10/04/2021

(USA) Intelligence Forecast Sees A Post-Coronavirus World Upended By Climate Change And Splintering Societies

Washington PostShane Harris

Student activists carry posters and shout slogans as they march against climate change in New Delhi on March 19. (Altaf Qadri/AP)

U.S. intelligence officials have little comfort to offer a pandemic-weary planet about where the world is heading in the next 20 years.

Short answer: It looks pretty bleak.

On Thursday, the National Intelligence Council, a center in the Office of the Director of National Intelligence that creates strategic forecasts and estimates, often based on material gathered by U.S. spy agencies, released its quadrennial “Global Trends” report.

Looking over the time horizon, it finds a world unsettled by the coronavirus pandemic, the ravages of climate change — which will propel mass migration — and a widening gap between what people demand from their leaders and what they can actually deliver.

The intelligence community has long warned policymakers and the public that pandemic disease could profoundly reshape global politics and U.S. national security.

The authors of the report, which does not represent official U.S. policy, describe the pandemic as a preview of crises to come.

It has been a globally destabilizing event — the council called it “the most significant, singular global disruption since World War II — that “has reminded the world of its fragility” and “shaken long-held assumptions” about how well governments and institutions could respond to a catastrophe.

At the same time, the pandemic accelerated and exacerbated social and economic fissures that had already emerged. And it underscored the risks from “more and cascading global challenges, ranging from disease to climate change to the disruptions from new technologies and financial crises,” the authors write.

In language that will resonate with just about anyone who has tread water in the past year, the authors write of a “looming disequilibrium between existing and future challenges and the ability of institutions and systems to respond.”

Within societies, fragmentation is increasing — political, cultural, economic — and “large segments of the global population are becoming wary of institutions and governments that they see as unwilling or unable to address their needs,” the report says.

The effects of the pandemic will linger, and could shape future generations’ expectations of their governments, particularly as a warming world leads to new human conflicts, including, in the most dire scenario, global food shortages that spawn mass violence.

Global power was contested long before the pandemic, and those trends haven’t abated.

The report sees the international stage as largely being shaped by a rivalry between China and the United States, along with its allies. No single state is poised to become the dominant global force, the authors write. And competing powers will jockey for position, leading to “a more conflict-prone and volatile geopolitical environment.”

Technology, with all its potential to boost economies and enhance communication, also may aggravate political tension — as it already has.

People “are likely to gravitate to information silos of people who share similar views, reinforcing beliefs and understanding of the truth,” the report concludes.

Prediction is an inherently risky business, and intelligence practitioners are quick to emphasize that they can’t see the future. But the National Intelligence Council imagines five scenarios on a kind of sliding scale that may help tell us where the world is turning as we approach 2040.

On the rosiest end, a “Renaissance of democracies” ushers in a new era of U.S. global leadership, in which economic growth and technological achievements offer solutions to the world’s biggest problems and Russia and China are largely left in the dust, authoritarian vestiges whose brightest scientists and entrepreneurs have fled to the United States and Europe.

At the dark end of the future is “tragedy and mobilization,” when the United States is no longer the dominant player, and a global environmental catastrophe prompts food shortages and a “bottom-up” revolution, with younger people, scarred by their leaders’ failures during the coronavirus pandemic, embracing policies to repair the climate and tackle long-standing social inequality.

In this scenario, a European Union dominated by green parties works with the United Nations to expand international aid and focus on sustainability, and China joins the effort in part to quell domestic unrest in its cities affected by famine.

In between those extremes, the report imagines three other possibilities: China becomes a leading state but not globally dominant; the United States and China prosper and compete as the two major powers; and globalization fails to create a single source of influence, and the world more or less devolves into competing blocs, preoccupied with threats to their prosperity and security.

The present has a lot of say over the future. And there, the authors find reason for alarm.

“The international system — including the organizations, alliances, rules, and norms — is poorly set up to address the compounding global challenges facing populations,” the authors write.

But the pandemic may offer lessons on how not to repeat recent history. The authors note that although European countries restricted travel and exports of medical supplies early in the crisis, the European Union has now rallied around an economic rescue package. That “could bolster the European integration projecting going forward.”

“Covid-19 could also lead to redirection of national budgets toward pandemic response and economic recovery,” they add, “diverting funds from defense expenditures, foreign aid, and infrastructure programs in some countries, at least in the near term.”

But overall, the pandemic leaves the authors with more questions than answers — and humbled.

“As researchers and analysts, we must be ever vigilant, asking better questions, frequently challenging our assumptions, checking our biases, and looking for weak signals of change,” they write.

Their work is not all doomsaying. The forces shaping the world “are not fixed in perpetuity,” the authors say. Countries that exploit technology and planning, particularly those that plan ahead for the seemingly inevitable consequences of climate change, will be poised to best manage the crisis.

And countries that harness artificial intelligence could boost productivity and expand their economies in ways that let government deliver more services, reduce debt and help cover the costs of caring for aging populations.

Ultimately, the societies that succeed will be those that can adapt to change, but also forge social consensus around what should be done, the authors write. In a splintering world, that may be the hardest scenario to imagine.

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Third Of Antarctic Ice Shelves ‘Will Collapse Amid 4C Global Heating’

The Guardian - PA Media

‘Unimaginable amounts’ of water will flow into oceans if that temperature rise occurs and ice buffers vanish, warn UK scientists

A rift in the Larsen C ice shelf, Antarctica, revealed by British Antarctic Survey observations from February 2017. Photograph: British Antarctic Survey/AFP/Getty

More than a third of the vast floating platforms of ice surrounding Antarctica could be at risk of collapsing and releasing “unimaginable amounts” of water into the sea if global temperatures reach 4C above pre-industrial levels, UK scientists say.


Researchers from the University of Reading said that limiting the temperature rise to 2C could halve the area at risk and avoid a drastic rise in sea levels.

The findings, published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters, suggest that 4C warming could leave 34% of the area of all the Antarctic ice shelves – amounting to about half a million square kilometres – at the risk of collapse.

Ice shelves are permanent floating sheets of ice that connect to a landmass; most surround the coasts of Antarctica.

Ella Gilbert, a research scientist in the University of Reading’s meteorology department, said: “Ice shelves are important buffers, preventing glaciers on land from flowing freely into the ocean and contributing to sea level rise.

"When they collapse it’s like a giant cork being removed from a bottle, allowing unimaginable amounts of water from glaciers to pour into the sea.

“We know that, when melted ice accumulates on the surface of ice shelves, it can make them fracture and collapse spectacularly.

“Previous research has given us the bigger picture in terms of predicting Antarctic ice shelf decline. But our new study uses the latest modelling techniques to fill in the finer detail and provide more precise projections.”

Gilbert said the team’s work highlighted the importance of limiting the global temperature increases as set out in the Paris climate agreement, which promotes a global framework to avoid dangerous climate change by limiting global warming to less than 2C above pre-industrial levels.

As part of their modelling study, the researchers also identified Larsen C, the largest remaining ice shelf on the peninsula, as being particularly at risk in a warmer climate.

They said other ice shelves facing this threat included Shackleton, Pine Island, and Wilkins.

Gilbert said: “If temperatures continue to rise at current rates we may lose more Antarctic ice shelves in the coming decades. Limiting warming will not just be good for Antarctica – preserving ice shelves means less global sea level rise, and that’s good for us all.”

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(AU) Climate Change ‘A National Security Threat’: Report

The Australian

Robert Glasser has called for the federal government to urgently recognise the security risks of climate-induced famines, rising seas and mass migrations affecting hundreds of millions of people. Picture: AAP

Key Points

Federal, State and Local governments should begin preparing now for the unprecedented scale of climate change emerging challenges by:
  1. Scaling-up Australia’s efforts through greater investment in disaster risk reduction to prevent the effects from natural hazards, such as extreme weather.
  2. Increasing planning to financially assist communities and the economic recovery of States following disasters.
  3. Strengthening disaster response capacity and planning at all levels, including in the military which will play an increasingly important role in transporting firefighters and equipment, fodder drops from helicopters, the provision of shelters, etc.
  4. Establishing joint task forces to coordinate the Defence contribution, like the one established during the Black Saturday Victorian bushfires.
  5. Ensuring that flood and bushfire risk maps, building codes, planning schemes, infrastructure delivery and supporting legislation embrace climate change.
Rapidly escalating climate change impacts in Australia’s immediate region pose an unprecedented ­national security threat that has been “largely ignored” by strategic planners, a new report warns.

The former head of the UN ­Office for Disaster Risk Reduction, Robert Glasser, has called for the federal government to urgently recognise the security risks of climate-induced famines, rising seas and mass migrations affecting hundreds of millions of people.

He said sea levels in Southeast Asia were rising four times faster than the global average, while in Indonesia alone 165 million ­people lived in at-risk coastal areas.

Water shortages, heat waves, collapsing fisheries and devastating storms were imminent risks, Dr Glasser said in a report for the Australian Strategic Policy Institute.

“Any one of the increasing risks would be serious cause for concern for Australian policymakers, but the combination of them, emerging nearly simultaneously, suggests we’re on the cusp of an unprecedented and rapidly advancing regional crisis.

“Australia urgently needs to begin thinking about political, economic and security tipping points generated by climate change.”

The head of ASPI’s new Preparing for the Era of Disasters called for the government to prioritise investments in defence, foreign affairs, home affairs and intelligence agencies to assess climate risks and feed those assessments into strategic decision-making.

Defence’s posture, training and capabilities would also have to change to respond to more frequent, higher-impact regional natural disasters, while the aid program “will need to scale up its efforts to strengthen regional ­resilience”, Dr Glasser said.

He warned that the regional impacts could “overstretch our operational capacities to act” by requiring the ADF to simultaneously provide disaster relief and respond to a national security crisis.

Scott Morrison acknowledged climate change as a security risk for the first time following the 2019-20 Black Summer bushfires, saying responding to natural disasters would have implications for the ADF’s structure, capability, command and training.

Yet the word “climate” appeared just once in the 2020 Defence Strategic Update, which said the region would face more pandemics and growing food and water scarcity.

“These threats will be compounded by population growth, urbanisation and extreme weather events in which climate change plays a part,” the key Defence planning document said.

Dr Glasser said accelerating climate change impacts meant “we can’t wait for the severity of the situation on our northern doorstep to become obvious before we act”.

He cited more frequent and intense fluctuations between El Nino and La Nina events as a key threat that would lead to more extreme droughts and floods, and food insecurity.

“Crop yields will be reduced by rising temperatures, changes in rainfall, the expansion of the reach of crop pests and shifts in predators that keep crop pests in check.

“The number and duration of heatwaves are increasing, disproportionately affecting maritime Southeast Asia, where hundreds of millions of people are already exposed to extreme heat, including in the agriculture sector.”

Dr Glasser said there was some cause for optimism, with Quadrilateral Security Dialogue countries — Australia, the US, India and Japan — establishing a climate working group to co-ordinate actions and policies.

US President Joe Biden’s new whole-of-government approach to dealing with climate change had also put the issue at the centre of nat­ional security planning, he said.

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