Climate change, and the responses to it, will reshape geopolitics and the global security landscape. With this project, Carnegie intends to contribute to the growing body of research on climate geopolitics and engage with policymakers to ensure that the latest, best knowledge is reflected in governmental strategies and security budgets. The project will generate an edited volume and a series of private workshops and public events.
This project is led by Dan Baer and Noah Gordon and is supported by the Open Society Foundations.
Join Aaron David Miller as he sits down with Sue Biniaz, the U.S. Deputy Special Envoy for Climate Change, to discuss what the United States and others in the international community do to deal with the global climate crisis.
Join us online for a conversation between Katherine Blunt, author of California Burning: The Fall of Pacific Gas and Electric and What it Means for America’s Power Grid, and Noah J. Gordon, acting co-director of Carnegie's Sustainability, Climate, and Geopolitics Program.
The agreement on a new loss and damage fund is one of the summit’s bright spots, but more needs to be done to deliver the trillions of dollars needed to finance the low-carbon transition.
It’s easy to get caught up on how climate change affects everything from Germany-Italy bond spreads to efforts to reach NATO’s defense spending targets.
Billions were allocated to help countries fight Covid – the same must be done for climate action.
“We have to be very clear-eyed about what is feasible, politically and socially.”
As the many instances of reparations throughout history show, paying reparations always sounds unrealistic until it isn’t. And there is more to reparations than handing over money and considering the matter settled.
The scientists behind the social-climate model have begun to do their part to consider how sociopolitical phenomena manifest as dependent variables.
This summer’s deadly heat wave could be the third major impetus in just two years for countries to acknowledge that tilting European markets through carbon pricing isn’t enough to address the climate crisis. To meet the existential challenge, states must intervene aggressively in markets, starting with energy regulations and industrial policies.
Berlin’s seemingly technical energy debate is actually social and political.