EuroNews (English)

Rapid militarisa­tion jeopardisi­ng climate, claim NGOs

- Marta Pacheco

Rising militarisa­tion and spending on defence is detracting from efforts to counter climate change, NGOs claimed at an event in Brussels this week.

The European Network against Arms Trade (ENAAT) and Transnatio­nal Institute (TNI) organised the event following gures from the Stockholm Internatio­nal Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) showing the leap in military spending, to consider the impact of European military public procuremen­t on climate change.

Nick Buxton, knowledge hub coordinato­r at TNI cited 2022 estimates by scientists who found the total military carbon footprint to be approximat­ely 5.5% of global emissions.

“Military spending is going to tanks, F-35 jets, with Belgium and Germany lining up to buy them … Every time we see this increase in numbers there is a huge increase in carbon emissions,” said Buxton.

Buxton said that the EU is fueling climate emissions through militarisa­tion citing EU naval operations in the Red Sea and defences of the bloc’s borders to stop migration.

“We need to expose to the European public how politics militarise every crisis rather than addressing them,” Buxton added.

Laëtitia Sédou, project offi cer at ENAAT, said EU military spending has been growing since 2021, from €3.32bn to €7.67bn in 2023.

Since 2017 there was a "paradigm shift", she said, referring to the moment when the EU budget started funding the arms industry via the European Defence Fund, Action in Support of Ammunition Production ( ASAP ), European Defence Industry Reinforcem­ent through common Procuremen­t Act (EDIRPA) or the European Defence Industry Programme (EDIP).

Military spending in Western and Central Europe higher than end of Cold War, data shows

Lawmaker Clare Daly (Ireland/The Left) said nothing was more anathema to climate action than militarisa­tion.

“Instead of seeking to build peace and strengthen goodwill, the EU is now abducting funds meant for climate action and channellin­g them into armament and militarisa­tion, a choice that only intensifi es tensions and makes war more likely,” Daly told Euronews.

MEP Mick Wallace (Ireland/The Left) regretted that military emissions were not added to the

Global Stocktake at the COP28 in Dubai, noting the “many gaps” in reporting of such emissions.

“Reliable data on military emissions is more crucial than ever at a time when military expenditur­e is increasing in Europe, and indeed globally, at a frightenin­g rate,” Wallace told Euronews.

Ionela Maria Ciolan, research offi cer on security and defence at the Wilfried Martens Centre for European Studies, told Euronews that investment in the defence industry and arms production “shouldn't be hindered” by climate change considerat­ions.

Ciolan suggested, however, the EU could invest more in greening its armies and reducing the environmen­tal footprint of its armed forces through research and developmen­t of low-carbon military technologi­es and fuels.

 ?? ?? AP / Czarek Sokolowski
AP / Czarek Sokolowski

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