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We Don’t Talk Enough About The Impact Of War On Climate Change

We don’t talk enough about the impact of war on climate change.

So, let me go straight in and highlight research from the Scientists for Global Responsibility Report in 2021, which found that the world’s militaries are responsible for around 6 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions. This is more than aviation and shipping combined. The crisis feeds itself, as the climate-driven resource scarcity increases the likelihood of conflict.

If the global military were a country, it would rank as the fourth-largest emitter in the world. The US military alone is one of the largest institutional consumers of oil on the planet. And yet, military emissions are rarely front and centre in climate conversations.

We cannot discuss the climate impact of war without first acknowledging its primary and devastating human toll. In Gaza, more than 75,000 people have been killed, with over half of the territory’s buildings destroyed or damaged. In Ukraine, tens of thousands of civilians have died, millions have been displaced, and environmental destruction continues to compound an already catastrophic humanitarian crisis.

But war does not only take lives. It scars the land.

It strips forests. It poisons soil with heavy metals and toxic residue. It contaminates water sources. Unexploded ordnance and debris render land unusable for decades. Entire ecosystems are disrupted. Biodiversity is erased. Recovery, if it comes at all, takes generations.

The latest escalation involving the US, Israel and Iran is not only geopolitically and economically destabilising, but also environmentally costly. Modern warfare runs on fossil fuels. Fighter jets, naval fleets, armoured vehicles, and supply chains are all carbon-intensive, all largely shielded from scrutiny.

The US military’s carbon footprint is larger than that of many entire nations. Yet historically, military emissions have often been excluded from binding international climate agreements or obscured through limited disclosure. In effect, one of the world’s largest polluters has operated with partial immunity.

At the same time, soaring military budgets drain public funds that could otherwise accelerate climate mitigation, adaptation, and resilience. Every billion spent on weapons is a billion not spent on renewable energy, flood defences, food security, or climate justice.

We cannot claim to be serious about climate action while ignoring the carbon cost of conflict.

Peace is not only a moral imperative. It is a climate strategy.

And until we recognise that, we are really fighting the wrong war.

Photocredit: Picryl

My Love of Podcasts!

During lockdown and our changing world, I have been keeping myself busy with writing and podcasts, not just listening to them, but being fortunate enough to be invited on to various shows to share my stories.

I enjoyed sharing my business wisdom and stories and have recently been on two popular US based podcasts shows – CurryUp StartUp Podcast and the #365FirstChallenge

Both shows are hosted by great podcasters who have the mastery of asking great questions and importantly, good listeners, knowing just when to come in to ask that timely question.

Podcasts are great for sharing knowledge, experiences and stories with a wide audience. You can listen to podcasts about politics, business, cooking and more; the options are endless. Data shows that two million podcasts are registered by Google.

According data released from Buzzsprout, Latino podcasts are flourishing due to the large number of Spanish speakers in both the US and South America, with Chile in the lead with a podcast growth rate of 85 percent; followed by Argentina; then Peru and Mexico. The country with the fifth-highest rate is China; and I know that in India, podcasts is a growing market.

While in the UK, 12 percent of adults listen to at least one podcast per week and are the most popular among millennials (21 percent) and only five percent of Baby Boomers have caught the podcast bug.

Other research by Music Oomph shows that brands that advertise products and services during business podcasts have a 14 percent lift in purchase intent! There is plenty of research on customer behaviour proving that podcasts impact brand lift.

Other interesting podcasting statistics on customer behaviour:

  • Brands that have ads in podcasts about society and culture are most likely to have a 9.2 percent lift in purchase intent.
  • Brands that advertise in news and politics podcasts are most likely to have a 12.8 percent lift in purchase intent.
  • Brands that advertise in comedy podcasts are most likely to have a 7.3 percent lift.
  • Brands that advertise in sports podcasts are most likely to have a 9.3 percent lift.

According to Forbes – 36. 39 percent of US small and medium-sized businesses owners are podcast users and 65 percent of them listen to podcasts weekly, according to 2018 podcast listenership stats.

So, if you happen to be looking for something to listen to…give CurryUp StartUp Podcast and the #365FirstChallenge a try.