Scientists have raised significant concerns about a recent UK Government report addressing the intersection of global biodiversity loss and national security. Published in early 2026, the report titled ‘Global biodiversity loss, ecosystem collapse and national security’ asserts that accelerating ecological degradation poses increasingly urgent threats to the stability of the United Kingdom. While the report’s focus on biodiversity and ecosystem collapse is broadly welcomed for drawing attention to critical environmental issues, experts caution against the framing of these challenges primarily through a national security lens. This approach, they argue, risks simplifying complex ecological and migratory dynamics, potentially leading to misguided or counterproductive policy measures.
Researchers from the University of East Anglia (UEA) and the University of Exeter have critically evaluated the UK Government’s report and identified key areas of concern. Writing in the journal PLOS Climate, they outline how viewing environmental changes—particularly biodiversity loss and climate impacts—primarily as security threats to the UK can inadvertently skew policymaking. Much like earlier attempts to securitize climate change, this framing tends to emphasize worst-case migration scenarios and security risks, overshadowing the nuanced, multi-scalar realities of ecological degradation and human mobility.
The securitization of climate-related issues has a problematic history of oversimplification. Past efforts often reduced complex environmental processes to straightforward causal claims, linking climate change directly to national security concerns. This trend commonly transferred authority and influence to military and border enforcement agencies, sidelining environmental scientists, social policy experts, and humanitarian actors. Tragically, such simplistic framings contributed to political backlash, hardened migration controls, and premature securitized policy responses that failed to adequately address root causes or support vulnerable populations.
Central to the critique is the report’s handling of migration dynamics in the context of biodiversity loss. The authors argue that the evidence cited does not substantiate predictions of large-scale international migration towards the UK as a direct consequence of ecological degradation. Decades of empirical research on environment-linked migration consistently show that most displacement occurs over short distances—within countries or neighboring regions—not across continents as framed in the report. This disconnect highlights the risks of conflating environmental stress with imminent national security threats.
Dr. Mark Tebboth, Associate Professor in Environment and Global Development at UEA and lead author of the critique, underscores the importance of nuanced causal analysis. He states, “Biodiversity loss and ecosystem collapse are rightly recognized as serious and urgent global challenges. However, direct causal links between these environmental changes and large-scale UK-bound migration remain unsupported by robust evidence.” Dr. Tebboth warns that conflating environmental stress with national security risks results in speculative conclusions that distract from addressing genuine vulnerabilities and misallocate resources.
A particularly problematic claim highlighted by the researchers involves an asserted relationship between food insecurity and migration rates. The report asserts that a 1% rise in food insecurity leads to a 1.9% increase in migration. This statistic, they clarify, originates from a non-peer-reviewed document extrapolating findings from a 2017 World Food Programme study focused on refugee flows elicited by armed conflict—not on general migration patterns or biodiversity loss. Applying such a figure to broad future migration projections in the context of ecosystem collapse is methodologically unsound and misleading.
Beyond issues of migration, the securitization framing risks narrowing the scope and effectiveness of policy responses to biodiversity loss. Environmental crises demand comprehensive and adaptive strategies, including ecosystem conservation, food system resilience, and climate mitigation efforts. However, when governmental responses default to a security paradigm, they disproportionately empower defense and border agencies. This realignment of priorities marginalizes institutions and stakeholders better equipped to address ecological decline and community-level food security, such as environmental agencies, agricultural departments, and development organizations.
Moreover, security-oriented narratives commonly frame ecological degradation in terms of catastrophic and alarmist scenarios, such as widespread mass displacements or societal collapse. While such risks warrant consideration, emphasizing unlikely worst-case outcomes can obscure the more empirically grounded dangers posed by biodiversity loss. These include disruptions to livelihoods, increasing fragility of global food systems, governance challenges in environmentally stressed regions, and the growing vulnerability of populations who may lack the capacity to move or adapt.
The researchers advocate for policy frameworks grounded in rigorous empirical evidence rather than deterministic models or speculative projections. They urge a shift away from security-driven approaches towards ones that prioritize ecosystem protection, support for adaptive governance in vulnerable regions, and investments in early warning systems. These systems can monitor ecological and livelihood stresses, enabling more targeted and effective interventions. Such an approach holds promise for generating practical solutions that address both the ecological crisis and associated social vulnerabilities without exacerbating geopolitical tensions.
In conclusion, the University of East Anglia and University of Exeter team emphasize that biodiversity loss and ecosystem decline are profound threats requiring urgent, evidence-based responses. However, securitizing these issues—with an emphasis on framing environmental changes primarily as national security challenges—risks diverting policy focus from the mechanisms that truly underpin resilience and adaptability. Effective solutions demand cross-sectoral collaboration informed by interdisciplinary research that respects the complexities of ecological systems and human migration dynamics.
The authors of the critique, published in PLOS Climate on April 8, 2026, call on policymakers to avoid fear-based and oversimplified narratives. Instead, they recommend strategies that foster ecological restoration, strengthen food security, enhance governance capacities, and build community resilience at multiple scales. Only through such holistic and scientifically grounded policies can the cascading threats posed by biodiversity loss and ecosystem collapse be met in a way that is just, sustainable, and effective.
Subject of Research: The implications of securitizing biodiversity loss and ecosystem collapse on national security policy and migration projections.
Article Title: Risks and limits from a securitisation framing of nature and biodiversity crises: Lessons from climate change
News Publication Date: April 8, 2026
Web References:
https://journals.plos.org/climate/article?id=10.1371/journal.pclm.0000873
References:
Tebboth, M., Redicker, S., Adger, N., & Subramanian, R. R. (2026). Risks and limits from a securitisation framing of nature and biodiversity crises: Lessons from climate change. PLOS Climate, April 8.
Keywords: biodiversity loss, ecosystem collapse, national security, migration, securitization, UK policy, environmental migration, food insecurity, ecosystem resilience, climate change, policy analysis, ecological degradation

