
The Geopolitical Dimension of Differential Diagnosis: Root-Cause Thinking for Global Stability
By Steven W. Pearce, MBA, MPM
Founder & CEO, Pearce Sustainability Consulting Group
Introduction β From Ancient Philosophy to Modern Strategy
In medicine, a differential diagnosis is a disciplined process: identify the root cause of illness by ruling out false leads, testing assumptions, and confirming the true underlying condition. The purpose is clear, treat the cause, not merely mask the symptoms. A misdiagnosis may provide temporary relief, but it risks allowing the condition to worsen, re-emerge, or become life-threatening.
In global development and security, the same principle applies, only the stakes are geopolitical. Poverty, instability, and armed conflict rarely exist in isolation. They are almost always symptoms of deeper, interconnected forces: contested borders, resource scarcity, climate disruption, fragile governance, and historical grievances. Addressing them effectively means moving beyond surface-level interventions to uncover the architecture of causes beneath the crisis.
Shaykh Hamza Yusuf, one of the most influential Muslim scholars of our time, once taught me that lasting solutions begin with uncovering the true origin of a problem. He often pointed to the ancient Greeks, renowned for their mastery of root-cause reasoning, the ability to think backward from an observed effect to its primary cause, or archΔ. For them, wisdom was not simply knowing what happened, but understanding why it happened, because without that deeper inquiry, solutions would be temporary at best and dangerously counterproductive at worst.
Applied to modern global challenges, this βroot-cause thinkingβ unlocks a profound truth: geopolitics is often the unseen driver that determines whether development succeeds or fails. It shapes who controls resources, who defines trade rules, and which regions receive stability or instability as a byproduct of power struggles. Without integrating geopolitical realities into development planning, even the most well-funded, technically sound, and morally urgent initiatives can stall, collapse, or be co-opted.
In a world where one drought can destabilize multiple nations, one resource dispute can trigger a regional war, and one migration wave can shift the balance of global politics, ignoring the geopolitical dimension is no longer an oversight, it is a systemic risk.
Why Geopolitics Must Be Part of the Diagnosis
In the realm of global development, many programs and interventions still operate in disciplinary silos. International agencies may focus narrowly on economic development, environmental NGOs on climate resilience, and humanitarian organizations on emergency relief. While each of these is vital, they often fail to account for the geopolitical operating environment, the complex web of power relations, territorial disputes, trade dependencies, and security concerns that ultimately determines whether a project succeeds or fails.
Ignoring geopolitics in development planning is like prescribing treatment without knowing the patientβs medical history. Just as a doctor would never treat symptoms without understanding prior illnesses, allergies, or lifestyle factors, policymakers and development practitioners cannot design lasting solutions without understanding the political, strategic, and security context in which those solutions will exist.
This is not an abstract risk. The geopolitical dimension actively shapes incentives, constraints, and vulnerabilities:
- Political Alliances and Rivalries β Development priorities are often dictated not by community needs, but by the strategic interests of national or regional powers. A road project, for example, may be routed to serve military logistics rather than economic integration for local farmers.
- Military Conflicts and Security Fragility β Even the best-planned infrastructure or social programs can be destroyed or rendered inoperable if the region becomes militarized or falls under contested control.
- Trade Dependencies and Economic Leverage β Nations dependent on a single export market or strategic transit route can have their economies destabilized by sanctions, tariffs, or blockades β instantly undoing years of development progress.
- Resource Competition β Water basins, mineral-rich territories, and fertile agricultural zones are not just economic assets; they are geopolitical flashpoints. Without anticipating and mitigating these tensions, resource-focused development can become a spark for conflict rather than a tool for stability.
- Diplomatic Leverage in Aid β Development funding is often intertwined with foreign policy agendas. Aid packages may come with political conditions that alter local governance priorities, distort project goals, or entrench dependency.
The consequence of overlooking these dynamics is that development becomes reactive rather than strategic. Programs are deployed without anticipating how they might be exploited, obstructed, or neutralized by geopolitical actors. The result is a recurring pattern of short-lived gains followed by systemic setbacks, where communities see little lasting improvement and trust in development institutions erodes.
To break this cycle, geopolitical literacy must be embedded into the very DNA of development planning. This means understanding not only the βwhatβ of interventions, the projects, policies, and resources, but the βwhereβ and βwhoβ: where they are deployed, and who stands to gain or lose from their success. In an interconnected world, the absence of this awareness is not just a gap in strategy, it is a critical vulnerability.
Key Reasons Geopolitical Analysis Is Essential
- Power Dynamics β The Hidden Hand Behind Development Priorities
Development agendas are rarely set in a political vacuum. In many regions, priorities are shaped, or reshaped, by the strategic ambitions of regional powers rather than the urgent needs of local communities. This can lead to infrastructure projects, trade corridors, or energy pipelines being designed to serve military logistics, elite economic interests, or spheres of influence, rather than inclusive, people-centered growth. Without understanding these political undercurrents, development interventions risk being co-opted or redirected before they even begin. - Resource Access β The Geopolitical Fault Lines
Water basins, energy reserves, rare earth minerals, and arable land are not just economic assets; they are high-stakes geopolitical bargaining chips. Control over these resources often determines political leverage in a region. A new hydropower dam, for example, might boost electricity access, but if it alters downstream water flows into a rival state, it could ignite diplomatic crises or cross-border hostilities. Political risk assessments are therefore not optional; they are a safeguard against turning development projects into conflict triggers. - Security Overlap β The Poverty-Conflict Nexus
Maps of conflict hotspots and extreme poverty often overlap with uncanny precision. Areas suffering from chronic underdevelopment frequently become breeding grounds for insurgency, organized crime, and extremism, which in turn perpetuate instability and economic stagnation. Effective interventions in such regions must integrate security sector reform, peacebuilding measures, and socioeconomic programs into a unified strategy. Addressing poverty without addressing security is like patching a leaking roof without fixing the structural damage beneath. - Foreign Policy Influence β When Aid Becomes a Tool of Statecraft
Development aid is rarely free from geopolitical strings. Donor states may tie funding to strategic alignments, trade concessions, or foreign policy positions. In some cases, aid flows are deliberately structured to reinforce dependence or to marginalize competing powers in a contested region. This can distort long-term development objectives, erode local sovereignty, and undermine trust in both governments and aid agencies. A clear-eyed geopolitical analysis can help recipient states and implementing partners negotiate terms that protect local priorities while maintaining productive international relationships.
Differential Diagnosis in a Geopolitical Context
Applying the differential diagnosis mode, borrowed from medical science, to the challenge of extreme poverty means looking far beyond immediate, visible symptoms. Just as a physician rules out false diagnoses to identify the real underlying cause of illness, policymakers and development professionals must evaluate not only the local conditions but also the global, regional, and transnational forces that drive them. This approach recognizes that poverty is rarely the result of a single factor; it is typically the product of layered, interconnected pressures that operate across multiple scales.
Step 1 β Identify the Local Symptoms
Begin with a ground-level assessment of the most visible indicators:
- Economic Metrics β Poverty rates, unemployment figures, household income data, and the size of the informal economy.
- Infrastructure Health β The condition of roads, power grids, water systems, and public transport.
- Social Indicators β Education levels, literacy rates, public health statistics, and access to basic services.
- Community Resilience β The presence or absence of local institutions, civic organizations, and social cohesion mechanisms.
Why this matters: Without a clear understanding of the visible problem set, it is impossible to detect where deeper geopolitical or systemic factors are exerting pressure.
Step 2 β Map the Geopolitical Environment
Identify the political geography in which these local symptoms exist:
- Control of Borders & Trade Routes β Who sets customs policies, maritime access, or airspace permissions?
- Resource Sovereignty β Which state or non-state actors control water basins, energy pipelines, mineral deposits, or agricultural zones?
- Regional Rivalries & Alliances β How do historic conflicts, ethnic divisions, or political blocs influence decision-making?
- External Influence β Are foreign powers active in the region, either through military presence, aid programs, infrastructure investment, or proxy forces?
Why this matters: Every development initiative operates within a power map. Understanding that map is essential to avoid triggering political backlash or being unintentionally drawn into larger disputes.
Step 3 β Analyze Cause-and-Effect Chains
Trace the causal relationships that link geopolitical realities to local conditions:
- Economic Sanctions & Trade Barriers β How do they alter commodity prices, disrupt supply chains, or affect access to technology?
- Security Dynamics β Does military presence (foreign or domestic) stabilize or destabilize markets and governance?
- Climate as a Political Lever β Are droughts, floods, or other disasters used to consolidate political power or extract concessions?
- Migration Pressures β Is population movement creating new fault lines, either within borders or across them, that increase tensions?
Why this matters: Poverty is often the end point of a political chain reaction. Breaking the cycle requires knowing where and how the chain begins.
Step 4 β Design Interventions That Account for Power Realities
Move from diagnosis to treatment by designing development interventions that are politically aware and strategically resilient:
- Policy Alignment β Ensure economic initiatives fit within existing regional trade frameworks to avoid legal or diplomatic roadblocks.
- Resource Security β Negotiate political guarantees for uninterrupted access to critical inputs like water, energy, and minerals.
- Conflict-Sensitive Design β Integrate peacebuilding, mediation, and security sector coordination into infrastructure or social service projects.
- Resilience Planning β Incorporate redundancy and adaptability so that projects can survive shifts in political leadership, economic shocks, or security incidents.
Why this matters: Without integrating power realities, even the most well-designed development project can collapse under political pressure, resource disputes, or shifting alliances.

Geopolitical Differential Diagnosis Flowchart β A strategic framework for identifying the root causes of global instability by integrating political, economic, environmental, and social dimensions into sustainable development planning.
Geopolitical Casebook: Applying Differential Diagnosis to Poverty, Climate, and Security
Development crises donβt occur in a vacuum. Extreme poverty, water scarcity, and conflict are rarely isolated βhumanitarianβ issues, they are almost always embedded in a geopolitical system where local realities are shaped, constrained, or outright dictated by external actors and power struggles.
Applying differential diagnosis, a method borrowed from medicine, to development challenges forces us to ask the critical questions:
- What looks like a humanitarian issue but is actually a political or security issue in disguise?
- Which βlocalβ problems are symptoms of larger regional or global systems?
- Which interventions are likely to fail because they ignore the political context that sustains the crisis?
The following cases illustrate how root-cause thinking and systems analysis transform understanding, and why ignoring geopolitics is the fastest way to waste billions in aid and create more instability.
Case 1: Gaza and the Water Crisis (2023)
Symptom Summary
In early 2023, a Gazan woman went viral pleading for water after Israeli settlers diverted supplies from her community. Access dropped from 30% of normal capacity to just 10%. Within weeks, this resource shock, in a territory already under blockade, escalated into street protests and violent clashes.
Underlying Causes
- Resource Weaponization β Control of water is a long-standing tool of leverage in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. The Mountain Aquifer, Jordan River basin, and desalination facilities have all been politicized in negotiation and enforcement.
- Political Leverage Over Aid β While humanitarian agencies provided tanker deliveries, they could not enforce long-term, legally binding water rights. Without political teeth, aid remained a stopgap.
- Security Fragility β Gazaβs extreme population density, combined with restricted movement of goods and people, magnifies the destabilizing impact of even short-term service disruptions.
Intervention Pathways
- Establish tripartite or multilateral water-sharing accords underwritten by regional powers and backed by neutral guarantors.
- Scale desalination, wastewater recycling, and aquifer recharge projects to reduce conflict-linked supply dependence.
- Embed peacebuilding clauses within infrastructure aid agreements so that humanitarian projects are insulated from political retaliation.
Global Implications
- Water in contested zones acts as a strategic tripwire; flare-ups can rapidly escalate beyond the immediate area.
- Instability in Gaza influences Egyptβs Sinai counterinsurgency posture, Jordanβs diplomatic flexibility, and Gulf statesβ normalization strategies toward Israel.
Case 1 β Gaza & The Water Crisis (2023)
Flashpoint: Water diverted from 30% to 10% supply sparked unrest within weeks.
Geopolitical Trigger: Resource weaponization in a high-density, blockaded territory.
Policy Insight: In resource-scarce conflict zones, water-sharing agreements must be politically binding and paired with technical resilience (e.g., desalination).
Case 2: The Sahel β Poverty, Climate Stress, and Extremist Recruitment
Symptom Summary
Stretching from Senegal to Sudan, the Sahel faces triple stress: entrenched poverty, accelerating desertification, and near-absent governance in rural areas. Armed groups β from Islamist insurgents to organized bandits β have capitalized on this vacuum, offering employment, identity, and βshadow governance.β
Underlying Causes
- Climate Stress β Desertification shrinks grazing lands and dries seasonal water sources, forcing pastoralists into conflict with farming communities.
- Security Vacuums β Many rural zones have no permanent state security presence, enabling militants to operate with impunity.
- Economic Fragility β Economies dependent on subsistence farming collapse quickly when climate patterns shift, creating a ready pool of recruits for armed groups.
Intervention Pathways
- Pair counterterrorism missions with livelihood restoration and climate adaptation, ensuring security gains arenβt temporary.
- Create cross-border agreements for grazing and water rights to defuse seasonal migration clashes.
- Expand microfinance, off-grid solar, and small-scale processing industries to diversify rural income sources.
Global Implications
- Sahel instability can sever trans-Saharan trade routes, disrupting everything from gold exports to supply chains for rare minerals.
- The climateβconflict nexus in the Sahel offers a predictive model for how environmental stress will shape insurgencies elsewhere in Africa, the Middle East, and South Asia.
Case 2 β The Sahel: Poverty, Climate Stress & Extremist Recruitment
Flashpoint: Poverty + desertification + weak governance = fertile ground for insurgency.
Geopolitical Trigger: Climate stress and security vacuums exploited by armed groups.
Policy Insight: Counterterrorism, climate adaptation, and economic diversification must be integrated, not siloed, to disrupt extremist recruitment ecosystems.
Case 3: Horn of Africa Drought β Where Climate Meets Geopolitics
Symptom Summary
In Ethiopia, Somalia, and Kenya, a multi-year drought has triggered livestock die-offs, grain shortages, and migration into contested territories. Cross-border tensions have sharpened over access to water and pasture, with some disputes rooted in colonial-era boundary demarcations.
Underlying Causes
- Climate Volatility β The Hornβs climate cycles have shortened, with extreme droughts now striking every 2β3 years instead of once a decade.
- Weak Cross-Border Governance β Shared rivers like the Jubba and Shabelle lack enforceable basin-wide agreements.
- Political Tensions β Disputes over resource-rich territories like the Ogaden region add a layer of ethnic and geopolitical complexity.
Intervention Pathways
- Negotiate African Unionβ and UN-backed transboundary water accords that define allocation rights and enforcement mechanisms.
- Deploy modern irrigation systems, desalination capacity, and drought-resistant seed programs to stabilize food security.
- Use Predictive Sustainability Intelligence (PSI) to forecast migration surges, enabling pre-emptive deployment of food, water, and security resources.
Global Implications
- Drought-induced migration affects Red Sea maritime security, which is critical to global energy and shipping flows.
- Grain export collapse from the Horn could spike global food prices, hitting vulnerable economies across the Middle East and Africa.
Case 3 β Horn of Africa Drought: Climate Meets Geopolitics
Flashpoint: Multi-year drought triggers migration, land disputes, and political tension.
Geopolitical Trigger: Cross-border resource disputes amid historic rivalries.
Policy Insight: Water diplomacy, climate adaptation, and predictive analytics can stabilize high-risk regions before migration and conflict spill over borders.
Why the Casebook Model Matters
- For Policymakers β Converts humanitarian data into strategic risk intelligence, ensuring foreign policy aligns with on-the-ground realities.
- For Development Planners β Builds resilience into programs by aligning with political economy factors and security dynamics.
- For Security Agencies β Offers early warning indicators for crises that could evolve into regional conflicts.
Why This Matters for Security and Stability
When geopolitics is excluded from development strategies, well-intentioned interventions can inadvertently fuel the very instability they aim to resolve. In fragile contexts, projects that ignore power dynamics risk being co-opted, obstructed, or weaponized by competing state and non-state actors. Infrastructure can be targeted, aid diverted, and reforms undermined if they threaten entrenched political or economic interests.
By contrast, when geopolitical realities are integrated into the diagnostic process, development work evolves from short-term relief into a strategic tool for long-term stability. This integration transforms aid from an after-the-fact response into a proactive shield against destabilization, enabling policymakers and practitioners to anticipate, and neutralize, emerging threats before they escalate into crises.
Key benefits of a geopolitically informed approach include:
- Aid as Prevention, Not Reaction
Instead of mobilizing resources only after violence erupts or famine sets in, development programs designed with geopolitical foresight can target the pressure points that, if left unaddressed, would spiral into instability. For example, resolving cross-border water disputes before the dry season begins can avert both humanitarian crises and armed conflict. - Security Strategies That Target Root Enablers of Conflict
By identifying and addressing structural drivers, such as contested resource corridors, marginalized border communities, or illicit trade networks, security forces and peacekeepers can focus efforts where they matter most, reducing the likelihood of recurring violence. - Economic Development That Aligns With Regional Stability Goals
When investment flows, trade agreements, and infrastructure projects are aligned with regional political realities, they can become anchors of cooperation rather than flashpoints for tension. Proper alignment ensures that new roads, ports, or energy grids are not just economic assets, but also diplomatic bridges between rival powers.
Ultimately, integrating geopolitics into development planning reframes the entire mission:
- From building isolated projects to engineering interconnected stability systems.
- From chasing symptoms to neutralizing root causes.
- From reactive humanitarianism to predictive, preventative governance.
In a 21st-century world where climate shocks, resource scarcity, and geopolitical rivalries are increasingly intertwined, ignoring the political landscape is no longer an oversight, it is a liability. Development without geopolitical intelligence is like navigating a minefield blindfolded; development with it is like mapping, marking, and disarming the hazards before anyone takes a step.
Policy Takeaway β Security Through Geopolitical Diagnosis
βAid without geopolitics is like prescribing medicine without knowing the patientβs history.β
Integrating geopolitical analysis into development planning transforms projects into conflict-prevention tools, aligning aid, security, and economic growth toward sustainable stability. Without it, interventions risk becoming weapons in someone elseβs strategy.
From Analysis to Action β Turning Geopolitical Insight into Measurable Stability
Recognizing the interplay between geopolitics, poverty, and climate stress is only the first step. The true value emerges when this understanding is systematically embedded into operational decision-making, transforming plans from reactive aid packages into proactive stability strategies.
1. Mainstream Geopolitical Analysis in Every Stage of Development Planning
Geopolitical context must not be a last-minute add-on or risk disclaimer; it should be built into the DNA of project design, approval, and implementation. This means:
- Baseline Political Risk Mapping β Before committing resources, map political alliances, military presences, contested territories, and transnational influence patterns that could affect operations.
- Dynamic Threat Monitoring β Use continuous intelligence updates to adapt projects in real time when political or security landscapes shift.
- Stakeholder Power Mapping β Identify all state, non-state, and corporate actors with influence over the success or failure of an initiative, and assess their competing interests.
Without this integration, even the best-designed programs risk becoming collateral damage in geopolitical maneuvering.
2. Align Aid and Security Strategies for Mutual Reinforcement
In too many cases, aid agencies and security actors operate in silos β sometimes working at cross-purposes. A new approach demands:
- Joint Planning Frameworks β Develop coordinated strategies where humanitarian goals are protected by security measures, and security operations are informed by social and economic realities.
- Conflict-Sensitive Infrastructure Design β Ensure that critical infrastructure (water, energy, transport) is not only climate-resilient but also politically defensible, with agreements in place to prevent sabotage or diversion.
- Resilience-Based Security β Shift from militarized crisis response to security through stability, addressing the economic and social conditions that feed instability in the first place.
When aid strengthens security, and security protects development gains, the result is a positive feedback loop of stability.
3. Leverage Predictive Sustainability Intelligence (PSI) for Pre-Crisis Intervention
Todayβs crises are often predictable, if the right data is connected and analyzed. PSI offers a transformational capability to forecast where poverty, climate stress, and geopolitical tension will intersect, providing decision-makers with a time window for preventive action.
- Multi-Variable Modeling β Integrate environmental, economic, demographic, and security datasets to pinpoint emerging hotspots.
- Scenario Testing β Simulate the impact of different interventions, from targeted investment to diplomatic mediation, before deploying resources.
- Early Warning β Early Action β Translate predictive insights into pre-positioned aid, policy shifts, or rapid diplomacy, cutting off escalation before it becomes a humanitarian catastrophe.
By shifting from reaction to prevention, PSI can redefine how the global community manages risk in volatile regions.
Bottom Line:
Geopolitical awareness without action is like diagnosing a patient but withholding treatment. By mainstreaming political analysis, aligning aid with security, and harnessing predictive intelligence, the global community can move from short-term crisis management to long-term stability engineering.
Final Thought β Root-Cause Thinking as a Survival Imperative
Extreme poverty is not merely a moral challenge or an economic statistic, it is a destabilizing force that can ignite conflict, dismantle governance, and redraw geopolitical boundaries. Left unaddressed, it becomes a multiplier for climate vulnerability, mass migration, resource disputes, and extremist recruitment, a threat matrix that extends far beyond national borders.
Addressing poverty effectively demands the precision of a systems diagnosis, one that treats local symptoms while tracing them to their structural and geopolitical origins. This means moving beyond surface-level fixes, food drops, temporary shelters, short-term cash programs, to strategies informed by power dynamics, resource flows, and security realities.
The ancient Greeks, masters of philosophical inquiry and political strategy, understood that solving any complex problem required finding its true root cause, the archΔ, or origin point. They knew that without this insight, solutions would be partial at best, counterproductive at worst.
Shaykh Hamza Yusufβs teaching carries that timeless wisdom into the modern era: if you want lasting solutions, you must understand the true cause. This is not just a matter of intellectual elegance, it is a moral, political, and security necessity.
In todayβs interconnected yet fragile world, crises in one region can cascade globally, a drought in the Horn of Africa destabilizes Red Sea shipping lanes; water disputes in Gaza influence Gulf security postures; Sahel insurgencies ripple into European migration debates. The geopolitical web is tighter than ever, and so is the speed at which instability can spread.
Therefore, placing geopolitics at the core of the development diagnosis is not a niche perspective, it is the only realistic approach to building sustainable peace. Anything less risks addressing symptoms while leaving the conditions for the next crisis intact.
Bottom line:
Root-cause thinking is no longer optional. It is the difference between firefighting and fire prevention, between temporary relief and lasting stability, and ultimately, between global cooperation and systemic collapse.
About the Author:
Steven W. Pearce is an award-winning sustainability strategist, global development expert, and the Founder & CEO of Pearce Sustainability Consulting Group (PSCG). He is also the architect of Predictive Sustainability Intelligence (PSI), a pioneering framework that fuses ESG foresight, climate risk analytics, geospatial intelligence, and national security indicators to forecast and prevent crises before they occur.
With over 13 years of experience advising governments, defense agencies, multilateral institutions, and Fortune 500 companies, Steven has partnered with USAID, the U.S. Department of Defense, and private-sector leaders across North America, Europe, Africa, and the MENA region. His work aligns sustainability objectives with geopolitical stability and economic growth, integrating climate foresight, ESG performance, and conflict prevention into actionable strategies that deliver lasting impact.
Stevenβs expertise extends across climate-resilient infrastructure, renewable energy deployment, ESG disclosure frameworks, and conflict-sensitive development planning. His approach recognizes that climate risks, governance gaps, and resource scarcity are deeply interconnected, and must be addressed as part of one integrated security and development strategy.
He is the author of From Warming to Warfare: Climate Change and the Road to WWIII, an in-depth examination of how environmental change is driving conflict and reshaping global security. He is also working on several upcoming titles, including:
- Make Green by Going Green β A profitability roadmap for executives embracing corporate sustainability.
- Climate Wars β A deep dive into the geopolitical consequences of climate-driven resource scarcity.
- Bridging the Divide: Public-Private Partnerships for Sustainable Development β A comprehensive guide to leveraging collaboration to achieve the SDGs.
In addition to his books, Steven has authored over 200 published articles on sustainability, climate security, ESG, and global development, appearing in Illuminem, the worldβs number one sustainability platform, and on his Strategic Earth Substack. His insights regularly influence policy discussions, boardroom strategies, and public discourse on the nexus between sustainability and security.
Stevenβs academic credentials include a Master of Business Administration (MBA) in Sustainability Management, a Master of Project Management (MPM), and a Bachelor of Integrated Studies in Sociology, Anthropology, and Political Science (with university and departmental honors) from Weber State University. He is currently pursuing a graduate degree in International Relations at Harvard University Extension School, expanding his research on climate change, security, and international development policy.
Through PSCG and PSI, Stevenβs mission is clear: to help governments, companies, and institutions see the future, and win in it by turning emerging risks into strategic opportunities for a more secure, sustainable, and prosperous world.
About Pearce Sustainability Consulting Group (PSCG)
Pearce Sustainability Consulting Group (PSCG) is an award-winning, internationally recognized sustainability and ESG advisory firm that operates at the intersection of environmental stewardship, economic growth, and geopolitical stability. Founded by Steven W. Pearce, PSCG delivers end-to-end solutions that help governments, corporations, development agencies, and multilateral institutions future-proof their strategies, comply with evolving regulatory demands, and seize opportunities in the low-carbon, climate-resilient economy.
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