Canada’s spy agency plans to offer ‘significant’ help assessing climate change threat
OTTAWA — A senior Canadian Security Intelligence Service official predicts the spy agency will make a “significant contribution” to understanding the threats posed by a warming planet as climate change accelerates.
Tricia Geddes, deputy director for policy at CSIS, told an intelligence conference Wednesday that global warming will have a profound effect on Canadians, including aspects of national security.
CSIS must continue to anticipate “the next threat” and understand it in order to support other government players, said Geddes, citing possible ripples from climate shifts, such as the mass migration of people.
“I think it’s important that we are going to be in that space,” she told a Canadian Association for Security and Intelligence Studies symposium.


