Focus.

    On a rainy July afternoon in 2017, I was in Jinhua, China, a city just south of Shanghai, to visit a pig farm. This was not just any pig farm—the Mebolo farm grows pigs that become the prized Jinhua Hams, a Chinese delicacy for nearly 1500 years. Long before Italians produced prosciutto and the Spanish their Jamón serrano ham, Marco Polo discovered Jinhua ham in the 13th century and brought ham-making techniques back to Europe.

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  • Advancing One Health: Protecting People, Gorillas, and the Land on Which They Live

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    Guest Contributor  //  Uncharted Territory  //  February 19, 2020  //  By Gladys Kalema-Zikusoka

    A group photo of VHCTs after  a training at the Gorilla Health and Community Conservation CenterIn 2003, a scabies skin disease outbreak affecting mountain gorillas in Bwindi Impenetrable National Park was traced to people living around the national park—people with limited access to basic health and social services. To protect the people and wildlife of this special park, we launched Conservation Through Public Health (CTPH), an NGO that promotes biodiversity conservation by enabling people, gorillas, and other wildlife to coexist harmoniously through improved health and wellbeing.

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  • Common Climate Impact Assessments Underestimate Future Vulnerability

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    Guest Contributor  //  February 18, 2020  //  By Halvard Buhaug & Jonas Vestby
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    This article originally appeared on the Peace Research Institute – Oslo.

    Climate-related disasters are a major source of human and material losses. Poverty and low level of economic development are important determinants of environmental vulnerability. Achieving stable and sustainable development thus represents an important strategy to reduce adverse impacts of climate change. However, present efforts to evaluate possible consequences of climate change in the future suffer from too optimistic assumptions about economic growth in poor countries, as we document in a new article just published in the journal Global Environmental Politics.

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  • Dr. Mishkat Al-Moumin on the Importance of Women & the Environment to Sustainable Peace

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    Friday Podcasts  //  February 14, 2020  //  By Mckenna Coffey

    mishkat“I believe if you acknowledge women as primary users of environmental resources, if you draft the policy with women [at] the table, offering you their unique perspective and unique feedback, you’re going to have a more stable policy. A policy that gets implemented,” says Mishkat Al-Moumin, scholar in residence at the Environmental Law Institute, in this week’s Friday Podcast, and second in a series of interviews recorded at the First International Conference on Environmental Peacebuilding.

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  • Black Coal to White Trash

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    China Environment Forum  //  February 13, 2020  //  By Richard Liu
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    Coal has long been China’s “black gold,” supplying over half of the nation’s electricity. Yet as coal’s energy share decreases due to domestic action to reduce air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions, a new coal industry is emerging. In China’s arid northwest, eight plants are pulverizing coal chunks and “cooking” coal powder into something more valuable than power—or maybe even gold. These coal conversion plants, soon numbering over 20, churn out chemicals to produce plastic.

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  • To Envision a More Sustainable Future Tell the Story of Conservation Technology

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    Guest Contributor  //  Uncharted Territory  //  February 12, 2020  //  By Lisa Palmer

    shutterstock_1098811376-645x363Last summer, I stood on a cliff 100 feet above the Madre De Dios River, in Southern Peru near the Bolivian border, to watch the rosy gift of an Amazon sunset. It was quiet, in a tropical rainforest way, with the light clamor of parrots, macaws, and cicadas. Then, a peke-peke motorized canoe broke through the soft din. It arrived from the east, carrying a new supply of diesel fuel for the gold miners who were prepping the generator that would operate a suction-pump and dredge for gold across the river and around the bend. Before nightfall, the fuel ignited the baritone of a diesel generator. It moaned all night and all day, barely stopping. In subsequent days, instead of a light clamor of birds and primates, the thrum of a gold mining operation seemed like all I could hear.

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  • The Top 5 Posts of January 2020

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    What You Are Reading  //  February 11, 2020  //  By Amanda King
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    The world’s largest greenhouse gas emitter, China, is projected to fulfill its Paris commitment to reduce the proportion of coal in its energy mix ten years ahead of schedule. However, the country remains the world’s largest producer and consumer of coal, and coal conversion practices are steadily on the rise. In this month’s top post, China Environment Forum’s Richard Liu, Zhou Yang, and Xinzhou Qian track China’s risky gamble on coal conversion.

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  • Fisheries Management: A Possible Venue for Navigating Fisheries Conflicts in the Indian Ocean

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    Guest Contributor  //  February 10, 2020  //  By Isigi Kadagi, Zachary Lien & Cullen Hendrix
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    A significant increase in fisheries-related conflicts in the Indian Ocean since 2000 is heightening regional tensions. These conflicts have ranged from purely verbal and diplomatic disputes to armed attacks on fishing vessels by coast guards and navies. These disputes are most often low-intensity, but constitute true “wild card” scenarios in which competing powers’ navies reach the brink of engagement due to the actions of third parties that they neither command nor control.

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