Advertisement
Advertisement
Climate change
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more

CIA stops studying impact of climate change on US security

The CIA has shuttered its unit dedicated to studying the impact of climate change on US national security, shifting its activities elsewhere, an official said.

"This work continues to be performed by a dedicated team in a new office that looks at economic and energy matters affecting America's national security," said CIA spokesman Todd Ebitz on Tuesday. "The mission and the resources devoted to it remain essentially unchanged."

The Centre on Climate Change and National Security was founded in 2009 under the leadership of then CIA director Leon Panetta, who now heads the Pentagon.

It was aimed at studying the security ramifications of climate-related issues such as desertification, rising sea levels, migration and competition for resources.

Republican members of the US Congress, many of whom doubt the scientifically accepted evidence that climate change is under way and caused by human activity, have opposed the unit since its establishment and unsuccessfully sought to block funding for it.

Panetta was replaced in September of last year by David Petraeus, who has since resigned over an extramarital affair, and the unit no longer enjoys as much internal support, according to Greenwire, a trade publication.

Under former president George W.Bush, the United States, one of the world's biggest polluters, opposed international measures such as the Kyoto Treaty designed to slow global warming.

President Barack Obama has now vowed a new push for action on the matter in his second term, saying the US had a duty to come together to curb emissions in the wake of last month's devastating superstorm Sandy.

Climate change played little role in the election campaign until days before the vote, when Sandy tore through the East Coast and the Caribbean, killing more than 110 people in the US alone.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: CIA's climate change office shut down after chief quits
Post