https://unfccc.int/news/un-steps-up-response-to-climate-related-security-risks
The United Nations is stepping up efforts to address climate-related security risks amid growing recognition of the role of climate change in exacerbating the risk of conflicts.
A new report by the United Nations University (UNU) Centre for Policy Research aims to support both the UN and its partners in developing climate-sensitive approaches to preventing conflict.
Climate-related changes in water resources, food security, sea-level rise and flood risks and migration patterns are already impacting the stability of many states to cope.
With warnings of impending "climate wars," driven by a dramatic shortfall in key resources as the world overheats, UN Secretary-General António Guterres has explicitly placed climate change as a central aspect of the UN's prevention agenda, as have key member states.
The United Nations has introduced a set of measures recently to make the organization better positioned to prevent conflict. They include improved planning and coordination with other actors, as well as the creation of a Climate-Security Mechanism spanning three UN entities, with a small but dedicated set of capacities to help improve the analysis of, and response to, climate-related security risks in the UN system.
The new UNU Centre for Policy Research report offers: 1) a literature review covering the major scholarship on the links between climate change and violent conflict; 2) in-depth case studies on climate-security dynamics in Bangladesh and Nigeria; and 3) cross-cutting conclusions and recommendations for the UN system.
The main recommendations of the new report include building up foresight capacities, analyzing direct impacts, adopting cross-border responses and prioritizing climate security in the broader climate discussion.
The main cross-cutting recommendations are as follows:
1. Analyse indirect impacts.
2. Focus on governance, not just scarcity.
3. Build up foresight capacities.
4. Look for maladaptation and inequality.
5. Adopt multi-scalar, cross-border responses.
6. Build a common language for climate-security.
7. Prioritize and bring climate-security into the broader climate discussion.
8. Strengthen knowledge management and build an evidence base.