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‘Silence the guns’ urges UN disarmament chief as global week of action begins

UN News Centre - Mon, 07/05/2018 - 23:25
The international community must present a united front against gun violence which kills nearly 250,000 each year and injures many more, said a senior United Nations official on Monday, marking the start of a Global Week of Action Against the scourge.

The First Saudi-Iranian War Will Be an Even Fight

Foreign Policy - Mon, 07/05/2018 - 23:16
What happens when the Saudi military's massive budget meets Iran's mastery of asymmetric warfare? Here's a preview.

UN forum to coordinate global efforts to address worsening water shortages

UN News Centre - Mon, 07/05/2018 - 20:29
With extreme weather costing hundreds of billions a year and fears that by 2050, one in four people will be living in a country affected by severe water shortages, a global conference got underway on Monday convened by the United Nations meteorological agency to manage the precious resource more sustainably.

Promesses économiques et démocratie surveillée

Le Monde Diplomatique - Mon, 07/05/2018 - 19:48
A la veille d'une élection qui, pensent certains, pourrait donner la victoire aux partis de gauche, la France offre un assez bon exemple de la dégradation de l'esprit démocratique. Non seulement parce que l'argent coule à flots, mais encore et surtout parce que les énormes moyens financiers mis en (...) / , , , , , - 1978/03

Largest-ever global response to cholera targets 2 million people in Africa

UN News Centre - Mon, 07/05/2018 - 19:03
The largest cholera vaccination drive in history targeting two million people across Africa is underway, the United Nations announced on Monday, in response to a series of recent deadly outbreaks of the water-borne disease. 

Inside the Cutthroat World of Billion-Dollar Military Supply Contracts

Foreign Policy - Mon, 07/05/2018 - 19:01
A U.S. military vendor created a “ghost structure” to do business with Iran, yet the dollars keep rolling in.

Le mythe du caractère invincible des guérillas

Le Monde Diplomatique - Mon, 07/05/2018 - 17:48
Tandis que certains éléments conservateurs, en France par exemple durant la guerre d'Algérie, aux Etats-Unis pendant la guerre du Vietnam, n'auront cessé de prétendre que toute guerre révolutionnaire peut être victorieusement combattue (allant même jusqu'à confondre le problème politique et les (...) / , , , , , , - 1973/07

La classe ouvrière contribue de plus en plus à tranformer la société

Le Monde Diplomatique - Mon, 07/05/2018 - 15:46
Depuis mai 1968, des travaux d'analyse et des enquêtes de toutes sortes foisonnent sur l'ouvrier français et sur la classe ouvrière, ancienne et nouvelle. Ils couvrent un champ d'investigation très large, allant de la description de la vie quotidienne àl'étude du comportement collectif, tant (...) / , , , , - 1971/09

UN experts urges Poland to ensure unrestricted ‘civic space’ during climate talks

UN News Centre - Mon, 07/05/2018 - 15:41
Poland’s new law designed to address safety concerns during the United Nations climate change conference to be held there later this year could infringe on the privacy of environmentalists and curtail their rights to protest peacefully, UN human rights experts said Monday.   

The Globalization of Solar Panels: Solar Mamas at work

Foreign Policy Blogs - Mon, 07/05/2018 - 15:11

Some cities are now betting on the proliferation of sustainable and local sources of energy. The idea was born in the forgotten network (inaccessible cities, suburbs, rural villages) and then is organized as such, that it questions today’s centralized national production of the world’s leading power source.

Cities are not only going through an energy transition but are shifting to an urbanization of energy. On the one hand, there is the growing integration of energy in urban policies, and on the other hand, there’s the growing importance of discourses, actions, and conflicts around energy that are expressed in cities which influence energy changes. Rather than empowering actors or even urban energy interests, we are witnessing the growing consideration of these interests in energy governance at the national level. This consideration has significant implications: it positions cities, especially larger ones, as possible interlocutors in a multilevel set of actors, it values ​​their role of incubation or training of energy changes. The urban energy interests are allowing for the demands, disputes and resistance voiced by urban consumers into the energy system debate. The current evolution therefore translate less into a desire for substitution than  the establishment of a long-term coexistence between various socio-technical systems. This coexistence presents considerable challenges. In addition, by combining heterogeneous systems, whose dynamics of development/decline may vary according to places and times, it makes possible a voluntary and often fortuitous diversification of energy devices along local scales, including the urban environment. This diversification is not an end in itself.

First stage: Bangalore, the tropical capital of Karnataka in southern India. This ancient garden city of flowers has become a major hub of advanced technology. The Bollywoodian Silicon Valley is the daughter of Western delocalized policies and the liberalization of the economy. It hosts the three giants of the country’s IT, but also Texas Instruments, Microsoft, Google, Yahoo, Amazon, Dell, IBM and seven hundred other research and development centers. Start-ups come running: no VAT and low-cost, highly-skilled English-speaking labor. In ten years, the population of Bangalore has grown from three to ten million. A large majority have worked on the construction sites of Electronic City and survive in the surrounding shantytowns.

Power outages are common, especially in Mumbai and Calcutta. India, which is heavily  engaged in its energy transition, already owns the largest solar power plant in Asia with plans to reach a capacity of 100 GW by 2022, the equivalent of 120 nuclear reactors. But its payout policy is growing social inequalities that are already impressive. One-third of India’s population lives below the poverty line. One-third of all Indians do not yet have access to the national electricity grid. The excluded represent 328 million inhabitants -equal to the population of the United States. Half of them are not yet 25 years old. These neglected from the network live either in the megalopolis (on fragile, flooded and contaminated lands), or in small cities or unconnected mountain villages.

Perhaps we are witnessing a real paradigm shift: from a vertical distribution of energy to a horizontal and decentralized distribution. Instead of huge production sites (coal-fired power plants, nuclear power stations), which are inevitably associated with complex networks designed to carry electricity to consumers who sometimes live several hundred kilometers away, short circuits are gradually being favored — less expensive, and more autonomous.

In this context, the issues of individual production – self-production – as well as those of self-consumption are numerous. It can be seen as a form of democratization, since part of the production are directly controlled by the citizens. It also participates in the decentralization of networks, with a view to increasing local resilience and improving the autonomy of each individuals.

In the dry dust of Rajasthan, in Tilonia, is where the Solar Mamas work. They are beautiful and proud in their yellow and pink saris. They bring the light to the heart of their homes and share the knowledge they have acquired here at Barefoot College, created by Sanjit Bunker Roy on the principles ofGandhi’s spirit of service and beliefs on sustainability, which are still alive and respected. This center of popular education teaches how to become autonomous in all domains: health, habitat, and energy. Everything works with solar: lighting, computers, water pumps, ventilators, dental offices and even a small hospital. Solar Mamas are learning to build a solar power plant in sixmonths. They communicate by gesture and simple schemas where each piece is identified by a different color. The students of Barefoot College graduate and are recognized in their society. They then, go on to  train other women, in the logic of pollination. They have already brought electricity to five hundred thousand people in 72 countries. The university has opened five centers in Africa – Burkina Faso, Liberia, Senegal, South Sudan and Tanzania. The benefits are direct:

– a reduction in the family budget devoted to the purchase of kerosene for lamps which could now can be invested in education;

– a source of lighting in the evening to improve income and to allow children to do their homework;

– a way of cooking cleaner (solar ovens) which reduces the requirement for hard labor by young girls;

– a revaluation of women in the community, as they become engineers and provide energy;

– the opening of evening schools (500 Barefoot Colleges in India which have already trained more than 3000 teachers).

Many villages in India, Bangladesh and Myanmar are now opting for off-grid renewable energy solutions. Thousands of homes are thus equipped with solar by combining microcredits, public aid and NGOs. Harish Hande, founder of the social enterprise Selco, has already facilitated the installation of solar power stations in one slum of Bangalore with micro-credit. In poor villages, SELCO negotiates with rural banks and farmers’ cooperatives. SELCO’s innovation touches every point in the clean energy supply chain, including human-centered and locally-driven product design, financing, and servicing.

Back in New York and the beautiful silhouette of Manhattan, Brooklyn enhances its landscape of rooftop terraces. It is easy to fall in love with solar gardens, a booming practice based on crowdsourcing energy. The idea is no longer to distribute energy from a large national network, but to build local production poles by combining several renewable sources. Welcome to the collective economy: each pole distributes its surplus production to neighboring territories.

In 2008, the U.S. Department of Energy published a report (not widely communicated) on this growing practice. It concludes that thousands of these poles can each make their territory self-sufficient in electricity and heating, forcing the national network to rethink their strategy. The latter would then become, if necessary a secondary source of supply. The system is presented as the only way to achieve a clean energy transition in the United States. Is the country ready for this third industrial revolution announced by Rifkin at the beginning of the third millennium? It is the time to imagine hundreds of millions of people producing their own green energy in their homes, offices, and factories, and sharing it with each other in an ‘energy internet’ just like we now create and share information online. For some, this may sound like pure science fiction.

In New York, the micro grids of Brooklyn represents a new landscape shared by producers, consumers, and sellers. The roofs are vegetable gardens and fragments of American archetypal meadows. Today’s ultra-connected hipsters have evolved under the caret shape of photovoltaic shadows. Do they know that they are the sons of the Solar Mamas?

The post The Globalization of Solar Panels: Solar Mamas at work appeared first on Foreign Policy Blogs.

Security Brief: Haspel Nomination Fight, Iran Deal Deadline Looms

Foreign Policy - Mon, 07/05/2018 - 14:24
Gina Haspel wanted to withdraw her nomination before the White House prevailed upon her.

Rubio Questions D.C. Panel on China Influence

Foreign Policy - Mon, 07/05/2018 - 13:00
It’s a sign of growing concern over Chinese influence operations in the United States.

America and the Future of War: The Past as Prologue

Politique étrangère (IFRI) - Mon, 07/05/2018 - 09:00

Cette recension a été publiée dans le numéro de printemps de Politique étrangère (n°1/2018). Rémy Hémez propose une analyse de l’ouvrage de Williamson Murray, America and the Future of War: The Past as Prologue (Hoover Institution Press, 2017, 224 pages).

Williamson Murray est un auteur bien connu des amateurs d’histoire militaire. Il a écrit ou dirigé de très nombreux ouvrages considérés comme des références. On pense par exemple à Military Innovation in the Interwar Period (1996), ou à son récent volume sur la guerre de Sécession, A Savage War: A Military History of the Civil War (2016). Son nouvel essai diffère de ses précédents livres. Il s’agit d’une charge contre les responsables politiques et militaires américains, et une bonne partie du monde académique du pays, qui semblent ignorer que l’avenir de la guerre sera à l’image de son passé, sanglant et imprévisible.

La démarche qui a conduit l’auteur à prendre la plume est intéressante. Invité par l’état-major interarmées américain à assister à une conférence de présentation d’un document sur l’environnement opérationnel 2035 (Joint Operating Environment 2035), Murray est marqué par la platitude des propos et l’absence de références à de possibles changements violents. Il conçoit alors le présent ouvrage comme une alternative à cette publication officielle afin de suggérer quelques vérités, et d’aider les armées ­américaines à mieux préparer l’avenir.

L’auteur rappelle utilement que l’analyse de tendance, lorsqu’il s’agit de réfléchir à l’avenir, est trompeuse. L’histoire du monde est d’abord faite de ruptures, souvent violentes, toujours imprévisibles. L’interdépendance croissante des économies ne signifie pas la fin de la guerre, tant la force sous-tend les relations entre États. Il revient ensuite sur la nature de la guerre. Contrairement à ce que certains zélateurs de la technologie pensent, sa nature n’a pas changé et ne changera pas. En effet, des interactions humaines complexes sont en jeu dans la guerre. Elles impliquent un nombre considérable de décisions et d’événements. La friction, l’inattendu, la chance, sont des éléments irréductibles du phénomène guerrier. Bien entendu, le caractère de la guerre évolue. Murray explique ainsi que nous sommes entrés dans la sixième révolution militaro-sociale, celle des ordinateurs, de la communication et des médias sociaux. Il souligne aussi que personne ne peut à ce jour appréhender globalement les effets que cette révolution aura sur l’art de la guerre.

L’auteur axe une partie de son propos sur l’analyse des problèmes américains. Dans un passage très inspiré, il affirme d’abord que la guerre nécessite une préparation intellectuelle poussée, en particulier dans les disciplines académiques, ce qui est loin d’être le cas pour l’élite militaire américaine actuelle. Ensuite, la sclérose croissante de la bureaucratie militaire et du renseignement, tout comme des règles d’engagement trop contraignantes, sont dénoncées. Enfin, dans un dernier chapitre, l’auteur s’attarde sur les États-Unis et la guerre future, en revenant notamment sur la grande dépendance des forces armées américaines vis-à-vis de l’espace et du cyber, ou sur le manque de bases logistiques avancées si des déploiements devaient avoir lieu.

Au final, cet essai, écrit avec brio et qui fait appel à des références historiques intéressantes, suscite la réflexion et amène à relativiser certaines idées reçues. Toutefois, la vision critique développée par l’auteur mériterait parfois d’être davantage illustrée et étayée.

Rémy Hémez

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Trump's Trade Rhetoric Is Already Hurting America

Foreign Affairs - Mon, 07/05/2018 - 06:00
Trump is raising uncertainty and degrading America's international authority on economic policy.

UN chief condemns deadly attack on voter registration centre in eastern Afghanistan

UN News Centre - Mon, 07/05/2018 - 03:05
United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres has strongly condemned an attack on a mosque being used as a voter registration centre in Afghanistan’s Khost province and underscored his support to the country as it prepares for elections later this year.

Macron Is Too Weak to Lead the Free World

Foreign Policy - Sat, 05/05/2018 - 00:38
Angela Merkel may have ceded her crown to France’s president. But neither can supplant Donald Trump.

Hottest April day ever recorded - maybe: UN weather watchdog

UN News Centre - Fri, 04/05/2018 - 23:16
Deadly storms in India and record temperatures in Pakistan are an indication that more extreme weather events are happening globally owing to climate change, United Nations weather experts said on Friday.

UN leaders vow to stamp out workplace sexual harassment

UN News Centre - Fri, 04/05/2018 - 22:42
Leaders from across the UN system on Friday pledged to increase efforts to stamp out sexual harassment within their ranks; ensuring a zero-tolerance approach where abusers are held accountable, and staff feel safe to report incidents.

The United States Should Seize on Iran’s Currency Crisis

Foreign Policy - Fri, 04/05/2018 - 22:13
An anti-regime alliance of rich and poor could be the key to ending clerical rule.

Could North Korea Help Bring the United States and China Closer Together?

Foreign Policy - Fri, 04/05/2018 - 22:13
The mutual challenge of managing Pyongyang could offer Washington and Beijing the chance to get along.

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