UNACpeace.org
The Climate Costs of the US Military
Machine
1.
The Department of Defense budget
comprises more than half of all federal discretionary spending every year. Just
11% of the military budget could fund renewable energy for every US home.
2.
A new report from the Institute for Policy Studies calculates
that the cost of U.S. militarization in the last 20 years is a staggering $21
trillion, (this does not included the uncountable and
unaudited money sent to Ukraine). About half of the budget goes to military
contractors. Estimates calculate the total cost of shifting to 100% renewable
energy over 10 years would be a fraction of this - $4.5 trillion.
3.
The US military is exempt from reporting on greenhouse
emissions even though it is the largest single source of US environmental
pollution IN THE WORLD.
4.
US tax dollars spent on the military, ($766 billion 2022) are
a windfall for the weapons industry but devastating for people and the planet.
The money could be spent on climate change mitigation measures.
5.
The Pentagon generates five times more toxins than the five
major US chemical companies combined.
6.
Since 2001, the military has been responsible for 77% to 80%
of federal energy consumption.
7.
Since the beginning of the Global War on Terror in 2001, the
military has produced more than 1.2 billion metric tons of greenhouse gases.
That is more than the entire country of Portugal in the same period.
8.
The F-35, the replacement for the F-16, burns about 5,600 liters of fuel per hour, about 200 million pounds of CO2
and assorted pollutants per year. That is the equivalent of the annual
emissions of almost 20,000 passenger cars.
9.
Western-induced wars lead to spikes in carbon emissions, they
have led to the use of depleted uranium and the residual dust is still causing
major birth defects, poisoning of air and water. The estimated cost of cleaning
up the environment in Iraq alone is $375 billion.
10.
Subsidies for arms exports cost American taxpayers $7.9
billion in 1996 (the last year for which full statistics are available), this
could buy about 30 million wind turbines. 1.26 million turbines would power the
whole of the US according to Forbes.
11.
The defense and foreign aid budgets
are the largest single source of government funding for private corporations.
More than half of U.S. weapons sales are now being financed by taxpayers
instead of foreign arms purchasers.
12.
There are more nuclear reactors at sea than on land. All US
aircraft carriers (10) and submarines (72) are nuclear-powered and there are 83
nuclear powered ships. The U.S. Navy uses highly enriched
uranium — identical to the stuff in our nuclear weapons. Dozens of nuclear
weapons have been lost at sea over the decades because they were on ships,
submarines, or aircraft that were lost.
13.
The US has enough nuclear weapons to destroy the world 10
times over. The current DOD budget includes over $44 billion for new nuclear
weapons.
14.
The U.S. has more than 750 bases in 80 countries and colonies
around the world. More bases than any nation, empire
or people in world history.
15.
Nearly all military bases in the United States have a history
of PFAS (per-and poly-fluoroalkyl substances otherwise known as ‘forever
chemicals’ because they never break down in the environment). The cost of
clean-up of military related sites is estimated to be upwards of $500 billion.
16.
The humanitarian cost of climate refugees. Approx 21.5
million people are forced flee their homes as a result of
sudden onset weather hazards every year. There is no provision for them to be
integrated into host societies.
17.
$1 billion spent on clean energy healthcare and education
will create substantially more jobs within the U.S. economy than would the same
$1 billion spent on the military.
18.
Investments in clean energy, healthcare and education create
a much larger number of jobs across all pay ranges, including midrange jobs
(paying between $32,000 and $64,000) and high-paying jobs (paying over
$64,000).
It is entirely possible for next
generation to grow up in an economy that’s about nurturing life, not waging
death.