The WMO (World Meteorological Organization) State of the Climate in Asia 2024 Report presents a clear and data-rich account of how Asia is being affected by accelerating climate change. Asia continues to warm nearly twice as fast as the global average.

The first publication of a knowledge partnership between SIPRI and the World Food Programme (WFP) assesses the contribution of WFP to the improvement of the prospects for peace, based on four field research-based case studies in El Salvador, Iraq, Kyrgyzstan, and Mali. Strong contributions were found in livelihood investments, in building good links between the state and citizens, in natural resource management and in community-based participatory approaches, areas that also show a close link to climate change. The report “The World Food Programme’s Contribution to Improving the Prospects for Peace” further explored whether WFP’s programming potentially exacerbates conflict or increases the risk of conflict.
The scan aims to help policy-makers, practitioners and academics who are short on time get to grips with the range of literature, discourse and social media coverage of the intersection of resilience, climate change, conflict and security. It has assessed over 350 pieces of literature and summarises 146. It intentionally emphasises academic journals, because these remain inaccessible to many, including those who take critical policy and funding decisions on how to prevent and respond to new manifestations of complex risk.
Tokyo, Japan, May 30, 2019 – Japan’s economic competitiveness is threatened by a heavy reliance on imports from countries that face multiple climate change-exacerbated security risks, and Japan can take lessons from the U.S. military’s vulnerabilities to climatic changes, according to two new Japan Series reports (here and here) from experts at The Center for Climate and Security, a think tank in Washington DC with a team and Advisory Board of senior military and security leaders. The reports come ahead of Japan’s hosting of two G20 ministerial meetings on Trade and Digital Economy (June 8-9) and Energy Transitions for Global Environment for Sustainable Growth (June 15-16)
Climate change poses increasing risks to peace and stability, contributing to a growing relevance of the climate and security nexus to foreign policy actors. To effectively address this topic and develop transformative options for action, it will be crucial to create political momentum, strengthen the bridges between science and politics, as well as the links with other societal actors.
With "How climate change can fuel wars" the Economist adds to the top tier news coverage of the Planetary Security Conference 2019. Starting off by describing the situation in the Lake Chad region, the article links terrorism, political mismanagement and climate change. Considering the situation in Mali, the Arctic, Sudan and Syria, to name but some examples, the global picture of climate security is illustrated with a specific focus on the PSI Spotlight regions.
In the past decade the Lake Chad Region, including parts of Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria, saw multiple crises and conflicts, with climate change intensifying existing conflict dynamics and creating new risks. Communities in the region are vulnerable to both the profound impacts of climate change and the ongoing conflict. In a project supported by the UNDP, the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the German Federal Foreign Office, PSI Consortium member adelphi took the lead on the spotlight region Lake Chad, resulting in a report addressing Climate and Fragility risks in the region.