// Global Analysis Archive
Tuvalu is advancing a multi-track strategy to preserve sovereignty and maritime rights even if sea-level rise renders parts of its territory uninhabitable. Through constitutional reform, UN norm-shaping, the Falepili Union treaty with Australia, adaptation infrastructure, and digital sovereignty initiatives, it is seeking to set a precedent for other low-lying states.
A CFR analysis argues China is using its 2026 Five-Year Plan to deepen leadership in solar, EVs, and wind while accelerating frontier bets such as green hydrogen and fusion. The article contrasts this with U.S. policy discontinuity and reduced clean-energy investment, which it suggests could weaken long-term competitiveness in complex, capital-intensive energy systems.
An interview with BNP chair Tarique Rahman depicts a campaign built on Gen Z mobilization, social-welfare commitments, and promises to restore law-and-order and institutional accountability ahead of Bangladesh’s February 12 election and referendum. The platform emphasizes economic diversification and a 'Bangladesh First' foreign policy, while structural risks include financial-sector stress, transition security, and delivery capacity against heightened public expectations.
The source argues that Sumatra’s late-2025 flash floods reflect long-term watershed degradation driven by forestry governance incentives, not weather alone. It frames climate change as a threat multiplier and calls for upstream accountability, integrated land-use planning, and stronger community forest management to reduce future disaster risk.
Tuvalu is advancing a multi-track strategy to preserve sovereignty and maritime rights even if sea-level rise renders parts of its territory uninhabitable. Through constitutional reform, UN norm-shaping, the Falepili Union treaty with Australia, adaptation infrastructure, and digital sovereignty initiatives, it is seeking to set a precedent for other low-lying states.
A CFR analysis argues China is using its 2026 Five-Year Plan to deepen leadership in solar, EVs, and wind while accelerating frontier bets such as green hydrogen and fusion. The article contrasts this with U.S. policy discontinuity and reduced clean-energy investment, which it suggests could weaken long-term competitiveness in complex, capital-intensive energy systems.
An interview with BNP chair Tarique Rahman depicts a campaign built on Gen Z mobilization, social-welfare commitments, and promises to restore law-and-order and institutional accountability ahead of Bangladesh’s February 12 election and referendum. The platform emphasizes economic diversification and a 'Bangladesh First' foreign policy, while structural risks include financial-sector stress, transition security, and delivery capacity against heightened public expectations.
The source argues that Sumatra’s late-2025 flash floods reflect long-term watershed degradation driven by forestry governance incentives, not weather alone. It frames climate change as a threat multiplier and calls for upstream accountability, integrated land-use planning, and stronger community forest management to reduce future disaster risk.
| ID | Title | Category | Date | Views | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RPT-5013 | Tuvalu’s Continuity Doctrine: Redefining Statehood as Seas Rise | Tuvalu | 2026-06-11 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-4338 | China’s New Five-Year Plan Signals a Long-Horizon Bid for Clean-Tech Dominance | China | 2026-04-29 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-640 | Bangladesh’s February 12 Vote: Tarique Rahman’s Youth-Driven Bid and the Governance Test Ahead | Bangladesh | 2025-10-16 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-833 | Sumatra Floods: How Forestry Governance Choices Amplify Climate-Driven Risk | Indonesia | 2025-08-28 | 0 | ACCESS » |