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The Global Security Defense Index on Climate Change: Preliminary Results

The Global Security Defense Index on Climate Change: Preliminary Results

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The American Security Project releases the preliminary results of a new resource on climate change and national security: The Global Security and Defense Index on Climate Change.

The Index analyzes how governments around the world and their militaries plan for and anticipate the strategic threats of climate change.

The project determines to what extent governments around the world consider climate change to be a national or international security threat and how have they enshrined such a concern in their official documents and statements. The project will centralize the varying attitudes of national militaries and security establishments toward climate change in the hopes of providing unique insight into national, regional, and multilateral security approaches to the issue.

The results show that over 70% of the nations in the world view climate change as a serious national security issue.

The armed forces of a variety of countries share this view, with players as surprisingly disparate as China, Kiribati, Rwanda, and Belarus all in agreement on the threat climate change poses. Western, eastern, rich or poor, the consensus on the climate threat seems easily apparent.

The preliminary results of the Defense Index are being released in both Washington D.C. and Seoul, South Korea at the Climate Security Conference in the Asia-Pacific Region to a high level group of ministers and experts.

Going forward, the Index will be published on line so that any one in the world can read and debate how to take this series national security issue forward.

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Find out more about the index by clicking on the image below:
GSDI

Global Security Defense Index on Climate Change: PreliminaryResults by The American Security Project

20 Comments

  1. […] The American Security Project was recently cited in a RealClearPolicy Article titled “Cal Thomas: Wrong on Climate Change,” which takes a look at the evidence of climate change and the implications for our national security strategy: Cal Thomas’s September 19 column makes a stab at a climate-change-debunking “a-ha!” moment, quoting a recent press report about Arctic ice in an attempt to demonstrate that the scientific consensus behind anthropogenic (“man-made”) climate change is “losing evidentiary support.” His argument falls short in a couple of serious respects, and his overall attitude glosses over the critical need for American society (and, yes, our government) to prepare for the effects of climate change. It cites the ASP’s “The Global Security Defense Index on Climate Change: Preliminary Results,” […]

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