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Congressional Hearing on Resilience Highlights Climate Change Risks

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By John Conger

On Friday, March 26, the Readiness Subcommittee of the U.S. House Armed Services Committee held a hearing on resilience, which in recent years has become synonymous with climate change adaptation.  It was a remarkably substantive hearing, with senior representatives of the military services (LTG Douglas Gabram, Commander Army Installations Management Command; VADM Yancey Lindsey, Commander Navy Installations Command; MajGen Edward Banta, Commander Marine Corps Installations Command; and Brig Gen John Allen, Commander Air Force Civil Engineering Center) citing progress on a variety of fronts, listing actions at specific bases, and clearly communicating the seriousness of the resilience requirement in the face of climate change and the increasing impacts of extreme weather.  It was also clear, however, that they had a very long way to go.

Chairman Garamendi’s opening comments outlined the challenges to installations, actions that the committee has taken in recent years to focus attention on these challenges, and highlighted recent extreme weather events that have cost the Department billions of dollars. His bottom line was that we have made a decision – over decades – to take risks with our installations and infrastructure, but that the calculus needs to change.  Climate change is making business-as-usual a bad bet.  

Some key takeaways:

Overall, though, it’s clear that climate resilience is an extremely active area at the Department of Defense, and Congress is going to continue its active role in overseeing their work.

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