CFR Launches New Climate Realism Initiative to Advance Climate and Clean Energy Policy

CFR Launches New Climate Realism Initiative to Advance Climate and Clean Energy Policy

April 7, 2025 8:03 am (EST)

News Releases

The Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) announces the launch of the Climate Realism Initiative, which will reimagine U.S. foreign policy to confront the threat of climate change, compete in the shifting global energy landscape, and build a pragmatic agenda that advances American interests. 

More From Our Experts

The initiative is led by Senior Fellow for Energy and Climate Varun Sivaram, who served as managing director for clean energy and senior advisor to Secretary John F. Kerry, the U.S. special presidential envoy for climate. 

More on:

Climate Realism

United States

Climate Change

“The effects of climate change, from extreme weather to sea level rise, will be felt by every country,” said CFR President Michael Froman. “Through the Climate Realism Initiative, CFR will identify ways the U.S. can leverage technology and finance to address the challenge of climate change – and to do so in such a way that spurs U.S. competitiveness.” 

The Climate Realism Initiative launches today at a high-level, multi-part event in Washington, DC, headlined by a keynote address from former U.S. Secretary of Energy Ernest J. Moniz

An introductory video and a dynamic website lay out the three key projects that the initiative will undertake to shape foreign policy and advance U.S. interests: 

More From Our Experts
  • Navigating the Geopolitics and Risks of a Warming World will provide U.S. policymakers actionable recommendations on how to grapple with the grave climate consequences that will arise over the course of this century. 
  • Accelerating Clean Technology Innovation and U.S. Competitiveness will develop strategies to win the global competition in clean energy technologies such as next-generation batteries and zero-carbon power systems to meet future energy demand growth from electric vehicles and artificial intelligence. 
  • Averting Catastrophic Climate Change will highlight the political, economic, and scientific tools the United States and other countries can use to still prevent the worst-case consequences of climate change.

“Climate Realism will draw inspiration from sound arguments that have bipartisan appeal, while jettisoning misguided proposals championed by partisans on the left and the right,” said Sivaram, in a new essay titled “Our Approach to Climate Policy Has Failed. It’s Time for Climate Realism”. “It represents a dramatic departure from how the United States has historically approached climate, refocusing America’s strategy to advance U.S. competitiveness, resilience, and geopolitical advantage—and in so doing, could force the world to much more dramatic action to confront the climate quandary.” 

More on:

Climate Realism

United States

Climate Change

In addition to Sivaram, the initiative is supported by a number of CFR experts including Alice C. Hill, David M. Rubenstein senior fellow for energy and the environment, and David M. Hart, senior fellow for climate and energy. 

To learn more about the initiative, visit https://www.cfr.org/initiative/climate-realism

To watch the launch event, visit CFR.org.

For more information, please contact the Global Communications and Media Relations team at [email protected]

Creative Commons
Creative Commons: Some rights reserved.
Close
This work is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) License.
View License Detail
Close

Top Stories on CFR

Venezuela

The opposition and the Maduro regime will face a new variable at the negotiating table: the United States and its heavy military presence off Venezuela’s coast. As a direct party, the Trump administration now has an opportunity to learn the lessons of the past to bring a potential conflict to a close. 

Taiwan

Assumptions about how a potential conflict between the United States and China over Taiwan would unfold should urgently be revisited. Such a war, far from being insulated, would likely draw in additional powers, expand geographically, and escalate vertically.

United States

Three CFR experts discuss President Donald Trump’s decision to allow Nvidia to sell advanced AI chip sales to China and what implications it could have for the future of AI, U.S. national security policy, and Chinese relations.