Defense News: Inaugural NPS and Stanford Climate Security Fellows Answer the Nation’s Call

Source: United States Navy

Rising sea levels and global temperatures, more severe and frequent droughts, floods, wildfires and extreme weather increasingly inflict devastation across the planet – not only to people and their homes and livelihoods, but also to infrastructure and the environment that encapsulates it all. These tragedies are not limited by borders and pose increasing risks to national security.

The U.S. Navy and Marine Corps operate in every domain, and the effects of climate change also impact naval operations and readiness. To help understand and address these clear present and future dangers caused by the climate crisis, the Naval Postgraduate School (NPS) and the Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability joined forces through an Educational Partnership Agreement signed in December 2022.

As part of the agreement, the two institutions launched a new Climate Security Fellowship program. Twelve graduate and postdoctoral students from NPS and Stanford formed the initial cohort of Climate Security Fellows, charged with the development of new ideas and innovative solutions to operational threats facing the Navy and Marine Corps. The solutions are “tactical to practical,” helping to drive technological advancements scalable from early-adopter military use to affordable public applications, such as resilient microgrid development for naval installations.

The initial cohort of Climate Security Fellows represented a wide range of educational backgrounds and real-world experiences. Those from NPS included mid-career Navy and Marine Corps officers, a recent U.S. Naval Academy graduate, and civilians. They studied infrastructure defense, law, meteorology and oceanography, national security affairs and operations research. Fellows from Stanford studied electrical engineering, interdisciplinary ecology and sustainable design and construction.

Applications for the next cohort of Climate Security Fellows are now open. For this next group, the fellowship will grow to 20 students, with new institutional partners – George Washington University and the Naval War College – joining the effort. The Army War College has formed its own Environmental Security Fellows program, which will add to Department of Defense (DOD) perspectives and collaborative actions across the joint force.

The Climate Security Fellowship started as students answered the call from mobilized efforts made by DOD, the Department of the Navy (DON) and NPS, and later by Stanford University, in response to White House Executive Order No. 14008, “Tackling the Climate Crisis at Home and Abroad.”

Threats and the Navy’s Early Support of Climate Science

The land, sea, and air are essential environments where the Navy and Marine Corps must operate, and the effects of climate change are increasingly shaping environmental conditions. Threats come from all directions and can adversely impact many operations, such as those conducted by surface ships, aircraft, submarines, expeditionary forces, uncrewed autonomous systems, and more.

It should come as no surprise, then, that the DON has long funded climate science-related research to help leaders make informed decisions. In fact, this practice dates to the start of one of the earliest and most important climate science investigations. During World War II, oceanographer Roger Revelle served in the Navy as the commander of the oceanographic section of the Bureau of Ships, and his research included sonar detection of submarines.

After the war, he returned to the Scripps Institution of Oceanography as director and continued his research, which was heavily funded by the Office of Naval Research (ONR). He grew concerned over greenhouse gas emissions and looked more into climate change, specifically into carbon dioxide gas absorption by the oceans and atmosphere.

In 1956, Revelle hired Charles David Keeling to begin highly accurate and systematic measurements of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere high above the newly constructed Mauna Loa Observatory, which the military also helped establish. Keeling’s work led to some of the most definitive evidence identifying the relationship between increasing carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and the rapid global warming that had occurred over the past century.

The measurements Keeling began in 1958 continue to be made to this day by Scripps, which is a longtime collaborator in oceanographic studies with NPS. The results formed the well-known Keeling Curve. Though among the most famous climate science research, the Keeling Curve is now just a mere stone in the mountain of scientific evidence that formed the foundation for subsequent actions by the Navy, the nation, and the world.

Formation of the Climate Security Fellowship

Understanding and predicting the impacts of climate change on Navy and Marine Corps operations demand clear understanding and science-based decision making.

Secretary of the Navy Carlos Del Toro, an NPS alumnus, issued a call to action to combat the climate crisis in his 2021 strategic guidance. “Climate change seriously increases the potential for greater conflicts on a global scale. We must be prepared to understand increased threats to other nations and the impact they may have on our own national security interests,” Del Toro stated in the guidance, which named climate change as one of the four top challenges facing the Navy and Marine Corps.

In response, NPS formed the Climate Security Network (CSN) to help address these needs.

“NPS pulled together faculty, students, alumni and external partners that are concerned about the impacts of climate change on national security,” said NPS researcher Kristen Fletcher, who co-founded CSN. According to Fletcher, CSN’s mission is to meet DON and DOD goals of building climate resilience and reducing climate threats by fostering collaboration and information sharing.

Fletcher had already begun collaborating with the 2021 Barrow Fellowship program at Marine Corps University. “I was a mentor and presenter for the Barrow Fellows,” she said. “The program focuses on a different topic each year, and the topic that year was climate change and national security.”

In May 2022, the Navy released “Climate Action 2030,” a strategic plan which the NPS CSN team helped to develop. This plan formalized Del Toro’s guidance into a roadmap for how to implement the fight against the climate crisis and achieve the DON’s goals.

Four months later, in September 2022, the Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability was founded, and in December of that year with Del Toro present, the Doerr School established its first educational partnership with NPS. The institutions have since held meetings and workshops concentrating on how they will collaborate on ocean sciences, energy security, and climate security and sustainability.

These efforts included the Navy’s second Climate Tabletop Exercise in April 2023. The event, which focused on energy and water security and coastal resilience actions, was attended by Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Energy, Installations and Environment (ASN EI&E) Meredith Berger, Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability Dean Arun Majumdar and NPS President retired Vice Adm. Ann Rondeau. Less than a year later, in February 2024, students and faculty from NPS and Stanford gathered at an Oceans Workshop to exchange ideas and information about dozens of their ongoing research projects.

By that time, the institutions had already taken another step forward in the partnership. Using the Marine Corps University’s Barrow Fellowship as a model, they launched the Climate Security Fellowship in November 2023 for their graduate and postdoctoral students. Fletcher would coordinate the fellowship for NPS.

The uniqueness of the fellowship’s format and learning opportunities excited civil and environmental engineering professor Jack Baker, the associate dean for faculty affairs in the Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability, who became an advisor to the fellows.

“The interactions between students who are thinking about fundamental problems around climate change and its impacts on adaptation with students who have operational experience and engage with real-world problems allow them to use their collective knowledge to address solutions in a more immediate and effective way,” Baker said.

This complementary collaboration between NPS and the Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability accelerates the pace of far-reaching implementation. Because solutions address national security needs, they can be funded and developed at scale with potentially much broader impact.

Mark McVay coordinates the fellowship for Stanford and is a fellowship advisor. A Naval Academy and Stanford graduate, he recognizes the importance of scalability for technical solutions like microgrids.

“Future military and civilian leaders must understand what climate change is doing to national security,” said McVay. “And it’s not just about defense. It’s about people and how they live.”

Inaugural Fellows Get Underway

When the students committed to becoming Climate Security Fellows, they took on responsibilities above and beyond their field of study and research requirements. In addition to becoming CSN members, they attended a series of instructional modules that included the topics of climate change science, physical hazards and resilience, oceans and climate security, climate change communications, financial considerations, risk assessment and food security.

U.S. Navy Lt. Caroline Kelly operated and navigated an amphibious aircraft carrier as a surface warfare officer before transferring to the METOC (meteorology and oceanography) community and beginning her master’s degree studies at NPS.

“I joined the fellowship mainly because of my own passion for the issues,” Kelly said. “I also know that climate and climate change directly relate to my professional work in the Navy.”

Kelly believes it’s important to incorporate both military and civilian perspectives in the program. “In the future, I only see us in the military working closer and closer with the civilian world regarding climate change,” she said. “The problem doesn’t just impact the civilian world, but it also impacts our operations in the military. To find good solutions and to really get the issue addressed, I think we need to accept that it’s affecting people on both sides.”

Stanford postdoctoral student DeVant’e Dawson earned his Ph.D. in interdisciplinary ecology and researches super reefs containing heat tolerant corals across the Pacific Ocean and in the Caribbean. “I was in Majuro doing my first ever fieldwork, but I knew that at some point I wanted to possibly transition into policy,” he said.

While there, he received an email announcing the new fellowship and recognized its potential for approaching climate change from another pathway.

“I jumped at the opportunity to get my foot in the door,” Dawson said. “I think the first step is science communication across sectors. My biggest goal was figuring out how does what I study intersect these other areas that may not necessarily think about coral, and how could I communicate it in a way that reaches more people than I initially thought it could.”

U.S. Navy Lt. Dishan Romine is a human resource officer working on his master’s degree in operations research. A former surface warfare officer, he now researches climate and its impacts on water infrastructure.

“The opportunity to be a climate security fellow was perfect for me because I knew that it would help with my research and thesis,” he said. “If you have climate change that impacts electricity or impacts water on your military base, and you’re unable to train, perform and provide health and hospitality services to personnel, then how are you going to be able to actually deploy on your mission?”

Romine knows how important operational readiness is for the military, and he feels operations research helps provide the answer with the data analytics that military leadership needs to keep it all running. What the Navy learns about resilience can be applied beyond ships and installations.

Fellowship Results

To complete the fellowship, the Climate Security Fellows worked in three teams that were supported by advisors from NPS and the Stanford Doerr School of Sustainability. Each team chose its own current climate change issue for a project to investigate, and then the Fellows applied their new training and skills to research them. The teams presented their results and wrote the following research project reports:

– “High Waters, High Costs: A Case Study on Naval Air Station Key West to Guide Decision-Making for Resilience Versus Managed Retreat,” written by DeVant’e Dawson, Rebecca Grippo, Nicholas Hilaire and Joseph Ward, with advisor Dan Eisenberg.

– “The Impacts of Food and Water Security in Southeast Asia with Insight into the U.S. Role,” written by Anna Broome, Caroline Kelly, Dishan Romine and Colby Smith, with advisor Mark McVay.

– “Tropical Cyclone Disaster Response Through a Climate Resilience Lens,” written by Marina Lesse, Katie Lindman, Emily Pesicka and Issac Tham, with advisor Justin Rogers.

U.S. Marine Corps Capt. Colby Smith graduated from the NPS Department of National Security Affairs. As a fellow, he was impressed by learning how the private sector, higher public education and military intersect and how far this broad partnership could go.

“All of these people coming together to talk about both the problems and the solutions, I think, is probably the single biggest advantage of the fellowship,” Smith said.

Smith’s work as a fellow overlapped with his NPS studies. “The topics we covered aligned to how the Department of the Navy is addressing its climate security strategy,” he added. “A lot of what I picked up directly impacts my assignment after NPS. I personally benefited, significantly, from our research project because we covered food and water security in Southeast Asia.”

Marina Lesse, co-lead of CSN and a faculty associate-research in NPS’ Energy Academic Group, is also a fellow, and is earning her master’s degree in national security affairs at NPS. “I enjoyed the integration of civilian students and military students because there was a sharing of perspectives that was very beneficial to everybody,” said Lesse.

She recognizes the demand for climate studies is coming not just from the fellows, but from many other students as well.

“When I’m in class and I bring up that I’m focusing on climate change, everybody is super interested and has stories to tell about climate issues they’ve experienced while on deployment,” she said. “Who’s going to be responding to these crises and conflicts caused by climate change? Yeah, people who are attending NPS and will be heading into the fleet after they graduate.”

Climate Security Fellows for the Future

Acting on science-based decision making by the Navy and other armed services within the DOD is imperative for the safety and prosperity of the nation. But to solve the climate crisis, it will take important partnerships between the military and civilians across many parts of society.

Del Toro added, “Today, climate change is one of the most destabilizing forces of our time, exacerbating national security concerns and posing serious readiness challenges for our fleet and force. There exist numerous tangible examples of the impact of climate change on Navy and Marine Corps operations all over the world.

“I look forward to seeing the work our Climate Security Fellows accomplish. The expertise of two globally-recognized hubs of research and innovation – the Naval Postgraduate School and Stanford University – will undoubtedly find practical solutions that our Navy and nation can implement both now and in the future.”

The partnership between NPS and Stanford’s Doerr School has shown just how to lead the way by working together, sharing perspectives, following the science and taking much-needed action. The first 12 Climate Security Fellows from NPS and Stanford are now part of the solution, and the expansion of the program to 20 fellows with new institutional partners is another important step forward.

Defense News: Navy Accepts Delivery of Future USS Robert E. Simanek

Source: United States Navy

The ship is named for Private First Class Robert Ernest Simanek, who was awarded the Medal of Honor for shielding fellow Marines from a grenade at the Battle of Bunker Hill during the Korean War. The Medal of Honor was presented to him by President Dwight D. Eisenhower in a White House ceremony in 1953.

“From christening in May 2024 to delivery, it has been an exciting time for those who spend each day preparing this ship to support our fleet,” said Tim Roberts, Strategic and Theater Sealift program manager, Program Executive Office (PEO) Ships. “The ESB ship class is a highly flexible platform used across various military operations. ESB ships are mobile sea-based assets and are a part of the critical access infrastructure that supports the deployment of forces, equipment, supplies, and warfighting capability.”

ESBs are optimized to support a variety of maritime based missions, including Special Operations Forces, Airborne Mine Counter Measures, Crisis Response Force Sea Basing, Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance and Unmanned Aviation Systems. The ESBs, which include a four spot V-22 sized flight deck, mission deck and hangar, are designed around four core capabilities: aviation facilities, berthing, equipment staging support, and command and control assets. 

Follow-on ship, future USS Hector A. Cafferata Jr. (ESB 8) is under construction at NASSCO.

PEO Ships, one of the Department of Defense’s largest acquisition organizations, is responsible for executing the development and procurement of all destroyers, amphibious ships and craft, auxiliary ships, special mission ships, sealift ships and support ships.

Defense News: Navy to Commission Submarine New Jersey (SSN 796)

Source: United States Navy

New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy will deliver the principal address. Additional speakers include Secretary of the Navy Carlos Del Toro; Adm. William Houston, director, Naval Nuclear Propulsion Program; the Honorable Frank Pallone and Donald Norcross, U.S. Representatives from New Jersey; Jennifer Boykin, president, HII-Newport News Shipbuilding; and Larry Runkle, vice president, Virginia-Class Submarine Program, General Dynamics Electric Boat.

The submarine’s sponsor is New Jersey resident Dr. Susan DiMarco, a retired dentist and wife of The Honorable Jeh Johnson, former Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security. As part of the commissioning ceremony tradition, she will give the order to “man our ship and bring her to life.” With the hoisting of the colors and commission pennant, Secretary Del Toro will formally place the ship in active service.

The future USS New Jersey (SSN 796) is the third naval vessel named for the state. The first USS New Jersey was a battleship commissioned in 1906 as part of the Great White Fleet that expanded the Navy during World War I. The second, also a battleship, commissioned in 1943 and earned commendations for action in World War II and the Korea and Vietnam conflicts.

New Jersey is the fifth Block IV Virginia-class submarine and is the first in its class designed and built with modifications for a gender-integrated crew. Former Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus announced the name of this nuclear-powered fast-attack submarine at a ceremony on May 24, 2015. Its keel was authenticated on March 25, 2019, and it was christened at Newport News Shipbuilding on Nov. 13, 2021. The shipbuilder delivered New Jersey on April 25 of this year.

Each Virginia-class submarine is 7,800-tons and 377 feet in length, has a beam of 34 feet, and can operate at more than 25 knots submerged. It is designed with a reactor plant that will not require refueling during the planned life of the ship, reducing lifecycle costs while increasing underway time. The submarine was built under a unique teaming agreement between General Dynamics Electric Boat and HII-Newport News Shipbuilding wherein both companies build certain portions of each submarine and then alternate deliveries. New Jersey (SSN 796) is the 11th Virginia class submarine delivered by HII-NNS. The commissioning ceremony will be streamed live at: https://www.dvidshub.net/webcast/33459/.

Media may direct queries to the Navy Office of Information at (703) 697-5342. More information on the Virginia-class fast-attack submarine programs can be found at: https://www.navy.mil/Resources/Fact-Files/Display-FactFiles/Article/2169558/attack-submarines-ssn

Defense News: Chief of Navy Reserve Vice Adm. Nancy Lacore visits Undersea Rescue Command

Source: United States Navy

Lacore’s visit to San Diego is her first since being sworn in as the 16th Chief of Navy Reserve, August 23, and the stop at URC is illustrative of the impact Navy Reserve Sailors have on the Navy’s submarine rescue mission. Reserve Sailors comprise more than half of URC’s overall rescue watchbill and are prepared to mobilize from civilian life within hours to support disabled submarine (DISSUB) operations anywhere in the world.

While at URC, Lacore and Hunt spoke with URC’s active component commanding officer, Capt. John Witte, and Cmdr. Michael Rocco, URC’s Reserve component commanding officer, about the vital mission carried out at URC, the Navy’s only submarine rescue-capable command, and the significant integration of the Reserve team into operations.

Lacore and Hunt observed equipment including the Pressurized Rescue Module (PRM), capable of rescuing up to 16 personnel per sortie at depths of up to 2,000 feet, and the Sibitzky Remotely Operated Vehicle (ROV), which is the first system mobilized in DISSUB operations and is capable of assessing, clearing, and replenishing emergency life support stores. Reserve Sailors are integral to the operation of these systems.

“It’s inspiring to see the operational impact the Reserve can have with a major command like this,” said Lacore. “The rapid readiness aspect of this command is something that could be replicated throughout the force.”

Reserve Sailors and operators at URC participate in international exercises and maintain stringent proficiency qualifications as part of their service. Indeed, more than a dozen Reserve medical personnel assigned to URC are currently overseas participating in Exercise Dynamic Monarch 24 in Norway, September 9-19.

“Our Reserve team serves alongside our active counterparts at every level of the submarine rescue mission, from divers and system operators to corpsmen and support personnel,” said Rocco. “If the call goes out, the Navy Reserve will answer it.”

Defense News: Navy Announces Commissioning Date for the Future USS John Basilone

Source: United States Navy

The ship honors United States Marine Corps Gunnery Sgt. John Basilone, who received the Medal of Honor for his heroism during the Battle of Guadalcanal in 1942. He was killed in action during the February 1945 invasion of Iwo Jima and was posthumously awarded the Navy Cross. Basilone is the only enlisted Marine to be honored with both the Navy Cross and the Medal of Honor.

The sponsors of DDG 122 are Ryan Manion and Amy Looney, the president and vice president of the Travis Manion Foundation, which empowers veterans and families of fallen heroes to develop character in future generations. The co-sponsors will lead the time-honored Navy tradition of giving the order during the ceremony to “man our ship and bring her to life!” At that moment, the commissioning pennant is hoisted and USS John Basilone becomes a proud ship of the fleet.

DDG 122 will be the second ship named in honor of Basilone.

Following its commissioning, USS John Basilone will depart New York City for its homeport assignment of Naval Station Norfolk.

Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyers are the backbone of the U.S. Navy’s surface fleet. These highly capable, multi-mission ships conduct a variety of operations, from peacetime presence to national security providing a wide range of warfighting capabilities in multi-threat air, surface, and submarine.

The future USS John Basilone (DDG 122) commissioning ceremony will be livestreamed at www.dvidshub.net/webcast/35147. The webcast will begin at 9:45 a.m. EST and the ceremony begins at 10 a.m. EST, November 9.

The mission of CNSP is to man, train, and equip the Surface Force to provide fleet commanders with credible naval power to control the sea and project power ashore.

For more news from Commander, Naval Surface Force, U.S. Pacific Fleet, visit https://www.surfpac.navy.mil/.