The full report can be found
HERE.
Today,
President Obama will travel to New London, Connecticut to deliver the
commencement address at the United States Coast Guard Academy. During
his speech, the President will speak to the importance of acting on
climate change and the risks to national security this global threat
poses. The White House also
released a new report on the national security implications of climate change and how the Federal government is rising to the challenge.
As
the President has made very clear, no challenge poses a greater threat
to future generations than climate change, as we are already seeing
these
threats in communities across the country. We know that climate change
is contributing to extreme weather, wildfires, and drought, and that
rising temperatures can lead to more smog and more allergens in the air
we breathe, meaning more kids are exposed to
the triggers that can cause asthma attacks.
But
as the President will stress, climate change does not respect national
borders and no one country can tackle climate change on its own. Climate
change poses immediate risks to our national security, contributing to
increased natural disasters and resulting in humanitarian crises, and
potentially increasing refugee flows and exacerbating conflicts over
basic resources like food and water. It also aggravates
issues at home and abroad including poverty, political instability and
social tensions – conditions that can fuel instability and enable
terrorist activity and other forms of violence.
The
Department of Defense (DOD) is assessing the vulnerability of the
military’s more than 7,000 bases, installations and other facilities to
climate
change, and studying the implications of increased demand for our
National Guard in the aftermath of extreme weather events. Two years
ago, DOD and DHS released Arctic Strategies, which addresses the
potential security implications of increased human activity
in the Arctic, a consequence of rapidly melting sea ice.
But
we also need to decrease the harmful carbon pollution that causes
climate change. That is why, this summer, the EPA will put in place
commonsense
standards to reduce carbon pollution from power plants, the largest
source in the United States. Today, the U.S. harnesses three times as
much electricity from the wind and twenty times as much from the sun as
we did since President Obama took office. We are
working with industry and have taken action to phase down HFCs and
address methane emissions in the oil and gas sector. By the middle of
the next decade, our cars will go twice as far on a gallon of gas, and
we have made unprecedented investments to cut
energy waste in our homes and buildings. And as the single largest user
of energy in the United States, DOD is making progress to deploy 3
gigawatts of renewable energy on military installations by 2025.
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