Accounting for war: Ukraine's climate fallout
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[June 06, 2023]
By Sarah McFarlane and Valerie Volcovici
LONDON (Reuters) - The war in Ukraine is deepening the climate crisis at
time when global greenhouse gas emissions are already running at a
record high, according to report by carbon accounting experts who have
tallied the overall impact of the conflict.
The report, which is due to be released on the sidelines of the U.N.
climate summit in Bonn this week, calculates that the first 12 months of
the war will trigger a net increase of 120 million tonnes of greenhouse
gases, equivalent to the annual output of country such as Belgium.
A group of researchers led by Dutch expert Lennard de Klerk looked at a
range of contributors to emissions, from fuel used by vehicles, to
forest fires, to changes in energy use in Europe and the future
reconstruction of buildings and infrastructure.
"We didn't expect the emissions of war would be so significant and it's
not only the warfare itself that contributes to the emissions, but it's
also the future reconstruction of the destroyed infrastructure," said de
Klerk by phone from his home in Hungary near the border with Ukraine.
Carbon accounting will be in focus at the COP28 climate summit in Dubai
this year as countries assess progress against climate goals agreed in
Paris in 2015, and de Klerk said it was crucial military emissions were
included.
"Emissions of conflicts and military emissions are often overlooked," he
told Reuters.
"The aim that we all should have is to get to net zero by 2050,
including the military, but if you don't know what the military
emissions are, it's very difficult to start work on policies to reduce
them," de Klerk said.
The report - Climate Damage Caused By Russia's War in Ukraine - was
funded by the European Climate Foundation and the Environmental Policy
and Advocacy Initiative in Ukraine.
GAS LEAKS AND BOMBS
According to the report, seen by Reuters, almost half of the net
increase in emissions since the Ukraine war started in February last
year are linked to the anticipated reconstruction of buildings, roads
and factories damaged in the fighting.
About 19% of the emissions, meanwhile, come from military activities
such as burning fuel in vehicles, making and firing ammunition and the
construction of concrete fortifications.
The overall tally included greenhouse gas emissions from outside Ukraine
linked to the conflict, such as gas leaks from the sabotaged Nord Stream
pipeline, the rerouting of international flights, as well as the
movement of refugees.
"If you look at the environmental costs of what's happening in Ukraine,
that war is a catastrophe when it comes to carbon emissions," said James
Appathurai, NATO's deputy assistant secretary general for emerging
security challenges.
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Onlookers watch as firefighters attempt
to put out a fire allegedly caused by a shelling in the
Nemyshlianski district, as Russia's attack on Ukraine continues, in
Kharkiv region, Ukraine, June 20, 2022. REUTERS/Leah Millis
The report acknowledged there had been a drop in Ukraine's domestic
economic activity due to the conflict, but said emissions related to
those activities had mainly shifted to other countries.
It also concluded that the fall in emissions in Europe from lower
flows of Russian gas and a drop in electricity usage due to higher
energy costs had almost all been offset by increases in the use of
oil, coal and liquefied natural gas (LNG).
The authors said the report followed guidelines on military
emissions reporting developed by the Conflict and Environment
Observatory charity, and relied on data sources including fossil
fuel consumption figures, remote sensing through satellites, and
open-source publications.
HARD TO DECIPHER
Ukraine's Ministry of Environmental Protection said it was important
to initiate discussions about the impact of conflicts on the
climate.
"Unfortunately, the impact of the war in Ukraine was not and will
not be reflected in the reports and reviews of greenhouse gas
emissions prepared annually by the Secretariat of the United Nations
Framework Convention on Climate Change," the ministry said in an
emailed statement.
Government reporting of military and conflict emissions to the
United Nations is notoriously hard to decipher.
Opaque data on military activities, exemptions for emissions
generated by armies while abroad, and annexed territories sometimes
being double-counted all confused the picture, said carbon
accounting expert de Klerk.
Other studies have attempted to calculate emissions from conflicts.
The U.S. military's war-related activities abroad between 2001-2018,
including in Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria, caused 440
million tonnes of emissions, according to the Costs of War project
at Brown University.
During the 1990-91 Gulf War, about 133 million tonnes of emissions
were released when Iraq set fire to hundreds of oil wells as it
retreated from Kuwait, according to a report by the International
Institute for Applied Systems Analysis.
Britain, meanwhile, is funding a study into emissions related to the
widespread use of concrete blast walls - known as Bremer walls - in
Iraq.
(Reporting by Sarah McFarlane and Valerie Volcovici; Editing by
Richard Valdmanis and David Clarke)
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