DGAP’s Center for Climate and Foreign Policy assesses the societal and geoeconomic impacts of climate change. The interdisciplinary team builds on scientific findings to develop policy recommendations for a coherent German foreign policy at the interface of climate security and human security.
Main Topics:
- Relevance of climate change for German security policy
- Coherence in response to the climate crisis given the interrelationship between the domestic and foreign policy dimensions of climate policy
- Consequences of climate migration and displacement worldwide
- Geoeconomic dimensions of the climate crisis: German climate and energy policy and international climate diplomacy
- Role of civilian crisis prevention in hindering the escalation of resource conflicts
- International legal dimensions of the climate crisis
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Experts
Publications
Safeguarding International Climate Protection Against the Trump Agenda
Germany’s Climate Foreign Policy Strategy
US Elections and European Cohesion: Scenarios for Green Transitions and Transatlantic Climate Action
Brüche im Generationenvertrag
Bildung, Gesundheit, Sicherheit: Schon heute schränken Klimafolgen die Entwicklung von Kindern und Jugendlichen weltweit ein. Noch stehen Wege aus der Krise offen.
Keine Heimat zum Aufwachsen
Wenn Klimafolgen und Konflikte sich gegenseitig verstärken und Menschen zur Flucht zwingen, leiden Kinder und Jugendliche besonders. Im Gepäck ist oft nicht mehr als die Hoffnung auf bewohnbare Orte und eine sichere Perspektive.
Media Center
A Week of Decisions: Germany’s Capacity to Act After US Elections & Government Crisis
Chinese Electric Vehicles and the Looming EU-China Trade Conflict
In the media
Events
Special DGAP Morning Briefing: COP29
Past events
A Holistic Approach to Climate-Resilient, Just Development: Translating Evidence into Action
Navigating Triple Up, Double Down Through Geopolitics with Multilateral Initiatives
Dialogue Process on the Federal Government’s Climate Foreign Policy Strategy
Meeting Migrants’ Needs through the Loss & Damage Fund
Sturmnomaden: Wie der Klimawandel uns Menschen die Heimat raubt
Wissenschaft trifft Kultur: Migration und Identität in der Klimakrise
Announcements
Projects
Glossary
Agriculture, Forestry, and Other Land Uses (AFOLU)
“Agriculture, Forestry, and Other Land Uses” (AFOLU) is a collective term that refers to human use of and influence on land areas.
Business-As-Usual Scenario
The Business-As-Usual (BAU) scenario describes the development of the concentration of greenhouse gas emissions in the atmosphere under the assumption that no further efforts to reduce emissions will be made. It is used in climate models to examine inaction in the areas of climate politics, social behavior, and technological progress and the consequences this inaction will have for climate impacts that will affect societies and natural systems in the future.
Climate Foreign Policy
Climate foreign policy encompasses the issue areas of climate protection, adaptation, prevention, and management of climate-related crises, in which national interests converge or conflict with those of other countries.
Climate Justice
Climate Justice is a normative concept that considers man-made climate change as an ethical and social problem. It consists of two main aspects: justice in terms of responsibility for climate change and justice in terms of the impacts of climate change. Populations in poor countries are disproportionately affected by climate impacts.
Climate Migration
Climate migration or climate-induced migration describes the permanent or temporary change of location of an individual or group of people due to environmental changes caused by global warming.
Common But Differentiated Responsibilities (CBDR)
The principle of Common But Differentiated Responsibilities (CBDR) establishes the common governmental responsibility for anthropogenic climate change and the environmental destruction associated with it. It acknowledges that responsibility among countries is unequally distributed due to their differing contributions to the causes of climate change and their varying economic capacities.
Ecocide
In international criminal law as well as in European and national criminal law, the term “ecocide” refers to criminal liability for massive damage to or the destruction of ecosystems by human actions.
Energy Security
According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), “energy security” is defined as the “uninterrupted availability of energy sources at an affordable price.”
Green Industrial Policy
Industrial policy becomes green when decarbonized economic activity and respect for other planetary boundaries become government objectives that are as important as social welfare. Green industrial policy is now at the top of the political agenda in many countries because it is essential for addressing those socio-environmental challenges that markets do not usually solve alone.
Hope
Amid multiple crises and slow progress on climate protection, hope is elusive. Yet hope is a key ingredient in climate foreign policy.
Intergenerational Justice
The concept of Intergenerational Justice is characterized by the question of what kind of world those living today will leave to their children and grandchildren. According to this concept, it is essential that different generations have an equal level of opportunity and quality of life, and that material resources are distributed equitably across them.
Just Energy Transition Partnerships
Just Energy Transition Partnerships (JETPs) are a new plurilateral structure for accelerating the phase-out of fossil fuels. These intergovernmental partnerships coordinate financial resources and technical assistance from countries in the Global North to a recipient country to help it in this regard. To date, JETPs have targeted emerging economies that produce and consume coal on a large scale.