https://therealnews.com/securitizing-climate-change-can-lead-to-more-surveillance-and-eco-fascism

SECURITIZING CLIMATE CHANGE CAN LEAD TO MORE SURVEILLANCE AND ECO-FASCISM
Experts warn that president-elect Biden's plan to include climate as a
national security issue can lead to militarization of climate agenda and
can fuel new geo-political tensions
BY AMAN AZHAR DECEMBER 10, 2020
U.S. President-elect Joe Biden listens as former U.S. Secretary of State
John Kerry, his special presidential envoy for climate appointee, speaks as
President-elect Biden announces his national security nominees and
appointees at his transition headquarters in Wilmington, Delaware, U.S.,
November 24, 2020. REUTERS/Joshua Roberts
President-elect Joe Biden’s plan to use heavy-handed climate diplomacy and
incorporate climate debate into the national security apparatus could
prompt a new round of geopolitical friction—to the detriment of the
environmental justice movement at home and abroad, experts warn.

Biden’s “Plan for a Clean Energy Revolution and Environmental Justice” lays
out the policy and implementation pathways for his administration to
advance the global climate agenda. One of these measures is to “name and
shame global climate outlaws”—countries that don’t live up to their climate
commitments under the Paris Agreement.


According to Biden’s plan, the State Department will publish a new Global
Climate Change Report that rates and ranks countries according to whether
they are adhering to their commitments under the Paris climate agreement.
This State Department-led initiative is meant “to hold countries to account
for meeting, or failing to meet, their Paris commitments and for other
steps that promote or undermine global climate solutions,” Biden’s plan
states.

Duncan McLaren, professor in practice at Lancaster University’s Environment
Centre, said the Biden administration should tread carefully on its climate
diplomacy plan.

“As the biggest cumulative emitter, the U.S. owes a huge climate debt to
the world, and it won’t be a good look to lecture other
countries—especially those with non-white majority populations,” McLaren
said in an interview with The Real News. “It will be very easy to heighten
tensions in climate diplomacy that way.”

For Biden’s climate diplomacy to work, McLaren explained, Washington will
need to acknowledge its own faults before pointing fingers at other
countries, and need to put justice at the heart of its national and global
efforts.

“The U.S. can and should increase its nationally determined contributions
(NDC),” McLaren said. “The second big tool available to the U.S. is to
increase dramatically its contributions to adaptation finance for the
world’s poorest countries. That would provide help for countries facing sea
level rise, water scarcity, heat stress, and so forth.”

While experts debate the merits of Biden’s climate diplomacy, his proposed
plan to call out the “climate outlaws” has already met its first diplomatic
setback. During the September presidential debate, Biden threatened Brazil
with “economic consequences” if Amazon deforestation didn’t stop. In
response, Bolsonaro tweeted that Brazil would not accept bribes or heed
threats. “Our sovereignty is non-negotiable,” he tweeted.

On Nov. 10, days after Biden won the presidential election, Bolsonaro took
another swipe at Biden, referring to him as “candidate” and criticizing
Biden’s Amazon remarks.

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The Biden administration will need to rely more on diplomatic tact than
naming and shaming countries if his global climate diplomacy is to bear
fruit in days ahead: “It will be good to see the U.S. adding its voice to
calls for effective action, but to be influential, will be really quite
tricky,” McLaren said.

McLaren added that without some degree of diplomacy, Biden’s plan to
restore the U.S. to global climate leader status will be met with
resistance as countries such as Brazil refuse to cooperate with the United
States and look for more compatible partners elsewhere.

Experts warn that an even bigger challenge to domestic and global struggle
for environmental justice is likely to come from pushing climate change as
a national security issue. Biden’s plan says “he will fully integrate
climate change into our foreign policy and national security strategies, as
well as our approach to trade.” The plan calls climate change a “threat
multiplier” that magnifies existing geopolitical and weather-related risks,
and goes on to say that “Biden will add climate change as a national
security priority” to address the challenges it poses to global stability
and security.

John Kerry, Biden’s pick for climate envoy, has also been given a seat on
the National Security Council (NSC).

According to Kevin Surprise, visiting lecturer in environmental studies at
Mount Holyoke College, climate security has been ingrained in the thinking
of the defense and security establishment since 2003.

“The first time climate change was formally put on the U.S. security agenda
in a serious way was 2003, when the Pentagon commissioned a report titled
An Abrupt Climate Change Scenario and its Implications for United States
National Security,” Surprise told the Real News.

Under Obama, Surprise explained, the CIA established a Climate Intelligence
Unit. In 2016, Obama issued an executive order mandating that security and
intelligence agencies incorporate assessments of climate threats to
national security into their operations and analyses. Even under the Trump
administration’s climate denialism, the military continued to focus on
climate change as a security threat.

To McLaren, a security narrative runs the risk of distracting from
questions of justice, and the fundamental need for reparations for past
harms done by the U.S., both internally and internationally.

“I can see why this framing might be useful in the USA. You have a high
degree of respect for the military—especially on the political right, which
is also the home of climate denialism,” McLaren said. “Turning the climate
into a question of national security might be a good way to get Republicans
on board.”

Narrowing the climate issue to security means neglecting the complex
political and economic questions that animate the climate conversation
while also expanding the role of the military in climate policy.

“The Pentagon and the wider security community expanded into
‘environmental’ and ‘climate’ security because, framed that way, myriad
environmental issues around the world became part of the military purview.
It expands the domain of operation,” Surprise said. “Securitizing the
climate or environment opens more space for military intervention.”

Biden’s plan to securitize climate issues also tends to favor
geoengineering approaches such as carbon dioxide removal technologies,
which are widely seen as the means to keep the fossil fuel industry in
business for decades: “It is in the U.S. interest to push models and
agreements that place primacy on large-scale carbon drawdown through carbon
dioxide removal technologies after 2050. This pushes the problem down the
road, minimizes action in the present, and relies on new, unproven
technologies that play into the rhetoric of American ‘innovation,’”
Surprise said.

The security narrative also allows dubious geoengineering approaches to be
deployed without proper scrutiny.

“Some scientists have speculated that countries might try to use
stratospheric aerosol injection [SAI] to establish climate conditions that
they prefer,” McLaren said.

SAI refers to blocking a fraction of solar radiation by continually
spraying megatons of sulfur dioxide into the lower stratosphere,
theoretically cooling the planet quickly and cheaply.

This rhetoric could also very easily play into the hands of ecofascists
concerned with “national territory,” and justify violence against
climate-displaced persons.

“National security in its modern sense has always been about expanding the
realm of imperialism and protecting elite members of society. It’s linkage
to climate change does not change that,” Surprise said.

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