A preliminary search of the NIES, Google Scholar, and ProQuest databases for the phrase “climate security debate” yielded research papers and reports based on two research projects that were conducted in Japan. It should also be noted that the number of hits from the preliminary search was too large to conduct a fruitful review. For example, the search on NIES yielded 153 results (
https://www.nies.go.jp/index-e.html, accessed on 15 March 2022) while Google Scholar returned 1,420,000 hits (
https://bit.ly/3rwQsAm, accessed on 15 March 2022). After applying the string query (“climate security” discourse AND Japan AND policy debate), the total number of papers from the three databases was reduced to 602 English language papers, with 49 papers from ProQuest, 545 papers from Google Scholar (including duplicates from ProQuest,
https://bit.ly/3uLfWMe, accessed on 15 March 2022), and 8 papers from NIES (Google search in the upper right corner,
https://www.nies.go.jp/index-e.html, accessed on 15 March 2022). Unlike the Google Scholar and ProQuest databases, the NIES database does not have the option to apply all search criteria. The titles and abstracts of all 602 papers were scanned to ascertain clear relevance to the goal of our review. Whenever we are unable to make this determination in a single paper, the full text of the paper was scanned (or read when necessary) for relevance to the three research questions. For the evaluation of eligibility and relevance, we narrowed the number of papers to 34 (by specifically including the word Japan): 2 from NIES, 10 from ProQuest, 15 from Google Scholar, and 7 reports from a research project.
At the time the project brief was published, previous climate security projects in Japan, unlike in the West, had not recognized the economic and socio-political risks of climate change as a compound risk with diverse consequences in national and international contexts, nor placed these impacts within a climate security framework or a broader security framework [
10]. Climate security researchers in Japan need to catch up. In this connection, the multidimensionality of security, the interconnectedness of various aspects of security (and sources of insecurity), the embedding of (in)security in multiple institutions, and the costs of insecurity (to individual, community, or state) make security policymaking and action ethically sensitive, politically contested, and practically difficult across the world [
18]. Mohamed Behnassi [
19] alluded to this perspective in the sense that an examination of the utility of climate security as a framework for improving climate policy and governance revealed that when climate–security concerns are underestimated, new security challenges are to be expected in addition to existing challenges. Therefore, as climate security frameworks can enable security-sensitive responses to climate risks and create new dynamics in climate policy and governance [
19], there has been growing attention to the challenges of compound extremes—multiple extremes occurring simultaneously [
20]—entailing compound, interconnected, interacting, and cascading risks [
21]. At the same time, given that the gap between the perceived and actual risk experienced by communities poses clear challenges for adaptation policy and practice, an awareness of climate-induced extreme events is not only a matter of community resilience [
22], but also of societal resilience in the face of high-impact events, as it is particularly essential to understand the complementarity of these overlapping risks which aggregate elements of resilience, critical infrastructure protection, and climate adaptation [
21]. The World Economic Forum’s
The Global Risks Report 2020 confirms the fact that “climate realities” represent an array of complex but unknown impacts [
23]. Compound risk encapsulates these realities. Indeed, without taking into account complex interrelations with other policy areas, measures that are beneficial to the climate in principle could even have negative impacts [
24]. Professor Simone Borg reiterated this complexity during an interview with Gaston Moonen. Climate change is not a simple environmental issue, but a complex one, and this is a challenge and potential prospect [
25].
In parallel with this project-based collection, in which the issue of climate security policy is a prominent topic, the generalizability of our review may be constrained by the small sample size (34 in total), the focus on peer-reviewed literature, and the geographic focus on Japan. In light of the proliferation of systematic reviews over the past decade, many of which have focused on understanding issues and trends in specific regions [
34], prior studies have warned that geographic constraints can lead to biased findings. In line with this warning, the review by Rocque et al. [
13] focused on papers with a global focus and no clear geographic constraints. Because the results of survey samples focused on national or regional levels are necessarily constrained [
12], readers may interpret this constraint as a weakness and thus point to the need for further research on climate change in general [
35]. There is another important concern about geographic focus. Sietsma et al. [
34] find not only topic biases by geographic location, especially regarding Western authors who are experts on climate issues in Global South countries, but also that criticisms of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s (IPCC) tendency to emphasize natural sciences at the expense of social sciences likely reflect the rapid growth of social science topics and the preeminent position of natural sciences in adaptation research, not bias within the IPCC. These findings are revealed through the use of a novel, probing, computer-assisted evidence mapping method (
n = 26) that combines structural topic modeling and expert interviews to formally assess the representativeness of IPCC citations [
34].
3.1. Has Japan Participated in the Global Climate Security Debate at All?
Although Japan “needs to start taking part in the climate security discussion” [
10] (p. 20), Tokyo has participated in and contributed to the climate security debate through research and policy discussions because countries around the world are expected to do so. Future researchers need to make a neat distinction between Japan’s participation and contributions. To begin with, contribution (which may be minor or substantial) means adding value to the debate and participation means taking part in the debate (whether actively or passively); researchers should set boundaries for what is and what is not participation, and divide participation itself into relevant categories. Participation in this sense implies active involvement in decision-making at all levels and concerns the formulation and implementation of climate policies. Thus, participation implicitly implies that climate security research will have a substantial, if not permanent or explicit, impact on policy debates. In other words, given the current reality in Japan, there is little room for leveraging influence when climate security research is scarce.
Therefore, given Japan’s track record in green innovation and resolute determination to coordinate and lead the innovation of technological approaches to reduce global warming, one may well expect further breakthroughs in the near future. According to Naoko Ishii, Director of the University of Tokyo’s Global Commons Center and the government’s Climate Policy Adviser, the greatest challenge facing humanity is to balance the natural system of the Earth, of which we are a part, with the interdependent economic system that exists on top of it [
40]. What can be achieved in this context is the likes of the Fukushima Hydrogen Energy Research Field (a cutting-edge innovation developed through a collaboration between five private companies and the New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization), which is the world’s largest hydrogen plant using renewable energy. Japan sees such solutions as central to winning the fight against climate change.
This is a testimony to Japan’s unwavering commitment to continue to participate and contribute to the global issues covered by environmental security and climate security. In 2007, in a report recommending policy benefits of climate security at home and abroad, the MOE highlighted that Japan’s position on the concept was due to research into four notable developments: the security concept, the comprehensive security concept, accelerating climate change, and the international debate on climate security [
24,
41,
42]. It was also in 2007 that the effects of climate change were first discussed in the UN Security Council. It was in 2008 that the European Commission submitted its report on climate change to the European Parliament. Furthermore, it was not until 2010 that the Obama administration mentioned the threat to national security posed by climate change in its Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR). The 2014 QDR published by the United States Department of Defense acknowledges climate change as an escalating threat, suggesting that it may complicate a series of threats to security and stability. In other words, the Japanese government’s initiation of discussions on climate security was not a late move compared to international trends.
The way global society conducts its daily life is a major contributor to environmental problems and one of the main reasons why environmental security is needed. Particularly in Japan, where civil society organizations are generally led by male leaders, the number of organizations representing women’s interests is limited to about 2.2% [
43], and civil society does not have full and unrestricted access to policymaking processes; thus, a comprehensive policy on environmental security monitored by civil society could have a considerable impact. There is a fundamental belief about the latter perspective. That is, according to Loada and Moderan [
44], civil society participation is central to three key functions. First, it strengthens the governance chain of security. Second, it provides democratic political requirements that strengthen the legitimacy of decisions affecting individual security. Third, it provides strategic requirements to strengthen the necessary national ownership of the process and thus the transparent governance of the security sector.
The concept of environmental security, little known in the immediate post-Cold War period, has been adopted in Japan as part of human security and remains at the core of Japanese diplomacy [
28,
45]. When the UN Development Programme put forward human security in its 1994 Human Development Report, the Japanese government responded favorably. Keizo Obuchi, in particular, strongly supported the idea of human security. In his speech in Singapore in May 1998, when he was Minister of Foreign Affairs, he officially announced for the first time that Japan would incorporate this idea into its foreign policy. He also emphasized the importance of human security in two policy speeches during his tenure as prime minister from 1999 to 2000. Since the late 1990s, the Japanese government has actively lobbied the international community for the realization of human security. When the UN Secretary General Kofi Annan visited Japan in 2001, Japanese Prime Minister Mori proposed the creation of a “Commission on Human Security” co-chaired by Sadako Ogata, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, and Amartya Sen, the President of Trinity College, University of Cambridge, and Nobel Prize winner in economics. After two years of discussions, the committee worked to develop a concept and guidelines for human security, and submitted its report to Prime Minister Koizumi in February 2003 and to UN Secretary General Kofi Annan in May of the same year. Subsequently, Japan has worked to disseminate the concept through such efforts as the launch of the Friends of Human Security meeting in 2006 and contributing to the adoption of the first UN General Assembly resolution on human security in 2010. In addition, the Japanese government contributed approximately JPY 500 million to establish the Fund for Human Security at the UN in March 1999. Since then, the Japanese government has contributed a cumulative total of approximately JPY 47.8 billion to the Fund through FY 2019, supporting a total of 257 projects in 99 countries and regions [
46].
Therefore, it is inaccurate to say that Japan has not meaningfully considered nor discussed climate change as a security issue. In fact, the latest research findings on climate security in Japan attest to this fact. Specifically, in his paper titled “Transforming the Dynamics of Climate Politics in Japan: Business’ Response to Securitization”, Takahiro Yamada [
26] reiterates the need to revisit the question of when the implementation, and thus the securitization, of climate security is considered successful. In summary, future researchers should note that other contexts may also need to be revisited, fine-tuned and repackaged. In this context, existing research on the pivotal position of Keidanren—the powerful Japanese confederation of industries—in Japan’s climate policy needs to be upgraded. Researchers may want to showcase why Keidanren is not merely an influential actor but a policymaker to reckon with. Its website is a mine of information waiting to be exploited, especially in relation to the decarbonization agenda (see [
47]).
3.2. Why Did Climate Security Struggle to Become a Major Political Theme in Japan until 2020?
For reasons of space limitations, it is impossible to cover every major factor that may well explain this question and thus the slow progress of climate security research in Japan. To begin with, the role of certain ministries is particularly noteworthy in Japan, where the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) and the MOE are the heavyweights in climate change policymaking. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) oversees other ministries when they contribute to climate change policymaking, pertains to Japan’s position at the international level, and helps build inter-ministerial consensuses. The Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism (MLIT) will always play a role in any discussion involving emissions from the transportation sector.
Few (if any) previous studies have examined perhaps the four most important among these factors (the scarcity of systematic research on climate security in Japan, regional imbalance, the METI–MOE inter-ministerial rivalry, and thematic imbalance or the dynamism between environmental security and climate security). In relation to the scarcity of research, Kameyama and Ono [
1] and Kameyama and Takamura [
4] provide insight into this issue. To shed light on this, Kameyama and Ono [
1], arguing that climate security seems to have become more popular in Japan since around 2020, trace climate security discourses to determine why so little exists in Japan before this period and whether such discourses could inform more comprehensive responses to the climate change issue. According to Kameyama and Ono, two approaches to climate security (short-term sudden risks to individuals and long-term irreversible global change) have been considered in Japan, even though the term climate security is not specifically mentioned, but the other two approaches (impacts to military and defense organizations, and causes of conflict and violence) have not been discussed and need to be incorporated in the discussions in Japan. They also clarified that these omissions are partly due to the different interpretations and usages of the term climate security in the existing literature.
Future research can make an important contribution by considering the following four factors, as there is a scarcity of research works that do so in a single paper. First, the scarcity of systematic research on climate security has affected policy progress in Japan. In the collection edited by Kameyama and Takamura, four contributors urge future research to provide more “systematic” examinations of and explanations on climate security. We belief, as Kameyama and Takamura [
4] write, that no matter how climate security is conceptualized theoretically, the concept ought to be fully deployed as a tool to promote not simply coordinated collaboration but, as Ide et al. [
31] point out, the gathering of more systematic data in order to better clarify the referent in need of protection and thus whose security is at stake. The same can be said for Räisänen et al. [
29], who argue that climate risks are not always followed in a systematic and coordinated way, and for Jakobsson [
33], (p. 16) who not only “systematically” answers her research question but takes issue with existing research on the ground that—despite scholarly focus on normative dimensions, institutional expansion, securitization and the conceptualization of discourse—not a single study covering the 2007–2010 period attempts to systematically articulate why the policy debate on climate-related migration surges in this specific period. In parallel, bearing in mind that some degree of complementarity always exists between academic contribution and policy initiative, Hardt’s [
32] pro-logic theory in the conclusion section of her paper states that future research needs to investigate the scientific research on the climate–security nexus more systematically because the main articulations on this nexus ignore key scholarly articulations of climate security, especially the Anthropocene dimension that is yet to become a topical topic among Security Council members.
The second factor is what Kameyama and Takamura [
4] identify as the problem of regional imbalance. This problem stems from the fact that most of the literature on climate change and security published to date has been written by authors from North America and the European Union [
4,
15,
34]. Kameyama and Takamura urge for more voices from other regions (such as Asia) because there are few experts and few case reports from these regions. This is an obvious lack of knowledge that deserves attention, and the scarcity of case reports that could compensate for this lacuna make research such as the present study timely and compelling. Although this claim only reemphasizes a prominently highlighted lacuna in existing literature, on the other hand, we contribute by suggesting the issue of regional imbalance as a major cause of the paucity of climate security discussions in Japan. Evidence of this suggestion can be supported with related statements made by some contributors to the collection of articles edited by Kameyama and Takamura [
4]. For example, bearing in mind that the tendency of cases focusing on particularly vulnerable regions or large countries is suggestive of the need for long overdue wider geographic coverage [
29], climate security has been accorded low priority in Japan compared to the academically trending status of this concept in the West [
4,
26], and “the recent emergence of security-related climate change rhetoric in Japan has not yet been covered in the academic literature” [
27] (p. 54). Hasui and Komatsu [
28] are quite explicit: the perspective of climate security is rare in Japan. There are two avenues at scholars’ and policymakers’ disposal when seeking to further address the problem of regional imbalance. First, commissioning more systematic, country- or region-focused projects, and second, increasing the participation of non-European researchers in such projects (this study is a clear example of how to meet both requirements).
We suggest there is high likelihood that progress on climate security has been (and is being) impeded by the METI–MOE inter-ministerial rivalry (the third factor). Previous studies referring to this rivalry have attempted to answer the question of why climate security has struggled to become a major political theme in Japan. In recent studies, Koppenborg and Hanssen [
27] only briefly touched on the role of political parties, while Hasui and Komatsu [
28] addressed hypotheses such as the lack of dynamism among parties and the dearth of scholarly interest in climate security. With more disagreement than agreement so far, not only is there room for improvement in these areas if future research is to satisfactorily answer the discussed question, but it is also necessary to correctly understand the rivalry which, to some degree, may not be separated from domestic climate politics and is actually related to the involvement of political parties in the policy process.
Despite this rivalry and the METI’s and Liberal Democratic Party’s consistent support for industry’s lack of enthusiasm toward decarbonization—which has dictated the tone of Japan’s basic energy plans [
26]—policy action on climate security should progress. This perspective is congruent with Hasui and Komatsu’s [
28] description regarding the introduction of a unique climate security concept into security policy in Japan as an enabler of preserving environmental protection and national security values. While that unique development represents, at a minimum, an obvious securitization move, climate securitization is a difficult process partly because the success of a securitizing move depends on a variety of factors. According to Yamada [
26], one such factor is the mismatch between the scale of the climate crisis and the identity of the actors tasked with addressing this crisis, as the Japanese case seems to exemplify rather explicitly. This is another interesting insight to note, partly because in the same collection in which Yamada makes this claim, Koppenborg and Hanssen [
27] identify civil society, city, parliament, and government as key actors that frame climate change in Japanese climate policy. They cite several framings made by these actors. For example, the Japanese Diet states (in its declaration on climate emergency): “we share the global perception that ‘the global warming problem now has exceeded the realm of climate change and entered into a situation of climate crisis’” [
27] (p. 60). Future research needs to explain how the operationalization of the concepts of power and securitization drives who can and who cannot participate in the securitization process. It is equally important to explain what subalterns need to do to gain access to the privileged securitization arena where their fate is often debated and rubber-stamped in relation to the climate measures needed to protect them. It should also be noted that a more practical way to make climate action more effective is to define climate security in a universal way.
As Japan embarks on its decarbonization journey, there has been a growing increase in the number of authors discussing the METI–MOE rivalry. However, it remains unclear whether the METI or the MOE is the most influential actor in domestic securitization. The MOE, as Yamada [
26] recounts, is considered a prime candidate for a domestic securitizing actor because the MOE-led coalition of securitization-inclined government officials has created a pre-emptive regulatory environment for decarbonization. This is a clear position on climate security. As this coalition has adopted a securitization formula that calls for special measures outside of normal political procedures, establishing climate securitization as a new minor discourse [
27], the MOE has implemented policies aimed at social change for disaster reduction [
28]. Policy implementation may have benefitted from a
special privilege.
Based on the papers published in the collection edited by Kameyama and Takamura ([
4], see especially [
26,
27,
28]), studies on climate securitization typically present the MOE, the METI—often in favour of Keidanren’s position on climate policy and vice versa—and the MOFA as key actors with the authority to address climate change and develop national climate policies, including climate security policy. With the government largely taking a back-seat role where the METI advocates energy efficiency and economic growth, and as the MOE pushes for strengthened environmental climate action, the power tussle often favors the METI and the (heavy) industries it represents [
27,
48,
49]. Even so, this is not always the case. The prime minister and the foreign ministry sometimes supported MOE’s climate policy decisions over those proposed by the METI. For example, in 2008, the MOE wanted to set the emission reduction target at the national level, but the METI strongly opposed the idea, resulting in then Prime Minister Fukuda’s intervention which decided that Japan would accept a certain level of target [
48]. Still, while the administration of the then Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and Chief Cabinet Secretary Yoshihide Suga usually supported the METI [
49], other important actors included the Ministry of Defense (who have not yet substantially addressed climate change countermeasures [
28] but established an internal task force on climate change in May 2021), the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, and the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport.
Given that these influential ministries do not mutually define climate security, researchers need to be more explicit about the timing, rationale and procedures of the major climate actions implemented (or likely to be implemented) by each ministry, taking into account the distinctive features of the climate security debate. Although the MOE’s articulation could be seen as the beginning of a mutual definition, more research is needed on three important fronts. First, outlining how the lack of a widely accepted definition has hindered clear policymaking on climate security in Japan. This difficulty arises not only because climate security and environmental security require more comprehensive and systematic research; the mainstream approaches adopted by Japanese researchers diverge from the main approaches to environmental security policy research in the West [
28,
42]. Second, ensuring that climate measures contribute to climate security for all involved countries, to initiatives in line with Japan’s notion of climate security, and to protecting citizens from climate threats [
41]. Third, identifying insights that may be gleaned from Japan’s emphasis on a bottom-up approach to policymaking, because it seems to be the case that policy feasibility seems to be more important than ambition [
49].
Ken Sofer [
50] provides a compelling empirical account of climate politics and the development of Japan’s energy goals, and how these forces both complicate and provide opportunities for cooperation on the climate crisis. Based on an analysis of interview transcripts, he examined the role of political parties, parliament, public opinion, the decision-making process of the bureaucracy, and the balance of power between the interest groups. In what Incerti and Lipscyv [
51] label Abenergynomics, the Abe Shinzō administration adopted energy policy as a tool to foster the economic growth goals of Abenomics, even when the associated policies were clearly unpopular with the public, opposed by the power companies, or very toxic to the environment. During that period, the METI–MOE rivalry over climate policy intensified. Especially since the 2012 elections, these rivals, and to a lesser extent the MOFA, have had the privilege of almost complete control and management of Japan’s domestic policy (environmental and energy policy) and international climate policy, with minimum input from both the party leadership and the Diet or the Prime Minister’s Office (known as the arbiter that keeps rivals from each other’s throats). In this “unhealthy” competitive environment, Japan’s leadership position in global climate governance has been severely diminished and this has been detrimental to the status and progress of domestic climate security action. Interestingly, this has contributed to Tokyo’s desire to regain its leading position in global climate governance. Charity, as you will agree, begins in one’s own country or regional affiliation. With this in mind, Japan can regain the lost position by setting up more climate initiatives and following them up decisively.
As a better alternative to previous studies, future studies should complement Sofer’s useful insights. In particular, the focus on climate security [
27,
28] and climate politics/policymaking [
49,
50,
51,
52] allowed these authors to provide more detailed information. However, combining these topics into a single manuscript would help the reader to infer their relevance in the context of the issue of the universal definition of climate security, which may not be completely separable from environmental security. Climate security and environmental security have been extensively studied by Western researchers. They have been understudied in Japan. Prudence is important when exploring very early studies on environmental security and climate security that were published in Japanese [
53,
54,
55,
56]. This is because these two concepts do not always lend themselves to simple understanding.
The fourth factor is the dynamism between climate security, environmental security and human security. Given that these concepts are essentially true to the spirit of protecting human needs, it is possible to reasonably make similar comparisons between them while acknowledging, in terms of the intersections between the concepts, content and structural differences between them. This dynamism is useful, but it can sometimes display what we call thematic imbalance. The idea that climate change will adversely affect the material and social stability necessary for preserving human security is part of the concept of climate security, which is generally included as part of the human security agenda in Japan [
9,
10]. The tendency to consider climate security as part of the latter, and sometimes as part of environmental security, has not helped in clarifying what may be perceived as confusion whenever these different concepts are interchangeably implemented in Japan. This
policy practice is common when these concepts are not properly distinguished, this is precisely what is meant by thematic imbalance. The first research project co-funded by the MOE and the Environmental Restoration and Conservation Agency contributed to this point by reorganizing those concepts, including important related ideas, and applying them to Japan and the Asia-Pacific region. By moving beyond dominant narratives on concepts to the emerging decarbonization agenda, future research should rigorously and systematically discuss the level and extent of Japan’s participation in the climate security debate, including contributions (if any) to defining climate security. It is also essential to fully explain the possible reasons why climate security is less familiar in Japan than in the international community. It is hoped that future qualitative researchers will fully elucidate thematic imbalance, including what needs to be done to avoid it. One way to do this is through thematic analysis, which is useful for interpreting trends in textual data (especially interview transcripts).
On this point, defining climate security and environmental security has long been of interest to some Japanese researchers. A good example of closely related discussion can be found in research published by Norichika Kanie [
56] in 2007 (whose title translates into “Towards the formation of climate security: The truth of high-politicising environmental politics”). Kanie suggests the importance of “structural climate security” to explain the need for a new world order and new international institutions based on it. While there is a move to prioritize frameworks for cooperation between countries in the new world order, Japanese policymakers begun discussing climate security at the International Climate Change Strategy Global Environment Committee meeting (within the Central Environment Council) in February 2007 [
42]. This is a very interesting testimony to the fact that Japan, as a global actor, has sought to meaningfully address climate security.
Another noteworthy example is Seiichiro Hasui, who published his paper in English. Hasui [
42], highlighting that the same argument can be made when considering the different concepts of climate security and environmental security, noted that the discussion of climate security on the global stage began with the remarks of the then United Kingdom Foreign Secretary Margaret Beckett at the UN General Assembly in September 2006 and at the UN Security Council in April 2007. Hasui believed that climate change security theory is very complex and that its meaning can change slightly depending on who uses it, and classified such meanings into the security
of climate, through climate policy, for climate protection and problems caused by climate change. While these definitions were made in 2011 and remain largely the same and valid today, the latter—security problems arising from climate change—should be prioritized in future research, and not merely because of their socio-political value and disabling effect on the economy. This is particularly so because climate-related environmental change and degradation remain a major concern. All this should receive more attention in future research.
3.3. Why Did Japan Explicitly Start Dealing with Climate Security as a Policy Issue in 2020?
There are several answers to this question. A series of major events in the global arena likely caused a sudden heightened interest in climate risk in the 2020–2021 period in both the Japanese public and private sectors. A remarkable shift in the global climate debate with regard to the development of new dimensions of public discourse in 2019 likely produced a similar effect. Across the world, a wave of environmental and climate emergency declarations simultaneously emerged around this period [
24,
27], paralleled by another notable development: the United Kingdom became the first country to legislate a zero-emission target for 2050 [
28]. Researchers have noted similar developments in the past. For example, according to a policy piece by Anthony Giddens [
57] in 2008, climate issues have remarkably and rapidly moved to the center stage of public debate, generating vast literature from scientists, other scholars, and journalists. Giddens also notes that, as scientists continue to express serious concerns about global warming, the issue now receives almost daily media coverage; however, environmental groups are struggling to push governments and citizens to take the issue more seriously.
Other reasons that may well explain this development include, first, the emergence of a global decarbonization agenda, and second, when it comes to a decarbonized society, there is a growing realization that climate change has entered the climate crisis phase in all areas of Japan, and that the METI and the MOE are, in the words of Shinjirō Koizumi, “not enemies’’ [
27] (p. 60). Multiple dovetailing factors contributed to that development. For example, the international debate on climate and security (both policy and academic), the UN Security Council’s interest in climate-related security risks, national declarations on climate security, the nascent (but budding) political interest in climate security in Japan, the influence of climate securitization on the position of the Japanese business community, Japan’s determination to maintain a leading role in further promoting and implementing its human security agenda, and the link between nature-based solutions and climate security. There has also been growing momentum in the private sector for companies to disclose climate risks as part of international financial reporting standards. In this context, Kameyama et al. [
58] contributed to the first research project led by Kameyama [
10]. They interviewed 11 Japanese companies to ascertain their perceptions of climate-related risks. While it is difficult to accurately assess the exact impacts of climate change and the extent of such impacts, the results showed that companies operate in an era in which investors are expected to prepare for these risks, have a high awareness of some risks, and are preparing or considering ways to confront them; however, some companies do not consider climate risks [
58]. That said, the Paris Agreement became operational in 2020, and President Joe Biden made climate change a central issue in United States foreign policy in 2021.
In today’s academic and policy spheres, it is becoming increasingly popular to discuss climate security in terms of global decarbonization and energy transition. However, diverse conceptualizations of decarbonization, low carbon transition, low carbon development, and the interrelationships among these concepts have created unclarity [
59]. Moreover, there could be security implications of responses to climate change in the form of low carbon development [
60]. The scoping review by Klopfer et al. [
15] conveys an important message: ongoing shifts imply the need for a comprehensive overview of how climate change impacts have been evaluated. This implies that only a limited number of (non)systematic reviews have been conducted on conceptual frameworks applied to evaluate these impacts in urban areas, and therefore implies the difficulty of obtaining the main directions and key methods in closely related areas. In parallel, Pham and Saner [
11] point out that the notion of inclusiveness has been underrepresented with respect to both sentient nonhuman animals and the interests of future generations, and emphasize the need for conceptual and empirical research because of the lack of reviews focused on the issue of inclusive climate adaptation.
Japan’s sudden legalization of its decarbonized target in May 2021 was in part a response to notable developments at the global level. Nonetheless, focusing on the Indo-Pacific region (where Japan remains a major geopolitical player), some innovative research projects and policy initiatives led by Japan should enhance our understanding of the decarbonization program. For example, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe launched the “Free and Open Indo-Pacific” foreign policy strategy in 2016, presenting it as a key for the prosperity, peace and stability of the international community through the dynamism of integrating two continents (fast-growing Asia and Africa with its enormous growth potential) and two oceans (the Pacific and Indian Oceans). With this strategy, Japan seeks to expand its diplomatic clout by promoting the Indo-Pacific region as a free and open international public good, as an active participant in the rules-based international order, and, in particular, as a region that will benefit from Japan’s readiness to foster greater cooperation and coordination in the area of disaster relief and humanitarian aid provision.
Due to the Indo-Pacific region’s increasing challenges, such as human security and climate issues, Japan’s Indo-Pacific strategy is all the more important. This strategy is intensifying at a time when the United States and its allies are quickly shifting their gaze to the region, which: covers the Indian Ocean and the Pacific coastline; is the typical residential site of more than half of the global population; is home to almost 65 percent of the global economy; and is the epicenter of the climate crisis and thus central to climate solutions. However, Japan is not the sole innovator of the Indo-Pacific strategy because the notion of an Indo Pacific-based economic corridor was mooted when India and the United States held a strategic dialogue in 2013. On few occasions thereafter, the then Prime Minister Shinzo Abe talked with Indian Prime Minister Modi about how to progress this notion. In February 2022, the long-expected United States’ Indo
-Pacific strategy was announced by the Biden administration. The United States’ strategy, similar to Japan’s strategy, comprises an economic framework that will assist countries to adapt to the climate and energy transition, among others. According to the White House [
61], Indo-Pacific countries are key players in defining the nature of the international order in today’s rapidly changing strategic landscape, and the United States and its partners worldwide have a stake in the outcome.
Useful in this context is a project sponsored by the Sasakawa Peace Foundation, Japan’s largest private foundation. Nine scholars contributed to the main outcome of this project: a book entitled
Climate Security: Global Warming and A Free and Open Indo-Pacific that was published in 2021 [
62]. In addition to this book being the first published on this subject in Japan, Yasuko Kameyama, Director of the Center for Socio-Environmental Systems Research at the National Institute for Environmental Studies, and Keiji Ono, Research Fellow at the National Institute for Defense Studies, published a co-authored paper on climate security in Japan in an international journal [
1] and issued a press release in October 2020 titled “What is climate security?” In addition to these scholarly contributions being one of the reasons why the Japanese society gradually became interested in this topic, the Nikkei and Asahi, the two influential Japanese newspapers, published a series of column articles on climate security one after another in April 2021. In May 2021, the Ministry of Defense newly established an internal “Climate Change Task Force” under the Senior Vice Minister to study the impact of climate change on security. It can be said that 2021 was the starting year for climate security discourse in Japan. This is similar to the establishment of the “Climate Diplomacy Task Force” within the MOFA in May 2018 to strengthen cross-sectoral efforts within the Ministry and promote climate change diplomacy more actively and effectively [
63].
Additionally, of relevance is Tangney et al.’s [
64] explanation regarding why the Indo-Pacific region, due to ongoing socio-political and environmental challenges as well as existing tensions within and among neighboring countries, is an important case study for understanding two important considerations in terms of climate security. According to the systematic review and the synthesis of academic and grey literatures conducted by Tangney et al. [
64], these considerations are, first, the interdependence of climate adaptation and regional security challenges in the Indo-Pacific region, and second, the four main themes that are prominent in discussions and analyses by governments, NGOs, and academics. These themes consist of the maintenance and enhancement of climate security in the Indo-Pacific, governments’ abilities to identify and resolve climate maladaptive pathway dependencies, governments’ abilities to manage finite resources efficiently, and governments’ readiness to cooperate despite inherent tensions [
64]. In parallel, Sharifi et al. [
65] identify four major thematic focus areas, namely, climatic impacts that may lead to large-scale human displacements, war and violent conflict, institutional mechanisms for addressing political tensions and conflicts, and cooperation/conflicts related to water resources.
This is an important reason why Japan should continue prioritizing a clear, focused, and decisive involvement in the global climate security debate as an indispensable aspect of its domestic climate change agenda (see
Table 1). Especially in some Indo-Pacific countries that are characterized by unstable governance structures and questionable governmental legitimacy, a variety of challenges may negatively affect regional security in the form of cascading climate security concerns, such as ongoing human security issues related to resource conflicts and forced migration between jurisdictions [
66,
67]. Against this background, the climate geopolitics of the Indo-Pacific region is directly relevant to Japan’s climate policy and will become more integral after 2022. With the Indo-Pacific being a region where climate-induced conflict within and between countries can affect the stability of communities and institutions in the greater regions, studying this region’s climate politics is an effective way of bringing more attention to both the political dynamics in the region and the larger framework of global climate governance that the region offers [
68,
69]. This perspective is particularly useful, partly because ensuring human security is the cornerstone of the Free and Open Indo-Pacific diplomatic strategy. In many cases, opportunities remain for responsiveness to decision-making involving the environment and security interactions more holistically, even if future scenarios on climate politics, socio-economics, and their impact on climate security links are highly uncertain [
17,
70]. Important in this regard is the systematic review of 1,337 articles conducted by Sharifi et al. [
65]. One of their major findings emphasizes how three decades of research on the interactions between climate change and negative peace-impairing events has focused primarily on war and violent conflict, with little focus on other important developments. Conceivably, while one of these developments is Japan’s Free and Open Indo-Pacific diplomatic strategy, this finding not only informs climate security research and policymaking but is also consistent with Pearson and Newman’s paper. Pearson and Newman’s [
17] (p. 2) systematic review contributes to “the broader and expanding field of climate security” by pinpointing the difficulty of neatly categorizing types of conflicts and the various groups—sometimes unclearly documented—identified by previous literature. Perhaps more interesting is Williams and McDuie-Ra’s [
68] (p. 10) argument: there are different narratives of climate security which are “also constructed as vulnerabilities that undermine human security”.
Table 1 is compelling for future research, as it derives important findings for advancing the global climate security debate and Japan’s involvement in it. With this table in view, future studies following Williams and McDuie-Ra’s [
68] argument would be compelling not only in relation to the table but especially for fresh information on how climate change has been constructed and politically shaped by national, regional, and global climate politics, which in turn has shaped the climate change debate.