File:Climate and National Security.jpg

From Green Policy
Revision as of 16:51, 11 June 2021 by Siterunner (talk | contribs) (Siterunner uploaded a new version of "File:Climate and National Security.jpg")
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Climate_and_National_Security.jpg(603 × 533 pixels, file size: 157 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg)


GreenPolicy360/Strategic Demands:

At the invitation of the new US president, nations are gathering this week in a virtual climate summit to share their Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) toward solving the climate change crisis.

We, GreenPolicy360 with our associate Strategic Demands, will cover news of the climate conference, both good and bad. Our several decades of pushing for immediate, concerted action and 'New Definitions of National Security' by all nations is front of stage, and confronted by old definitions of security, conflicts and wars, that take our eyes off of the existential challenges of climate -- and a resurgent, escalating nuclear weapons threat.

Here, in the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists, we look at a key group of experts sounding the alarm about both climate disaster and nuclear war.

They are the great challenges of our time and must given a spotlight and focus of our citizen action.


By most accounts, President-Elect Biden looks to position climate change as a central organizing principle in his Executive Branch. Through cabinet appointments of sympathetic experts at agencies not normally at the fore of environmental policy—such as Treasury, Justice, and Transportation—Biden hopes to deliver wide-ranging wins on climate policy. The EPA, the Energy Department, and the Interior Department will be redeployed in Obama-era roles as key instruments for aggressive climate action. These would all be positive steps forward.

What appears largely missing is a commensurate level of effort directed towards infusing climate change deep into the national security community. Experts worldwide, including in many corners of the US intelligence community, embrace the notion that climate change will be an increasingly consequential factor for conflict, political instability, social and economic disruption, migration, water and food insecurity, and altered patterns of infectious disease...

Read more at https://thebulletin.org/


Keywords: National security doctrine, Office of Science and Technology Policy, climate change, climate change and national security, climate crisis, global warming


File history

Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.

Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current16:51, 11 June 2021Thumbnail for version as of 16:51, 11 June 2021603 × 533 (157 KB)Siterunner (talk | contribs)