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Title: The Climate Impacts of Trump II
Approx. Reading Time: 9 minutes
Author: Laurie Laybourn

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The Climate Impacts of Trump II

A second Trump presidency is bad news for efforts to limit climate disruption. Laurie Laybourn argues US emissions will be higher, partly because Trump is beholden to fossil fuel interests and partly because he will try to reverse the Biden administration’s shift towards activist government, which was crowding in private investment and accelerating decarbonisation. Ultimately, Trump could be the first post-1.5°C president. Global climate efforts will need to work out how to deepen cooperation even as climate consequences rapidly escalate and while facing an isolationist US administration.

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Trump, Putin, Ukraine and European Security: a period of radical uncertainty

Donald Trump doesn’t think of the world in terms of a grand strategy. Rather, he combines an unpredictable and disruptive leadership style and a transactional approach to allies and adversaries alike. His electoral victory heralds a new era for European security. Unless Europeans can step up and take on much of the role currently undertaken by the US, the region could face growing uncertainty and conflict.

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The Trump Cascades

In early 2023, not for the first time, we made the case that inter-systemic risk would become the defining characteristic of the future political and geostrategic landscape. World leaders would be overwhelmed by complexity, radical uncertainty and bewildering rates of change. The impacts of the incoming Trump administration and the influence of the ‘libertarian right’ cannot be understood in conventional risk and opportunity terms, or as the sum of individual policies.

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Trump’s Trade Tariffs

Donald Trump’s frustration at the US trade deficit is justified. However, import tariffs are a poor way to go about addressing this issue. Capital controls would get to the root of trade imbalances more effectively than tariffs while doing less damage to the international trade system. Like previous administrations, the incoming Trump one is likely to eschew this route.

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What China Wants: control at home, power abroad

Chinese equites have recovered sharply since their summer lows, but whether this can be sustained depends—in the short-term—on the economic outlook, which in turn de-pends to a significant extent on policy announcements due in November. Over the long-er term, confidence in China as a place to invest, be it physical or portfolio capital, will also be determined by how the country manages its global economic role and the actions it takes to project power and influence.

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Title: Climate Runs Amo(c)k
Approx. Reading Time: 12 minutes
Author: David Drewry

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Climate Runs Amo(c)k

Global warming is contributing to the weakening of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC), a system of ocean currents that bring water from the tropics to the Northern Hemisphere—maintaining Western Europe’s temperate climate—and cold water towards the equator. Professor David Drewry argues that scientific studies pointing to a collapse of AMOC need to be taken more seriously. The consequences for Western Europe would be devastating: dramatically lower temperatures, most agricultural land rendered infertile, and mass migration southwards. Despite this grim prospect, our preparedness for collapse of the AMOC is negligible—all attention is focused on adapting to a hotter world.

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Title: AI Futures, Peace and War
Approx. Reading Time: 15 minutes
Author: Peter Kingsley, Dame Wendy Hall

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AI Futures, Peace and War

The next generation of strategic risk management must deliver a better understanding of systems, how events crystallise and propogate, and how imagined futures shape human responses. The grand challenge is to reinvent governance to match the demands of a potentially chaotic world dominated by the cascading impacts of poorly understood, fast-moving events that threaten fragmentation and breakdowns in trust. In other terms, the challenge is to shift from short-term reactive policy to foresight-driven, agenda-setting and pre-emptive action. Peter Kingsley and Dame Wendy Hall show that nowhere is the challenge as acute or urgent as in the deeply interconnected worlds of AI, peace and war.

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Title: Climate Change and the UK’s National Security Rethink
Approx. Reading Time: 7 minutes

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Climate Change and the UK’s National Security Rethink

The new UK government is undertaking a major rethink of national security and resilience policies. This is partly in response to the Covid-19 pandemic, which showed severe threats to security can come without malicious intent. Another non-malicious threat—climate change—should be at the heart of these new plans. However, writes Laurie Laybourn, government assessments do not adequately recognise the greatest security threats posed by climate change, particularly cascading risks and tipping points. As things stand, the UK is not resilient to even the most benign climate change impact scenarios. The government must remedy this.

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Title: Hypermedia Politics
Approx. Reading Time: 9 minutes
Author: Peter Kingsley

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Hypermedia Politics

In outtakes from the Nixon Tapes made by broadcaster David Frost, President Richard Nixon—who coined the term ‘the media’—said in effect that media owners often had more power than presidents. Media and politics have always been deeply intertwined. Contests over power to influence public opinion and emotion are nothing new. Peter Kingsley writes that what is new is that media power has crystallised at the intersection of populist autocrats, artificial intelligence (AI), deepfakes and social media at a critical moment for democracy and, above all, the United States.

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Briefing

Hybrid Threats, Secret Worlds

The wars in Ukraine, Gaza and Lebanon are reminders of the catastrophic consequences of conventional conflict. They also remind us that hybrid conflict and breakthroughs from the secret worlds of invention—particularly in AI—are transforming the security landscape. More importantly, layer upon layer of hybrid threats create ever-greater complexity, uncertainty and speed. With that, the challenges to policymakers, corporate strategists and financial services risk teams grow exponentially. Conventional risk modelling has few answers.

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The Living Planet Report and COP16: biodiversity in crisis

Two years ago, 196 countries agreed to reverse biodiversity loss and achieve a world living in harmony with nature by 2050. Meanwhile, the WWF is warning of a potential ecosystem collapse that would threaten global food security and livelihoods. As COP16 convenes in Cali, Colombia while both futures remain possible, is enough is being done to save our ecosystems?

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Is Global Warming Accelerating? An Update

The last 18 months have seen extraordinary temperature increases that have taken climate scientists by surprise, with 2024 set to break 2023’s record as the hottest year on record. Scientists had predicted this extreme outcome was a possibility, but not that it would manifest this soon or severely. This should act as a salutary lesson to focus our understanding of climate threats on what could be most extreme, rather than what might currently seem most likely. There would then be no surprises.

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Briefing

Europe: doomed to decline?

Europe is falling behind the United States and lacks the political will to do much about it. The direction of travel across the EU is towards more national control—that is, less integration of markets and pooling of debt, even if doing the latter would make all member-states wealthier. This makes it less likely that Europe will take its own defence more seriously, leaving it increasingly exposed to geopolitical risk.

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Germany: no longer the world’s moral authority?

Three eastern German states are now voting for far-right parties in record numbers. Despite “firewalls” against forming coalitions with them, the country’s mainstream politicians appear to still be bending to populists’ policy demands. This could help create a moral vacuum in the EU just as the US—depending on the result of November’s election—could be retreating from the region.

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Supply and Demand

Contrary to IMF data, global trade imbalances are growing once again. Addressing them will primarily require action on the part of the countries running trade surpluses, not least China. Unless this happens, global economic growth will remain sluggish and protectionist pressures will build, ultimately rebounding on every economy.

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Global Growth and Economic Security

The 10 percent fall in the S&P over the three weeks to early August set off alarm bells in global markets. By mid-month, a sense of calm had returned but market expectations have shifted, with the cyclical outlook for the world economy very much in the balance. More significantly, a whole spectrum of economic policymaking is playing out, with significant implications for asset markets and, hence, investors.

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On Language, Frames, Mood

Just a few weeks ago, many authoritative analysts held out little hope for the future of US democracy. Fear stalked the world. Suddenly, the atmosphere is positive again. Amongst the many explanations for the transformation created by Vice President Kamala Harris and Governor Tim Walz, the most important are language, frames and mood. They are also predictive.

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Amazonian Deforestation and Devastating Floods in Brazil’s South

Record-breaking floods in Brazil’s far south are the product of overly intensive agriculture but also deforestation in the country’s far north—particularly in the Amazon—which is altering weather patterns across the whole region. While preparations to keep people safe when the next extreme weather event arrives are key, thinking about how to prevent these disasters from getting worse is just as important.

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Imagined Futures, Narrative and Cultural Realities

Back in 2018 we explored the central role of imagined futures and narrative in shaping present-day cultural realities and decision-making. Six years on, we are re-publishing one of the defining essays on a theme that casts a light on everything from the US Presidential Election in November and in the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, to the role of ‘artificial general intelligence’ (AGI) in describing the future of artificial intelligence.

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A World of Cheap, Ubiquitous Energy?

Thanks to rapid advances in—and falling prices of—renewables and battery storage, the world could be on the cusp of an era of cheap, ubiquitous energy. This would reduce production costs and boost household incomes, driving stronger economic growth. It would also lead to a far more decentralised energy system, undercutting producer leverage and, with it, stoking geopolitical tensions. The flipside is that the coming stranded asset problem could be much bigger than previously thought.

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Making Change: the role of art

The future is all too often seen as only the province of science. The uncertainty of tomorrow is managed with backward-looking analysis, models and graphs projected forward to produce probabilities. In contrast, pre-Capitalist societies shaped their vision of the future through art and storytelling. If we want to create the future we need—one that is sustainable, equitable and peaceful—we should take the creative arts more seriously than we do.

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Disinformation, Toxic Swamp, Intent

Picture this: the bubble surrounding generative artificial intelligence (AI) and large language models (LLMs) begins to deflate. The hype turns to retrenchment. Investors turn to caution. Another variation of an ‘AI winter’ looms. This may seem an unlikely scenario, but the signs are there. There is momentum: in everything from concerns about security, to questions about ‘product’ performance, to the ethics and intentions of Big Tech.

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UK Election—All Change?

Can a Labour government improve the UK’s poor economic performance? As things stand, probably not by that much—not least because Labour continues to rule out rejoining the EU’s Single Market and Customs Union. However, faced with a poor economic inheritance, the new government might come to calculate that the risks of not rejoining—weaker growth, higher taxes, growing disillusionment among younger voters—outweigh those of reopening the issue.

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Hybrid Threats: escalation

The expression ‘hybrid threats’, or ‘hybrid war’, goes back decades. During this time, the security and military landscape has been transformed by waves of inventions by states, defence contractors and technology companies. The barriers to entry for developing lethal systems for non-state actors, terrorists and criminals continue to drop. So-called ‘dual use’ systems are pervasive, blurring boundaries between Big Tech and governments. Artificial intelligence and autonomous lethal weapons increase the risks of civilian casualties and miscalculation.

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Risk Assessment of Nuclear War: lessons for climate change

During the Cold War, government risk assessment inferred that nuclear conflict would be devastating but manageable. By the mid-eighties, improved analysis contributed to an understanding across society that nuclear war would indeed be catastrophic. Today, official risk assessments of climate change infer that even severe temperature rises could be manageable. A similar analytical fightback could give urgency to climate action.

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