Climate Policy and Politics in the Middle East: Environmental, Economic and Political Challenges
By (Author) Dr Aisha Al-Sarihi
Edited by Michael Mason
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
I.B. Tauris
27th November 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Petroleum, oil and gas industries
Green politics / ecopolitics / environmentalism
Hardback
192
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
The Middle East region is one of the most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change. This book assesses the extent to which there is political and economic space for Middle Eastern states to transition into a sustainable, just and climate resilient future.
The book offers a regional political economy perspective, comparing the hydrocarbon-rich Gulf States with those Arab states in the Mashreq (Levant) and Maghreb (North Africa) lacking matching resources to undertake investments in low-carbon growth and societal-wide climate change adaptation. While recent scholarship has focused on the impact of the energy sector on climate policy, this book covers other key issues including climate finance, food security, water security, Arab climate urbanism, and more immediate threats to human security such as conflict and political instability. It concludes that uneven economic development and major variations in governing capacity are more important determinants of climate mitigation and adaptation policy than exposure to the biophysical impacts of climate change. Through a comprehensive analysis of the Middle East, authors in the volume explore the challenges and opportunities to advance alternative development pathways in a post-oil era. The wide-ranging and perceptive chapters are written by leading scholars, featuring mostly researchers from the region.
Al Sarihi and Mason have put together a useful and illuminating volume to understand the diversity of the challenges and the wide scope of policy solutions facing climate policy in the Middle East. The chapter authors represent some of the best thinking on how to approach the risks of climate change across the region. -- Karen E. Young, Senior Research Scholar, Columbia University Center on Global Energy Policy, US
Aisha Al-Sarihi is a political scientist with over a decade of research expertise in the policy, politics and governance of climate change and energy transition. She is a non-resident fellow at Chatham Houses Middle East and North Africa Programme, London, UK, the Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington DC (AGSIW), US, and the Middle East Council on Global Affairs (MECGA), Qatar. She was a former Research Fellow at the Middle East Institute of the National University of Singapore, Singapore.
Michael Mason is Professor of Environmental Geography at LSE, UK, where he served as Director of the Middle East Centre from 2018-2025. He is the author/editor of six books, including co-editor of The Untold Story of the Golan Heights (I.B. Tauris, 2023).