https://thehill.com/opinion/national-security/542060-to-win-the-climate-battle-we-need-the-intelligence-community

March 08, 2021 - 10:30 AM EST
To win the climate battle, we need the intelligence community
To win the climate battle, we need the intelligence community
BY KAREN MONAGHAN, DAVID RUBIN AND GEORGE LITTLE, OPINION CONTRIBUTORS
The views expressed by contributors are their own and not the view of The
Hill
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John le Carré famously defined the espionage genre, and his novels were
shaped by the global power paradigm and threat of the time: The Cold War.
If le Carré were still with us and crafting a novel about the existential
threat of our time, the spy hero would be using his or her very particular
set of skills on the front lines of climate change.

Lots of you likely just rolled your eyes and thought “you can’t be
serious.” Are you implying that climate change is an existential national
security threat? A threat that requires focused intelligence collection and
analysis? Really? What about cyber threats or threats from adversarial
nation states? Why would our satellites track polar bears instead of
terrorist training camps?

The reality is the intelligence community can and should do both because
climate change presents an incredible risk to global stability.

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This isn’t a new idea. In fact, for more than 25 years the intelligence
community has provided discreet, essential, and consequential support to
experts tracking climate change — particularly the degradation of sea ice
and glaciers. Predecessors in this effort include the Director of Central
Intelligence’s Environmental Center and CIA’s Center for Climate Change and
National Security. This helped drive the MEDEA program, a CIA program that
shared classified data, such as hundreds of thousands of satellite images
and ocean temperature data, to civilian scientists to examine links between
climate change and global security threats. Earth scientists for the first
time saw the extent of global environmental degradation, deforestation, and
sea ice melt. Unfortunately, this project was shut down in 2015.

President Biden’s recent executive actions make it clear that climate
change is a top policy priority. With John Kerry at the helm of
international efforts and an experienced team of Cabinet officials, the
Biden administration will attempt to steer a unified response to climate
change. The Executive Order on Tackling the Climate Crisis at Home and
Abroad rightly calls for putting climate change “at the center of U.S.
foreign policy and national security” and calls for a National Intelligence
Estimate its impacts. But policymakers need a dedicated, expert
intelligence unit to support their efforts to make informed decisions on
climate-induced national security risks.

The very real domestic and overseas threats posed by climate change have
been on the minds of the U.S. military and intelligence community for
decades. They have warned about the physical infrastructure and global
security interests threatened by melting sea ice, rising sea levels, acute
water shortages, record high temperatures, extreme weather events, and
environmental degradation. They have underscored that climate-induced
degradation contributes to instability and violence across the world,
triggering economic crises, physical dislocation, and mass migration.

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Many cite climate-driven environmental degradation as one of the key
contributors to instability across Africa, home to some of the countries
most vulnerable to climate change. In Nigeria, Cameroon, Chad, and Niger,
drought has displaced millions and contributed to communal violence. The
region’s continued instability drives security concerns common to failed
states and sputtering economies that set the breeding grounds for power
vacuums filled by extremist groups.

Intelligence assessments point to the fact that melting sea ice has ushered
in a new arena of great power competition with China, Russia, and others
competing for control over sea lanes and natural resources in the Arctic
and Antarctic.

The Department of Defense (DOD) has repeatedly raised concerns about the
risks that rising sea levels pose to its coastal air bases, naval
facilities, and training grounds. The 2021 National Defense Authorization
Act specifically tasked the Coast Guard to provide Congress with an update
on its most vulnerable facilities.

Fortunately, President Biden’s newly confirmed director of National
Intelligence, Avril Haines, could stand up an interdisciplinary,
interagency environmental mission center to support intelligence collection
and analysis of climate change impacts. Director Haines needs a clear
mandate and significant resources to pull together the A-team of climate,
energy and environment experts from not only the intelligence community but
also the Environmental Protection Agency, Department of Homeland Security,
Department of Energy, State Department and others.

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An environmental intelligence unit could help anticipate and respond to a
wide range of policymakers’ questions — from collecting objective data and
information on treaty negotiations and compliance; to providing data and
imagery to scientists and civil agencies; to developing and monitoring
predictive indicators of climate-induced instability; to tracking mis- and
disinformation on climate issues; and assessing the global government and
commercial competition for rare earths and other resources, clean energy
and alternative technologies, and geo-engineering initiatives.

Just as important, this new unit would need to have the independence to
engage U.S. and non-U.S. scientists, non-profit leaders and private sector
experts to turbocharge the use of open-source information and commercial
data to offer analysis and inform solutions to one of the greatest security
threats the globe has ever faced.

Rather than the sleight of hand and clandestine tactics of le Carré era
spies that fill our collective imagination, it is the deep information
management and analysis, experience cultivating sources and modern
technology-enabled capabilities that make the intelligence community a
truly indispensable component of the battle against climate change.

Karen Monaghan is a retired senior intelligence service officer with the
CIA where among her positions she oversaw global energy security issues and
served as the National Intelligence Officer for Economics. She is currently
principal at KJM Analytics LLC and has served as a consultant to Deloitte
since 2018.

David Rubin is a managing director at Deloitte, where for over 30 years he
has supported national security clients.

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George Little is a former Pentagon press secretary and former CIA
spokesman. He currently is a partner in Brunswick Group's Washington, D.C.,
office specializing in crisis communications, cybersecurity, reputational
and public affairs matters.

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