New DoD IG Report on Climate Resilience in the Arctic: Key Takeaways
The DoD Inspector General released a new report last week on #climatesecurity & US military bases in the Arctic – a few thoughts on this revealing glimpse inside DoD climate resilience implementation.
First, the report underscores the #1 takeaway the Center for Climate and Security identified in Challenge Accepted, our scorecard of the Biden Administration’s #climatesecurity policy – the need to move from words to action. The IG shows the yawning gap between what policymakers mandate in Washington, what tools the Pentagon creates, and what actually happens (or doesn’t happen) out in the field.
Recommended by LinkedIn
Second, the report reminds us that time is not on our side – the pace of US government bureaucracy is no match for the pace of intensifying climate change hazards. The requirements for base resilience assessments are from 2020, it’s now 2022 and the IG found, “most installation leaders at the six installations we visited in the Arctic and sub-Arctic region were unfamiliar with military installation resilience planning requirements.” Nevermind that the person ultimately responsible for overseeing this line of effort for the military – the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Energy, Installations and Environment – was just nominated by the White House in March of this year and awaits confirmation.
Finally, the good news – DoD leadership appears receptive to the IG recommendations and in fact have already met some of them through the release of the (excellent) DoD Climate Adaptation Plan last fall. The problems identified by the IG are solvable – requiring committed, ongoing efforts to translate and communicate policy guidance out to the field, and holding bases accountable for following through. Doing so will not only make Arctic bases more resilient to climate change, but also more operationally effective in protecting US interests in the High North.
Co-Founder, Senior Fellow- Meridian Institute
2yErin, years ago when we were mediating budget and requirements for RCRA and other clean up at DOD facilities between the services, DOD, and Senate and House committees a base commander suggested adding one item to the performance reviews around environment , got adopted, and would like to think a little more got done. My point being - how to keep baking this kind of need I to the system. Thanks for keeping up and keeping the rest of us up to date and with your good thinking g.
Sustainability Leader; Managing Director, Consumer Sectors & Business Transformation, Business for Social Responsibility
2yFrom the woman who - like climate change - never sleeps: another short, sharp snapshot on the state of US preparedness for #climatesecurity. "The pace of US government bureaucracy is no match for the pace of intensifying climate change hazards, indeed!" But that is a solvable problem, and the US defense establishment, with support from expertise from The Center for Climate and Security and others, can rise to it. Onward!
Open-Source Digital Tech Mgr at OffsiteWood.org
2yGlad you stay up reading those for the rest of us, Erin Sikorsky; can we take your choice of pictures to mean that maybe we could use some more icebreakers too? New Northwest Passage needs dedicated equipment!