Cutting US military spending could save as much energy as used by a small nation

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“F15 Fighter Jet Belly" by TheBusyBrain is licensed under CC BY 2.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/)

North American researchers suggest the US military produces the largest quantity of greenhouse gas emissions of all of the world's institutions, and that cutting their spending could result in a meaningful reduction in energy consumption comparable to the annual energy usage of the US state of Delaware, or the entire nation of Slovenia. To work this out, the team analysed the publicly available data on the US military expenditure between 1975 and 2022. They found the cuts could help reduce energy consumption by limiting the use in facilities, vehicles and equipment, and in particular, jet fuel.

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From: PLOS

U.S. military spending reductions could substantially lower energy consumption

New study suggests sustained cuts could save as much energy as used by a small nation

A new analysis suggests that reductions in U.S. military spending could result in significant decreases in energy consumption by the Department of Defense, leading to reduced greenhouse gas emissions. Ryan Thombs of Penn State University, U.S., and colleagues present these findings in the open-access journal PLOS Climate on July 2.

Of all the world’s institutions, the U.S. military produces the most greenhouse gas emissions. This occurs through such activities as maintaining bases, continual preparations and training, research and development, and transporting people, supplies, and weapons worldwide. According to military leaders, anthropogenic climate change threatens geopolitical stability and national security. Meanwhile, prior research suggests possible links between various nations’ military spending and their national-level emissions.

However, few studies have analyzed associations between military spending and direct measurements of military energy consumption. To help fill that gap, Thombs and colleagues conducted a statistical analysis of publicly available data on U.S. military expenditures and U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) energy consumption from 1975 to 2022.

The analysis showed that reductions in U.S. military spending are associated with decreased energy consumption. Decreased spending appears to have a bigger effect on saving energy than increased spending does on increasing energy consumption, with these effects due primarily to reductions in energy consumption from facilities, vehicles and equipment, and—in particular—jet fuel. The researchers note that this asymmetry suggests that modest U.S. military spending cuts could meaningfully reduce fossil-fuel consumption and contribute to climate-change mitigation.

The researchers also developed forecasts of the possible effects of different spending decisions on energy consumption from 2023 to 2032, exploring various sizes of spending increases or cuts. These forecasts suggest that, by 2032, sustained cuts could yield annual energy savings comparable to the annual energy usage of the U.S. state of Delaware or the nation of Slovenia.

Given the potential implications for climate change and sustainability, the researchers note the need for further research to elucidate what mechanisms might underlie the observed asymmetrical effects of military spending on energy consumption.

The authors summarize: “We show that sustained cuts to U.S. military expenditures could result in annual energy savings on par with what the nation of Slovenia or the U.S. state of Delaware consumes annually by 2032.”

Journal/
conference:
PLOS Climate
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Penn State University, USA
Funder: The author(s) received no specific funding for this work.
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