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Event Recap: Feeding Resilience: Interagency Coordination and Foresight

By Tom Ellison and Noah Fritzhand

On 22 October, the Center for Climate and Security brought together current and former US government officials, scientists, and researchers to discuss two topics that the Feeding Resilience program has identified as essential to progress at the nexus of food systems, climate change, and US national security: improved US government interagency coordination and better deployment of strategic foresight capabilities. The discussion was held under the Chatham House Rule. 

Participants first discussed how the United States can better synchronize across development, diplomatic, defense, and humanitarian programs, leverage expertise in places like the US Department of Agriculture (USDA), and apply the new Framework for Climate Resilience and Security to food. The group also discussed how the United States can best use and fill gaps between capabilities like climate projections, the Famine Early Warning System Network (FEWSNET), and intelligence and political stability assessments to more holistically anticipate food- and climate-related security issues. Several themes emerged from the discussion:

Overall, the discussion emphasized progress and opportunities in collaborating across agencies; synthesizing food, water, and stabilization efforts; and improving the availability and communication of policy-relevant forecasting. Continually advancing these efforts will be critical to safeguarding US and global security from the challenges of climate change and food insecurity.

Panelists and participants included (panelists’ names are bolded):

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