The Feeding Resilience Plan
Safeguarding US National Security at the Crossroads of Food and Climate Change
Authors: Tom Ellison and Erin Sikorsky
Project Co-leads: Tom Ellison, Patricia Parera, and Erin Sikorsky
Editor: Francesco Femia
Contributors: Siena Cicarelli, John Conger, Brigitte Hugh, and Ethan Wong
Executive Summary
Today, the global food security situation is dire, with a confluence of environmental, economic, and political shocks reversing progress on hunger and pushing more than 250 million people into food insecurity.1 It is increasingly clear that a resilient food system is needed to ensure US national security and global stability. Yet pressure from conflict, economic shocks, demographic trends, water insecurity, geopolitical competition, and climate change complicate efforts to build such resilience.
This report identifies three areas where these dynamics intersect to affect US national security. First, the nexus of food insecurity and conflict threatens US interests, whether from instability over food price spikes, the weaponization of food by adversary states or extremists, or humanitarian crises from lost farming livelihoods. Second, the United States must navigate the geopolitics of food, whether Russia’s weaponization of food insecurity for leverage in Ukraine, China’s lead in agricultural research and development, or maritime conflict risks over dwindling fish stocks. Third, the US national security apparatus must be attuned to the challenges and opportunities in achieving a more resilient food system, ranging from the promise of innovation to prevent food-related security tensions to the instability pitfalls involved in reforming agricultural subsidies.
(more…)CCS to Launch New Report on Food, Climate, and National Security
By Tom Ellison
Global hunger is worsening humanitarian emergencies, food prices are driving instability, weather shocks are threatening the global food system, and extremists and geopolitical challengers are capitalizing. In this context, getting ahead of the nexus of food insecurity and climate change is critical to US national security.
On September 16, the Center for Climate and Security (CCS) will launch The Feeding Resilience Plan, a report synthesizing the 18-month Feeding Resilience project on food, climate change, and US national security. Interested policymakers, researchers, and members of the public are invited to register and join CCS for a launch event on September 16 from 12 – 1:30 pm EST on Capitol Hill (Rayburn House Office Building, Room 2060).
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