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G7 Summit: Clock is ticking on the global military fulfilling its responsibility in reaching net-zero

Friday 4 June, 2021

Academics, NGOs, activists and creatives support a call for G7 militaries to come clean on their carbon emissions ahead of COP 26 in Glasgow.


Tipping Point North South’s Transform Defence project today published an Open Letter to United Kingdom Prime Minister Boris Johnson, as host of the G7 Summit in Cornwall. 

The 26 signatories comprise an international list from academia, international development, environment, peace and the arts.


The Open Letter calls for G7 commitment to come clean on its collective military emissions ahead of COP and to take account of the letter’s recommendations (see Notes) as an urgent roadmap for action on this all too hidden aspect of the climate-emergency.


Military carbon emissions


The world must cut global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by at least 50% by 2030 if we are to limit the global temperature rise to 1.5˚C – we have less than nine years.[1] Yet while all aspects of human activity are required to urgently decarbonise, one sector remains out of view: the global military.


The global military has been a significant contributor to climate change over decades. Its emissions are estimated to be several percent of total global carbon emissions and are comparable with the carbon emissions of civilian aviation.[2]
Modern militaries are completely dependent on fossil fuels and are among the biggest institutional consumers of oil in the world, with no sign of realistic or practical net-zero plans to offset their carbon emissions.


The public are in the dark


The G7 countries (UK, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, and the USA) are all in the top 20 military spending nations and currently, the global military is exempt from compulsory reporting of GHG emissions to the UN/IPCC. Some countries, including the USA, the UK and Germany, voluntarily report, but this is a bare-minimum disclosure as the IPCC template and codes have only a handful of items mentioning domestic military-related activities.


This means the public and policy makers are unable to obtain an accurate picture of the global military’s overall contribution to climate heating ― from its massive fossil fuel consumption both domestically and overseas to its military exercises and expeditions; from the impacts of conflict and war to GHG emissions arising from post-conflict reconstruction or nation re-building.[3]


Critical relationship to the SDGs


Calculating and addressing the carbon burden of conflict and war means acknowledging the impact of military activity on conflict-driven poverty and displacement. It also means addressing the untold billions of dollars in military spending that is spent unnecessarily — as a consequence of waste, fraud and abuse — on many nations’ military spending and which should now be part of all discussions concerning funding sources to plug the significant SDGs funding gap.


Integral to all social and environmental justice issues


The eyes of the world are on the UK for this hugely important G7 meeting. The climate change related concerns of civil society must not be side-lined. In a climate-changed world that urgently needs to get to net-zero, this is yet one more challenging social and environmental justice issue for the G7 of 2021 which can no longer be swept under the carpet.


Full text of the Open Letter and supporting signatories here (https://transformdefence.org/g7-open-letter-2021/).




Contact:


Deborah Burton


E: deborah@tippingpointnorthsouth.org


T: 020 8847 0377


NOTES TO EDITORS


1. Open Letter Recommendations in brief (expanded in Open Letter)



2. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is the United Nations body for assessing the science related to climate change. The main objective of the Task Force on National Greenhouse Gas Inventories is to develop and refine a methodology for the calculation and reporting of national greenhouse gas emissions and removals.


3. There have been a number of recent reports quantifying the carbon contribution of the global military to climate change.3


4. Tipping Point North South’s (TPNS) Transform Defence for Sustainable Human Safety
initiative launched in December 2020 with two reports detailing the staggering cost of military spending to people and the planet: Indefensible: The true cost of the global military to our climate and human security
assesses the impact of the global military on climate change, human security and development and Global military spending, sustainable human safety and value for money
makes the case for modernising defence and security thinking and spending. TPNS was founded by former senior Christian Aid trade, tax and climate justice campaigners.


Supporting Signatories




























































































































Christine Allen



Executive Director, CAFOD (UK/Int'l)



Amir Amirani



Documentary Filmmaker (UK)



Nick Buxton



Future Labs Co-ordinator, The Transnational Institute (Netherlands/Int'l)



Dr Neta C. Crawford



Professor and Chair of the Department Political Science, Boston University and

Co-Director of the Costs of War Project. (USA)



Nick Dearden



Director, Global Justice Now (UK)



Fiona Dove



Executive Director, The Transnational Institute (Netherlands/Int'l)



Martin Drewry



CEO Health Poverty Action (UK/Int'l)



Brian Eno



Musician (UK)



Andrew Feinstein



Author, former ANC MP, Executive Director Shadow World Investigations (UK/Int'l)



Pat Gaffney



Vice President Pax Christi (UK)



Jeff Halper



Author, Founder Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions (Israel)



Dr Jason Hickel



Senior Lecturer, Goldsmiths University of London; Visiting Senior Fellow,

International Inequalities Institute at LSE (UK/Eswatini)



Charles Kenny



Author, Economist (USA)



Dr Ho-Chih Lin



Lead Researcher, Tipping Point North South / Transform Defence (UK)



Tamara Lorincz



Author, PhD candidate in Global Governance at the Balsillie School for International Affairs (Canada)



Priya Lukka



Visiting Fellow Goldsmiths University of London, International Development Economist (UK)



Linda Melvern



Author, Journalist (UK)



Pablo Navarrete



Journalist, Documentary Filmmaker (UK/Chile)



Dr Benjamin Neimark



Senior Lecturer at the Lancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster University (UK)



Dr Stuart Parkinson



Executive Director, Scientists for Global Responsibility (UK)



Dr. Samuel Perlo‑Freeman



Research Coordinator, Campaign Against Arms Trade (UK)



Prof Paul Rogers



John Sauven



Executive Director, Greenpeace UK



Andrew Simms



Co-director New Weather Institute, Co-ordinator Rapid Transition Alliance (UK)






[1] https://www.ipcc.ch/sr15/


[2] Ho-Chih Lin and Deborah Burton, ‘Indefensible: The true cost of the global military to our climate and human security,’ Transform Defence, 2020, https://transformdefence.org/publication/indefensible/; Various reports by Stuart Parkinson and colleagues, Scientists for Global Responsibility, https://www.sgr.org.uk/projects/climate-change-military-main-outputs.


[3] Ho-Chih Lin and Deborah Burton, ‘Indefensible: The true cost of the global military to our climate and human security,’ Transform Defence, 2020, https://transformdefence.org/publication/indefensible/; Neta C. Crawford, “Pentagon Fuel Use, Climate Change, and the Costs of War,” Costs of War Project, 2019, https://watson.brown.edu/costsofwar/papers/ClimateChangeandCostofWar; Oliver Belcher, Patrick Bigger, Ben Neimark, and Cara Kennelly, “Hidden Carbon Costs of the ‘everywhere war’: Logistics, Geopolitical Ecology, and the Carbon Boot-print of the US Military,” 2019, https://rgs-ibg.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/tran.12319; Various reports by Stuart Parkinson and colleagues, Scientists for Global Responsibility, https://www.sgr.org.uk/projects/climate-change-military-main-outputs.



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