Current:Home > NewsClimate Change Will Increase Risk of Violent Conflict, Researchers Warn -Infinite Edge Learning
Climate Change Will Increase Risk of Violent Conflict, Researchers Warn
Chainkeen View
Date:2025-04-07 13:56:14
Worsening climate change will increase the risk of future violent conflict within countries, a group of top researchers representing an array of viewpoints said Wednesday in the scientific journal Nature.
The study, “Climate as a risk factor for armed conflict,” tries to address some longstanding disagreements among climate scientists, political scientists, historians and other experts about what role, if any, climate change has played in internal conflicts over the last 100 years. Stanford researchers took the unusual step of convening 11 of the most experienced and cited experts on the topic to resolve their assessments of climate change’s impact on global security.
Working together, the experts concluded that climate change so far has not played a large role in stoking conflict, overshadowed instead by other factors such as poor governance and weak economic development. But they agreed that climate change will play a far greater role in destabilizing countries as the planet warms.
There was “strong agreement that the risks go up with more climate change,” said Katharine Mach, director of the Stanford Environment Assessment Facility and the lead author of the study in a video supplement to the report. “But some of the biggest uncertainties are how and why.”
Rather than wars between nations, the Stanford study focused on internal conflicts, because there have been far more of them in modern history, killing anywhere from dozens of people to hundreds of thousands, Mach said.
Still, domestic armed clashes, which include genocide and civil war, often spill beyond borders and destabilize entire regions.
U.S. Military Sees a ‘Threat Multiplier’
The relationship between climate change and armed conflict, even when confined to one country, is complicated, and it’s hard to tease apart the effects of extreme weather from other factors that push a society toward violence. But U.S. military and intelligence agencies have long considered climate change to be a “threat multiplier,” the factor that could tip into violence those states already staggering under the weight of other problems.
For instance, a drought exacerbated by climate change in a country where the government fails to provide for its people, water is already scarce and relations between tribes and communities are fraught could lead to local clashes over water and, ultimately, broader internal conflict.
In a 2015 report to Congress, the Pentagon pointed to the Syrian civil war as an example of how climate change can aggravate the fragility of a nation already riddled with tensions and poor governance. At the time of the Arab Spring in 2010, Syria was already under great stress. The authoritarian regime of Bashar al-Assad was unpopular, and an influx of more than 1 million Iraqi refugees strained basic services.
At the same time, the worst drought in 500 years had shriveled large swaths of rural Syria, a country long plagued by water scarcity. Thousands of Syrians moved from farms into towns and cities. The migration contributed to the instability, which erupted into uprisings and, eventually, a cataclysmic civil war. Hundreds of thousands of people died and waves of refugees moved through the Middle East and into Europe and shook the political order as far as Germany.
Trump Administration Still Pushes Denial
Despite the concerns of the U.S. military and intelligence agencies, President Donald Trump has made his National Security Council the hub of an effort to undermine acceptance of climate science. Trump, a staunch climate denier, appointed former physicist and climate denialist William Happer to the NSC to undercut the intelligence community’s integration of climate science into its threat assessments.
The Stanford analysis arrives in the wake of news that the White House tried to prevent a senior State Department intelligence expert from testifying last week about the link between climate change and global security at a hearing on the topic held by the House Intelligence Committee. The official, Rod Schoonover, ultimately testified, but Trump advisors took the rare step of withholding Schoonover’s written testimony from the Congressional Record. A copy of the written testimony, laden with critical comments from Happer, was published by The New York Times over the weekend.
In his oral testimony and what was revealed in the leaked written report, Schoonover bluntly described the scenarios that climate change could catalyze. No country will be spared damage from climate change, he said, but some will deal with it better than others. Much of the planet is “especially vulnerable,” he said, including sub-Saharan Africa, the Middle East, and South, Central and Southeast Asia.
“Most countries, if not all, are already unable to fully respond to the risks posed by 14 climate-linked hazards,” Schoonover told the committee.
The flap in Washington highlights how policymakers have long ignored or tried to suppress information about the role of climate change in conflict situations. Mach said resolving experts’ disagreements about climate change and conflict could nudge policymakers into mainstreaming the use of climate science in assessing security and diplomatic risk.
The study’s authors also recommended that the role of climate change in conflict inform policies to rein in global warming. They wrote: “Given that conflict has pervasive detrimental human, economic and environmental consequences, climate–conflict linkages—even if small—would markedly influence the social costs of carbon and decisions to limit future climate change.”
veryGood! (8)
Related
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- Ukrainian soldiers play soccer just miles from the front line as grueling counteroffensive continues
- Coast Guard searching for Carnival cruise ship passenger who went overboard
- Gigi Hadid Is the Girl With the Dragon Tattoo After Debuting Massive New Ink
- Costco membership growth 'robust,' even amid fee increase: What to know about earnings release
- Listening to the Endangered Sounds of the Amazon Rainforest
- Listening to the Endangered Sounds of the Amazon Rainforest
- Kelly Ripa & Mark Consuelos' Son Michael Now Has a Role With Real Housewives
- Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
- Matt Damon Shares How Wife Luciana Helped Him Through Depression
Ranking
- Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
- James Cameron Denies He's in Talks to Make OceanGate Film After Titanic Sub Tragedy
- Scientists Examine Dangerous Global Warming ‘Accelerators’
- This Dime-Sized Battery Is a Step Toward an EV With a 1,000-Mile Range
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- Two Volcanologists on the Edge of the Abyss, Searching for the Secrets of the Earth
- Shell Refinery Unit Had History of Malfunctions Before Fire
- Margot Robbie, Matt Damon and More Stars Speak Out as SAG-AFTRA Goes on Strike
Recommendation
Chuck Scarborough signs off: Hoda Kotb, Al Roker tribute legendary New York anchor
Gigi Hadid Is the Girl With the Dragon Tattoo After Debuting Massive New Ink
U.K. leader Rishi Sunak's Conservatives suffer more election losses
Two Volcanologists on the Edge of the Abyss, Searching for the Secrets of the Earth
2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
Women Are Less Likely to Buy Electric Vehicles Than Men. Here’s What’s Holding Them Back
These 8 habits could add up to 24 years to your life, study finds
Look Out, California: One of the Country’s Largest Solar Arrays is Taking Shape in… Illinois?