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CFR:
COUNCIL REPORT ARGUES FOR NEW POLICIES TO PROTECT NATIONAL SECURITY
INTERESTS FROM CONSEQUENCES OF CLIMATE CHANGE: 02/12/2007
(MaximsNews Network)
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UNITED NATIONS - / MaximsNews Network /
- 02 December 2007 -- Hurricane
Katrina underscored how extreme weather events—which are expected to become
more severe and more numerous with climate change—can overwhelm civilian
disaster response capabilities and become national security issues.
As
climate negotiators gather in Bali, Indonesia, a new Council
Special Report argues that new policies are needed at home and abroad
in order to strengthen national security and reduce vulnerabilities to climate
disasters.
“Domestically,
extreme weather events made more likely by climate change could endanger large
numbers of people, damage critical infrastructure (including military
installations), and require mobilization and diversion of military assets,”
says report author Joshua W. Busby of the LBJ School of Public Affairs at the
University of Texas-Austin.
He
argues that internationally, climate change could also lead to large-scale
refugee and humanitarian crises and thus contribute to instability in other
countries and regions.
In order
to minimize the worst possible security consequences of climate change, the
report—Climate
Change and National Security: An Agenda for Action—says
that there are several policies the United States should support:
No
Regrets: “The United States should prioritize so-called ‘no
regrets’ policies, those that it would not regret having pursued even if the
consequences of climate change prove less severe than feared,” Busby
says.
They
include establishing comprehensive evacuation and relocation plans in response
to natural disasters, particularly hurricanes; improving building codes for
low-lying and coastal populations; and increasing water conservation efforts for
agriculture and human consumption.
Invest
in Infrastructure: Minimize security risks by improving domestic
infrastructure, which will not only improve disaster responses, but will have a
spillover benefit to the overall economy.
“The
United States should support this infrastructure investment program and dedicate
a healthy portion to ‘climate proof’ vulnerable infrastructure, particularly
in coastal areas,” says the report.
Risk
Reduction: When natural disasters strike, the United States and
the international community will be called upon to intervene.
It will
be much more cost effective to support risk reduction and adaptation than it
will be to respond when disasters happen.
“The
government effort should begin by providing incentives for individuals and firms
to reduce risk, particularly through building codes and ensuring that federally
funded disaster insurance discourages dangerous coastal settlements,” Busby
says.
Climate
Change Diplomacy: Engage
countries such as China and India to encourage a reduction in greenhouse
gases.
Climate
damages are likely to exceed most governments’ adaptive capacities unless a
major reduction in greenhouse gases takes place before the mid-twenty-first
century.
“While
advanced industrialized countries bear historic responsibility for existing
concentrations of greenhouse gases, China will be increasingly fingered as a
climate culprit in the future,” Busby says.
“This
will create a common interest between the United States and China in avoiding
world condemnation for being ‘climate villains.’ Enlightened climate
diplomacy could build on that common interest to improve U.S.-China
relations.”
Institutional
Reforms: Integrate climate security into the National Security
Strategy; create a deputy undersecretary of defense position for environmental
security at the Department of Defense; and create new positions in the National
Security Council and the office of the president so climate security concerns
get the attention they deserve.
“The
importance of climate policy to national security demands that it receive much
greater prioritization across the U.S. federal government,” Busby says.
“Other
players in the federal government have largely been sidelined. There are few
efforts to integrate climate concerns into top-level decision-making.”
“The
policy proposals presented here…have the potential to strengthen national
security by reducing U.S. vulnerabilities to climate change at home and abroad,
securing and stabilizing important partners, and contributing to other goals
such as energy security and industrial revitalization.
In a
world of new security challenges, forging a climate policy along these lines
must be a national priority,” the report concludes.
Full
text of the report, including recommendations, is available on the Council’s
website at http://www.cfr.org/publication/14862
Labels: United
Nations, U.N.,
~~~~~
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