A Lot of Talk, But Little Action—The Blind Spots of Nordic Environmental Security Policy
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Turning Environmental Security into Policy
3. Materials and Methods
4. Results: Environmental Security Policies in Finland and Sweden
4.1. Policies for Local Environmental Security Impacts in Finland and Sweden
4.2. Policies for Geopolitical Environmental Security Impacts in Finland and Sweden
4.3. Policies for Structural Environmental Security Impacts in Finland and Sweden
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
- Further inter-disciplinary research is needed on the geopolitical and structural environmental security impacts. The current level of knowledge is inadequate to guide well-grounded policy-making. In addition to the kind of country-specific assessments already carried out in Finland and Sweden, there is still a need for basic research to develop methodologies to understand the security consequences of global power relations and resource flows or of adaptation and mitigation. Inter-disciplinarity, also between natural and social sciences, should be encouraged in order to consider the geopolitical and structural impacts of different IPCC scenarios, for instance.
- Coordination and exchange of information between researchers and policy-makers on environmental security issues. Our analysis has shown that in the case of all environmental security impacts, policy implementation often remains inadequate. A closer interchange between researchers and policy-makers or practitioners can help to raise awareness on the potential consequences and the need for effective policy responses. For researchers, on the other hand, it gives access to invaluable information and insight from the practitioners.
- Integration of environmental change and its mitigation into risk assessments and scenario-building on various sectors. It is becoming increasingly clear that both environmental changes and actions to mitigate and adapt to them will be significant. Therefore, any risk assessments or future scenario work has to reflect this and take them into account as factors. This also concerns sectors like foreign policy and security that are not traditionally considered to be linked to the environment.
- Establishment of a comprehensive environmental security approach through a strategy or action plan. Due to the multi-sectoral character of environmental security impacts as well as the relative novelty of the concept itself, it is necessary to spell out its implications to the various actors involved. A strategy or action plan will be useful here as a point of reference to direct and coordinate work across sectors.
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Local Impacts | |||
---|---|---|---|
Possible impacts | Geographic scope | Time frame | Scale |
Storms, floods, droughts, heat waves and other extreme weather events | Local, regional | Short to long term | Sectoral, cross-sectoral |
Geopolitical Impacts | |||
Possible impacts | Geographic scope | Time frame | Scale |
Conflict, migration, food shortages, disruptions in energy production, disruptions in resource flows | Regional, global | Short to long term | Cross-sectoral |
Structural Impacts | |||
Possible impacts | Geographic scope | Time frame | Scale |
Systemic shock in energy production patterns, failure of economic production system, erosion of democratic governance | Local, regional, global | Long term | System-level |
Impacts Recognised in Assessments | Impacts Recognised in Policies/Strategies | Policy Measures Adopted | |
---|---|---|---|
Finland | Precipitation, flooding, temperature rise, disruptions in transportation, water management, health, forestry, agriculture and fishery, infrastructure, energy | Environmental accidents, environmental change | Natural disaster warning system; cross-sectoral coordination |
Sweden | Precipitation, flooding, heat waves, disruptions in transportation, water management, health, areal livelihoods, infrastructure, energy | Flooding, sea level rise, heat waves | Working group for environmental accidents; Network for climate adaptation |
Impacts Recognised in Assessments | Impacts Recognised in Policies/Strategies | Policy Measures Adopted | |
---|---|---|---|
Finland | Economic production, energy, transport, migration, health, biodiversity, development cooperation | Sustainable development, migration, the Arctic region, security of supply | Potential for inclusion in security of supply policy (domestic); partially included in peace-building (international) |
Sweden | Migration, livelihoods, food security, transport, energy | Global risks of conflict, poverty, lack of food or water, migration | Engagement at UN Security Council, Climate Security Hub, Proposal for an institutional home for climate security at the UN |
Impacts Recognised in Assessments | Impacts Recognised in Policies/Strategies | Policy Measures Adopted | |
---|---|---|---|
Finland | Energy security | Climate change mitigation and adaptation | None |
Sweden | Energy security | Climate change mitigation and adaptation | None |
Policy Framework in Place | |||
---|---|---|---|
Local | Geopolitical | Structural | |
Finland | Extensive | Weak | None |
Sweden | Extensive | Average | None |
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Hakala, E.; Lähde, V.; Majava, A.; Toivanen, T.; Vadén, T.; Järvensivu, P.; Eronen, J.T. A Lot of Talk, But Little Action—The Blind Spots of Nordic Environmental Security Policy. Sustainability 2019, 11, 2379. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11082379
Hakala E, Lähde V, Majava A, Toivanen T, Vadén T, Järvensivu P, Eronen JT. A Lot of Talk, But Little Action—The Blind Spots of Nordic Environmental Security Policy. Sustainability. 2019; 11(8):2379. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11082379
Chicago/Turabian StyleHakala, Emma, Ville Lähde, Antti Majava, Tero Toivanen, Tere Vadén, Paavo Järvensivu, and Jussi T. Eronen. 2019. "A Lot of Talk, But Little Action—The Blind Spots of Nordic Environmental Security Policy" Sustainability 11, no. 8: 2379. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11082379
APA StyleHakala, E., Lähde, V., Majava, A., Toivanen, T., Vadén, T., Järvensivu, P., & Eronen, J. T. (2019). A Lot of Talk, But Little Action—The Blind Spots of Nordic Environmental Security Policy. Sustainability, 11(8), 2379. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11082379