Context:
The ongoing West Asia conflict is emerging as a major environmental crisis, contributing significantly to greenhouse gas emissions, pollution, and disruption of climate goals.
Key Highlights:
- Environmental Damage from War
- Gaza conflict alone generated ~33 million tonnes CO₂ equivalent emissions.
- Comparable to emissions from 7.6 million cars or Jordan’s annual emissions.
- Global Conflict Emissions
- Ukraine war caused over 300 million tonnes emissions, equivalent to France’s annual output.
- Sources of Pollution
- Jet fuel consumption, oil depot fires, naval operations.
- Attacks on refineries release toxic chemicals into air and water.
- Strategic Energy Implications
- Rising fossil fuel prices due to conflict may:
- Encourage renewables and electrification
- Accelerate energy transition efforts
- Climate Policy Challenges
- Governments may prioritize price stability over climate commitments.
- Risk of delayed decarbonisation goals.
Relevant Prelims Points:
- Decarbonisation: Reduction of carbon emissions from energy systems.
- Electrification: Shift from fossil fuels to electricity-based technologies.
- Greenhouse Gases (GHGs): Include CO₂, methane, responsible for global warming.
- Carbon Footprint of War: Military activities are major but often unaccounted emission sources.
Relevant Mains Points:
- War as Environmental Crisis:
- Conflicts contribute significantly to climate change and ecological degradation.
- Military emissions often excluded from global climate accounting.
- Energy Infrastructure Vulnerability:
- Attacks on oil and gas facilities increase risk of environmental disasters.
- Climate vs Economic Trade-off:
- Rising fuel prices may push nations to prioritize affordability over sustainability.
- Opportunity for Energy Transition:
- High fossil fuel prices can incentivize renewables, heat pumps, electrification.
- Global Climate Governance Challenge:
- Conflicts undermine Paris Agreement goals.
- Need to integrate conflict-related emissions into climate frameworks.
- Way Forward:
- Incorporate military emissions into global climate reporting.
- Strengthen protection of energy infrastructure under international law.
- Accelerate renewable energy adoption to reduce conflict vulnerability.
- Promote green diplomacy and conflict-sensitive climate policies.
UPSC Relevance:
• GS Paper 3 – Environment (climate change, emissions)
• GS Paper 2 – International Relations (conflict-climate nexus)
