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Global Sustainability Agenda #61: From Climate to Defense: Decarbonization as a National Security Imperative

Global Sustainability Agenda #61: From Climate to Defense: Decarbonization as a National Security Imperative

In January, I stood on stage at the AAPA POWERS Conference in Tampa and shared a perspective that resonated deeply with the port and maritime leaders in the room:

The conversation is shifting—from climate to defense.

Climate change is no longer confined to environmental discussions. It has emerged as a national security threat, directly impacting military operations, infrastructure resilience, and global stability.

Today, defense forces worldwide are adapting—building climate-resilient infrastructure, enhancing disaster response capabilities, and integrating climate risks into strategic planning. But the private sector, especially in global supply chains, must follow suit.

Why am I raising this now?

Two recent studies reignited this urgency for me:

  • Columbia Business School argues that energy policy, climate, and national security should be integrated—not treated as separate silos. Their insight highlights the geopolitical risks of fragmented strategies, especially in how nations source and use energy. (Full article)
  • Stanford University provides the data to back this up: in most countries, decarbonization actually improves energy security. Moving toward clean energy makes nations less dependent on unstable regions for fossil fuels, reducing vulnerability to global shocks. (Full study)

As someone deeply engaged in maritime decarbonization, port strategy, and supply chain resilience, I believe this conversation must expand.

Why This Matters for Ports and Supply Chains

Ports, ships, and supply chains are strategic corridors for global energy and trade. They’re not just energy consumers—they’re enablers of economic security and geopolitical stability.

But in recent years, we’ve seen how vulnerable these systems can be:

  • The Panama Canal drought, caused by climate-related shifts, restricted shipping routes and disrupted supply chains.
  • The Red Sea crisis, sparked by geopolitical tensions, revealed the fragility of trade corridors and the cascading impact on global freight rates.
  • The ongoing energy transition mandates (like IMO 2050 and the EU Fit for 55) are driving ports and shipping companies toward decarbonization—but compliance remains the primary focus, often at the expense of addressing deeper vulnerabilities in resilience and security.

The intersection of climate risks, energy policy, and security is not theoretical. It’s unfolding in real-time across the world’s logistics networks.

From Efficiency to Resilience: The New Strategic Mandate

For decades, efficiency has been the guiding star for global trade. Just-in-time models, lean supply chains, cost-optimized routes.

But resilience—the ability to withstand shocks and adapt to disruptions—has become just as vital. And energy security is at the heart of this resilience.

Decarbonization reduces reliance on volatile fossil fuel markets, strengthens local energy independence, and enhances geopolitical stability. Whether through port electrification, alternative fuels like hydrogen or methanol, or digital optimization of port calls—these strategies make our supply chains both greener and more secure.

What Ports and Supply Chains Must Do Next

  1. Integrate Energy and Security Strategies
  2. Invest in Clean, Reliable Energy Infrastructure
  3. Collaborate Across Sectors
  4. Leverage Digitalization for Transparency and Optimization

The Path Forward: Decarbonization is Security

The world is waking up to the reality that climate security is national security. Ports and supply chains sit at the center of this transformation.

If we continue treating energy transition as a siloed, compliance-driven exercise, we miss the bigger opportunity—to create resilient, secure, and sustainable systems that withstand the shocks of tomorrow.

The shift from climate to defense is here. The question is—are we ready to lead?

I’d love to hear your thoughts.

How is your organization integrating climate risk, energy strategy, and security planning? Let’s connect and continue the conversation.

#ClimateSecurity #EnergyTransition #Ports #SupplyChainResilience #Decarbonization #Geopolitics #SuReStrategy

Beatriz Canamary

I’ve spent the past 18+ years helping ports, supply chains, and global businesses turn sustainability goals into real, measurable results.
From leading billion-dollar infrastructure projects to building my own consulting firm, I’ve seen how the right strategy can turn pressure into opportunity.

My mission today is simple: help leaders like you build sustainable, future-ready businesses that don’t just check boxes—but actually make an impact. One decision, one project, one team at a time.

Let’s build what’s next—together.
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Book a quick call here