At the State Department’s “Our Ocean” conference this week, environmentalists need to engage with the security community.
By JOHAN BERGENAS
This week, Secretary of State John Kerry is gathering world leaders in Washington, D.C., for a major conference on protecting the oceans. Included on the program are key issues such as ocean pollution, sustainable fishing and protection of marine parks.
This is a strong biodiversity and conservation agenda, but notably absent is how these traditional environmental challenges are a threat to U.S. and global security. Illegal fishing — one of the most important drivers of ecological catastrophe — has become inextricably linked with a variety of illicit behaviors, including transnational organized crime. By themselves, conservationists do not have the resources and experience to take on these challenges. If they want to make genuine progress on the issues they’re grappling with this week, world environmental leaders must think more broadly about the causes and possible solutions to the problems they’re trying to rein in — and that means reaching out to the security community to directly address these threats.
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Source: politico.com

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Security and Risk Report 24/05/23
MAST’s security report issue 370 is available to read now. In the Gulf of Guinea, the US Consulate has praised the efforts of the Nigerian