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Video: © Woodrow Wilson Center
International Alert's Climate Change and Conflict Adviser, Janani Vivekananda, speaks about climate change and stability in conflict-affected and fragile states at the Woodrow Wilson Center.
Alert recently convened a meeting of security experts to look at the likelihood of increased conflict arising from changes to our climate already underway. The newswire Reuters Foundation AlertNet has reported the story here, or you can read the article below:
Article: © AlertNet, Thomson Reuters Foundation
Photo: © International Alert/Niranjan Shrestha
This paper is a collection of reflections from a field visit to three districts in the middle hills and Terai belt of eastern Nepal (Sunsari, Dhankuta and Morang) which set out to explore the various dimensions of the resilience of climate-affected communities. By sharing the perceptions and insights of community members from these districts, this paper aims to shed light on the complexities of these particular local contexts and flag some of the specific challenges of responding to climate change in fragile and conflict-affected contexts such as Nepal.
This paper explores the various dimensions of the resilience of climate-affected communitieto in three districts in Nepal (Sunsari, Dhankuta and Morang).
Climate change is unfolding and adding to the burdens that developing countries have to face. Its physical effects vary from region to region. Although adaptation to suit new conditions was also common in the past, the severity and pace of climate change in the 21st century will present unprecedented challenges that will play upon and exacerbate the vulnerability of ordinary people and their communities to extreme disruption, weakening confidence in the social order and its institutions, and damaging the resource base of their life together. Under these circumstances, urgent grievances and sharpening conflict can be expected.
The impact of climate change has particular resonance in the Niger River basin, where burgeoning demands on its fresh water resources from a plethora of nations and users compounded by increasing migration and competition threaten to overwhelm existing coping and adaptation strategies. With a specific focus on the riparian countries of Mali, Niger and Nigeria, yet maintaining linkages to the regional and international stage, Alert seeks to increase the capacity of people and institutions from the Niger River basin to respond to current climatic stresses and the future impacts of climate change, maintain or enhance their levels of human security and well-being and avoid situations of tension developing into violent conflict.
At present, Alert and its partners at International Development UEA and at universities in Mali, Niger and Nigeria are conducting research into environmental stress, climate change, human security and violent conflict at different localities along the Niger River, which will serve as the basis for future engagement.
With many communities around the world experiencing extreme weather conditions, changes to agricultural cycles, longer dry seasons and rising sea levels, climate change is no longer a future challenge, but a very present risk. It is not just the direct consequences of climate change and variability which we need to be worried about also the consequences of the consequences.
International Alert, together with the Bangladesh Institute for Peace and Security Studies (BIPSS) and the Regional Centre for Security Studies and the Peacebuilding and Development Institute in Sri Lanka, co-hosted an expert roundtable on the Security Implications of Climate Change in South Asia in Dhaka, Bangladesh on 29th-30th March 2010.
This article is an abstract from Dan Smith’s contribution to the new Foreign Policy Centre pamphlet Tackling the world water crisis: Reshaping the future of foreign policy.
Water is a basic condition for life. We depend upon it for daily use, agriculture and industry. Both declining availability and quality as well as an excess of water undermines welfare, impairs human security and generates risk of conflict.
Initiative for Peacebuilding (IfP), a consortium supported by the European Union and led by International Alert, recently launched six synthesis papers which summarise lessons learnt, conclusions and recommendations drawn from evidence-based research conducted in the last year and a half by Alert and its partners.
Taken from Dan Smith’s blog, which can be found at www.dansmithsblog.com
International Alert was recently invited to speak at the GLOBECRAFT Conflict and Climate Change Symposium hosted by the Geneva School of Diplomacy on 7 – 9 September 2009. The symposium brought together experts from the security, climate change, development and humanitarian relief sectors to discuss the emerging security implications of climate change. Participants ranged from high-level climate scientists from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, directors and advisors of relevant UN bodies and NGOs, to government ministers and CEOs of climate-related corporations.
In Liberia, the process of recovery from war includes encouraging both ex-combatants and former IDPs to return to their place of origin and resume their lives there. There are many difficulties, not least the reluctance of some excombatants to go and to stay, and the reluctance of some communities to accept them back.
When the Koshi River which flows through the Eastern Terai region of Nepal flooded in summer 2008, it displaced more than 60,000 people, damaged the national highway, and destroyed crops. Since then, major concerns have been voiced that the fragile embankment will break in more places, flooding an even greater area.
The severity of risk is closely linked to the poor maintenance of dams and river barriers. Responsibility thus ultimately lies with the government.
People must both understand and trust the climate information they receive if they are to respond in an adequate manner.
In 2000, the Limpopo river basin in southern Africa experienced a very substantial rainfall for many days as a result of unusual cyclone activity. Experts knew that it would result in serious flooding - of a magnitude never experienced before by rural communities in Mozambique. Yet very few villages were informed about it.