Title 50 › Chapter CHAPTER 44— - NATIONAL SECURITY › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER I— - COORDINATION FOR NATIONAL SECURITY › § 3060
The Director of National Intelligence must create a Climate Security Advisory Council. The Council helps intelligence analysts study how climate change affects national security. It also makes it easier for intelligence agencies and other federal agencies to share climate data and analysis. The Council must meet at least once every three months and make short summaries of each meeting. The Director appoints members. The chair is an official from the National Intelligence Council. Other members include climate leads from the CIA, the State Department’s Bureau of Intelligence and Research, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, the Department of Energy’s intelligence office, the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence and Security, and the Defense Intelligence Agency. The Director also picks three officials from non-intelligence federal agencies that run climate predictions, Earth observations, or coordinate climate research and investments. The chair must find those agencies, get permission for their staff to join, and do any other tasks the Director assigns. The Council must share data, set up routine data-exchange processes, and find best practices for climate security analysis, past work, and warning signs of climate-driven instability. It should recommend how to add these practices to training, consult with other analysts to avoid duplicated work, help share findings, and can call conferences when needed. The chair must send a report to the congressional intelligence committees by January 31, 2021, and then at least once a year after that, describing the Council’s activities and any problems or gaps. The Council ends on December 31, 2024. Definitions: “climate security” = how climate change affects U.S. security, political stability, allies, and political violence. “Climate intelligence indications and warnings” = climate developments that could soon and greatly harm political stability, U.S. national security, allies’ interests, or U.S. citizens abroad.
Full Legal Text
War and National Defense — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
50 U.S.C. § 3060
Title 50 — War and National Defense
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73