Scientists have warned that a new UK Government report on global biodiversity loss and national security risks distorting evidence and driving ineffective policy by framing ecological degradation and its impacts on migration as a security threat.
The report, ‘Global biodiversity loss, ecosystem collapse and national security’, was published in early 2026 and argues that accelerating biodiversity loss and ecosystem collapse pose mounting security threats to the UK.
Writing in the journal PLOS Climate, researchers from the University of East Anglia (UEA) and University of Exeter welcome the attention on biodiversity and nature loss. However, they say the report – which views environmental change and biodiversity loss, alongside climate impacts, through a national security lens – could lead to poorly targeted actions and policy.
The researchers say past attempts to cast climate issues as security risks often relied on simplified causal claims, shifting authority towards military and border agencies in policymaking, and ultimately failed to motivate constructive climate action.
Instead, this approach sometimes triggered political backlash or restrictive migration policies. The researchers warn this strategy risks repeating the problems associated with the securitisation of climate change.
Framing any environmental issue as a security threat to elicit positive action creates its own risks, often relying on simplified evidence and “ethically questionable foundations”, the researchers say.
Concerns over migration claims
They highlight migration as a major weakness in the report’s analysis, arguing the evidence does not support claims that biodiversity loss will drive large-scale international migration towards the UK.
Decades of empirical research show that most environmentally linked migration is short distance, occurring within countries or neighbouring regions – not across continents.
Dr Mark Tebboth, of UEA’s School of Global Development and lead author of the opinion article, said: “Biodiversity loss and ecosystem collapse are rightly recognised as serious global risks, and theUK Government report raises an important and timely issue around the security implications of accelerating ecological degradation.
“However, it fails to present a credible causal link between biodiversity loss and UK-bound migration. Environmentally linked migration is translated directly into security impacts for the UK, but current evidence does not support this assumption.”
Dr Sarah Redicker, from the University of Exeter, added: “Policy that outpaces the evidence risks misrepresenting the problem and misdirecting the response.
“The real threats to food systems, livelihoods, and people’s ability to cope and adapt deserve to be front and centre.”
The researchers say the report also overstates the evidence by promoting a poorly sourced and mischaracterised claim that a 1% rise in food insecurity leads to a 1.9% rise in migration.
That figure originates from a non-peer-reviewed report based on a 2017 World Food Programme study – and the original study examined refugee flows from armed conflict, not general migration or biodiversity loss. Applying it to broad future migration trends is, the researchers say, “inappropriate”.
Security lens risks narrowing responses
“Positive actions to build resilience include supporting farmers to avoid food insecurity through food production harmonious with nature; avoiding urban development on flood plains to make space for water and nature; and accelerating climate action to avoid the consequences of runaway climate change,” said Dr Tebboth.
“But securitising biodiversity loss creates a policy environment where certain voices within government, such as defence and border agencies, can disproportionately shape government responses. This sidelines institutions better suited to address ecological decline, food system fragility, and community resilience.”
The authors also caution that security-driven narratives tend to produce worst-case scenarios such as mass displacement – scenarios not supported by current evidence.
Overemphasising such risks can obscure the most significant, and empirically grounded, risks to the UK associated with biodiversity loss, including the erosion of livelihoods and food systems, governance pressures in environmentally stressed regions, and the growing vulnerability of populations who may be unable to move or adapt.
Dr Redicker said: “When we frame biodiversity loss primarily as a security threat, we risk losing sight of the people most affected. The communities facing the sharpest consequences of ecological decline need targeted support for adaptation and resilience, not policies shaped by worst-case displacement scenarios.”
Call for evidence-based, non-securitised policy
The team warns that unfounded claims about mass displacement risk distorting the national debate and could push the UK towards counterproductive policy decisions.
“While biodiversity loss and ecosystem collapse are indeed major global threats, we argue the UK must ground its national risk assessments in rigorous evidence rather than deterministic models or speculative migration projections,” said Dr Tebboth.
“Policy should focus on protecting and restoring ecosystems critical to food security, supporting governance and adaptive capacity in vulnerable regions, and investing in early warning systems that track livelihood and ecological stress. They should avoid unfounded claims about mass displacement triggered by biodiversity decline.”
‘Risks and limits from a securitisation framing of nature and biodiversity crises: Lessons from climate change’, Mark Tebboth, Sarah Redicker, Neil Adger, Reetika Revathy Subramanian, is published in PLOS Climate on April 8.
