Open access notables
The Intelligence Community Must Evolve To Meet the Reality of Arctic Change is a product of the Wilson Center s subject specalist center The Polar Institute. As its title suggests the report is squarely centered on nitty-gritty details of geopolitical adaptations forced by climate change as they re reflected in national security matters, here (unsurprisingly given the Wilson Institute s mission and purpose) specifically the security of the United States. Let alone what passport is in one s pocket, the report s provenance and urgency is a bellwether indicator of radical change in the Arctic thanks to our sudden climate accident. Recommendation #4 is rather striking but is based on a claimed track record of success in other arenas: Prioritize Top Secret with Special Access clearances for non-IC Federal Interagency Arctic and climate experts. This report is included in this week s collection of government/NGO repor
Open access notables
In connection with how do we feed ourselves without disrupting the climate, Research needs for a food system transition by Sunala Shukli McDermid and coauthors and published in Climatic Change first reviews what we ve learned of impacts from our agriculture and in particular animal husbandry on Earth systems, including climate. The review s conclusion remains familiar: there s an urgent need to make some major changes. That s going to need a lot of attention to a lot of detail, and how to work at that level is the main thrust of the article s purpose. The authors go on to argue we need to practice concerted, systematic research in key areas of agriculture and agricultural policy so as to inform our steering of transitions, identify pitfalls, and make translating scientific findings into policy more efficient. They break this big overall challenge into more digestible conceptual chunks, with suggestions on how to get started.
In our government/NGO section this week, Brown University’s Climate and Development Lab report Discourses of Climate Delay in the Campaign Against Offshore Wind: A Case Study from Rhode Island applies earlier work by Lamb (Discourses of Climate Delay) and Cook (FLICC taxonomy) to put the bright lights on a organization attempting to fossilize energy supplies, finding archetypal examples of both systems littering that organization s rhetoric :
Open access notables
Sea level rise (SLR) as a result of our atmospheric accident is a certainty; the outcome we ll realize sits between brackets restng far above zero. For any country with a sea coast— particularly those with a combination of human presence and low coastal elevations— there s more or less urgent need to figure out how accomodate encroachment. We get one chance to optimize this work and it won t be easy even with the best information. So, useful information we should know is what are the foundations of our plans, and do we have any plans for SLR at all? Utah State University s Daniella Hirschfeld and her coauthors delve into this in their paper Global survey shows planners use widely varying sea-level rise projections for coastal adaptation, just published in Nature Communications Earth & Environment. There is lots of room for improvement. From the abstract: