State of the Planet

News from the Columbia Climate School

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The Military-Climatological Complex

This is the fifteenth of a continuing series of essays and interviews from Earth Institute scientists on the prospects for a global climate-change treaty. Check with us daily for news and perspectives, and to make comments, as events unfold throughout the Copenhagen meetings.

Image from http://www.flickr.com/photos/shekgraham/289144887/
Image from http://www.flickr.com/photos/shekgraham/289144887/

In the movie 2012, the world’s governments must respond to the ultimate global change: overheating of the earth’s core, with attendant giant mega- earthquakes, volcanoes and tsunamis. The effective international cooperation it inspires is proportional to the impacts.  As prospects appear to shrink in Copenhagen, this flight of political fancy is starting to look even more outlandish than the movie’s irreverent approach to geophysics.  In the real world, governments are responding to increasingly dire projections with promises to keep on talking.

Anything can happen between now and Dec. 18, so it is too early to write an epitaph for Copenhagen.  But we have had plenty of time to judge the suitability of the diplomatic processes surrounding the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change and the Kyoto Protocol.  The core political challenges that were with us 20 years ago – how to get rich countries to reduce emissions and how to get developing countries to commit to capping growth in emissions – remain elusive.  And as we enter the third decade of the modern climate-change debate, the policy agenda is seized by a new issue: national security. For the question surrounding this, the existing diplomatic process is singularly ill suited.

Many now fear that climate change may trigger waves of “climate refugees” fleeing newly inhospitable areas and sparking wars in their wake; or that climate change may shift patterns of moisture and set off water wars; or that it may tip already fragile states over the edge into complete collapse.   Other scenarios  include possible territorial conflict over new navigation pathways in the Arctic, and changing disease patterns that may put troops in harm’s way. One problem that has been on the agenda for a long time – the threatened disappearance of small island states – is becoming a reality, with displacements and resettlement plans already in motion.

Not only do these concerns show no signs of going away; most countries with advanced military establishments have launched major programs organized around them.  The United States’ 2009 Annual Threat Assessment  devoted almost a quarter of its pages to climate and water issues.  The U.N. Security Council has held hearings on the subject.   Yet coordinated international action is curiously absent.

Here is what we ought to be doing if we are going to take climate-related security seriously:

  • Monitor climate impacts on societies systematically.  There is no international mechanism to do this. That is inconsistent with what we see on the horizon.
  • Coordinate assessment and response with respect to climate-conflict hotspots.  We do this for global health crises, monetary crises and conventional military crises.  We need to do the same for climate-security threats.
  • Begin open international discussions about the most difficult policy implications. Effective responses will require rational, sober attention to topics that are potentially incendiary: migration, military intervention, and the rights of displaced and stateless populations.   These won’t be easy to deal with. We need to start now.

Our appreciation of climate change has advanced considerably since the U.N. Framework was signed in 1992. Since then, well-founded  alarms have been sounded around the world.  Yet, policy deliberations remain stuck where they were in 1992.  If the U.N. Framework cannot deliver the needed response, we must look to alternative mechanisms that have greater chance of success.


Political scientist Marc A. Levy is deputy director of the Center for International Earth Science Information Network.

Science for the Planet: In these short video explainers, discover how scientists and scholars across the Columbia Climate School are working to understand the effects of climate change and help solve the crisis.
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Priyank Sarswat
Priyank Sarswat
14 years ago

Dear All Vierws of this message.
Global warming can be stoped by taking one step by the entire world.That is to stop using steel.If u once stoped using steel automatically it wont get demand in market and if the demand will low the production will automatically get low.and if production get low ming will not done.And if mining stoped the heatness comes out from the earth it will get low.Now come to the point the Raw material of steel is Iron Ore That founds in earth and the huge layer of steel wont allow the heatness of earth to come out.that is how we control the heatness of earth.And if we dont run steel furnases the air pollution can be control.And if steel wont come to the market.
1:WE cant make cars we can control pollution and heatness.
2:We cant make Air conditions.we can control
3.We cant make those all the things which is made by steel and we can control all the pollution and heatness which is comes out by the equpitment we use and give out heatness.
So The warm request to who is reading this mail stop using the steel items.
Thanks&Regards
Priyank Sarswat
+919504274046.