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The Commons: Tools For Reading, Writing, and Rhetoric: The Defense Department is Worried about Climate Change by Neta Crawford

The Commons: Tools For Reading, Writing, and Rhetoric
The Defense Department is Worried about Climate Change by Neta Crawford
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table of contents
  1. Introduction
  2. Metacognitive Critical Reading
  3. Reading, Writing, And Rhetoric In A Nutshell
  4. Rhetorical Awareness in College Writing
  5. MLA Formatting Basics
  6. Themes For Reading Navigation
  7. The Danger of a Single Story by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
  8. Is Burning Trash a Good Way to Handle It? by Ana Baptista
  9. Geronimo's Story of His Life by S. M. Barrett
  10. Chat Example: A Brief History of Artificial Intelligence in Technology and Popular Culture by: Jason Blomquist and Liza Long
  11. How To Read Like a Writer by Mike Bunn
  12. The AI Dilemma by J.T. Bushnell
  13. Misinformation and Biases Infect Social Media by Giovanni Luca Ciampaglia and Filippo Menczer
  14. The Defense Department is Worried about Climate Change by Neta Crawford
  15. Sustaining our Commonwealth of Nature and Knowledge by Herman Daly
  16. Demanding Equal Political Voice by Louis DeSipio
  17. Writing in the Age of Distraction by Cory Doctorow
  18. Rural Appalachians Face Higher Debt Burdens Than Other Areas Across America by Kristi Eaton
  19. Are Batman and Superman the Barometer of Our Times? by Ira Erika Franco
  20. The Rural South's Invisible Public Health Crisis by Lyndsey Gilpin
  21. How Large Language Models (LLMS) Work by Joel Gladd
  22. How I Celebrate Life on the Day of the Dead by Linda González
  23. Appalachian Foodways by Amanda Green
  24. The Declaration of Independence by Thomas Jefferson
  25. The Day Language Came into My Life by Helen Keller
  26. How Helen Keller Learned to Talk
  27. John F. Kennedy Inauguration Speech by John F. Kennedy
  28. What Is Digital Literacy? by Liza Long
  29. Struggling With Cultural Repression from The National Museum of the American Indian
  30. Fred Rogers Testifies before the Senate Subcommittee on Communications by Fred Rogers
  31. The School Days of an Indian Girl by Zitkala-Ša
  32. Appalachians Are Dying At A Faster Rate Than The Rest Of The Nation by Taylor Sisk
  33. The Dude Map by Nikhil Sonnad
  34. A Feminist's Guide to Rom-Coms and How to Watch Them by Ayu Sutriasa
  35. Poor Man’s Maple Syrup Cultivates a Rich Family Heritage by Kristen Pennycuff Trent
  36. A Modest Proposal by Jonathan Swift
  37. The Ninth Myth of Appalachia by Randy Wykoff
  38. Supplementary Student Work
    1. Analysis: "A Critical View Of Corey Doctorow's 'Writing in the Age of Distraction'" by Riley Ballinger
    2. Analysis: "The Strange Science Of Online Toxicity" by Samuel Dutton
    3. Analysis: "How To Read Like A Writer" by Cameron Gates
    4. Analysis: "Distractions That Come With Writing" by Emma Hibbs
    5. Analysis: "Helen Keller's 'The Day Language Came into My Life'" by Hannah Higgins
    6. Literacy Narrative: Understanding Transgender Identity Through Language by Kaine Flynn
    7. Literacy Narrative: Horseback Riding and Showing by Kelsey Howell
    8. Literacy Narrative: Language of Multiethnicity by Alojzy Rembis

Before You Read

In this essay, author Neta Crawford addresses ecological issues of global warming and fossil fuel consumption from a sociopolitical perspective. She details the hypocrisy between governmental positions on climate change and the astronomical contributions made by the U.S. Department of Defense to greenhouse gas emissions. The carbon footprint left by military installations and operations alone rivals that of many smaller countries and Crawford argues that massive amounts of funding toward protections against potential human advisories neglects the very immediate threat of climate change. The ecological realities presented in this text offer an important perspective on the environmental realities of our world. The certain catastrophes of climate change, and even the political uprising resulting from said catastrophes, necessitates immediate attention on the part of world governments and individuals like you.

Introduction by the editors

Strategy: KWL-Q

Create a table with four columns as seen below.

  • Before you read: Take note of what you already know about the Defense Department and/or Climate Change (Column 1). What do you want to know about them? (Column 2)
  • When you finish reading: Take note of what you learned (Column 3)
  • After reading: What questions do you still have about the topic? Where do you think you could find those answers? (Column 4)
What do you already know?What do you want to know?What did you learn?What questions do you still have about the topic? Where do you think you could find those answers?

The Defense Department Is Worried about Climate Change and Also a Huge Carbon Emitter

by Neta Crawford

Jet plane flying over an aircraft carrier

"An F/A 18 Super Hornet, assigned to the "Blacklions" of Strike Fighter Squadron (VFA) 213, flies over the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN 71) during flight operations." by Lt. Cmdr. Johnnie Caldwell, U.S. Navy is in the Public Domain.

Scientists and security analysts have warned for more than a decade that global warming is a potential national security concern. They project that the consequences of global warming – rising seas, powerful storms, famine and diminished access to fresh water – may make regions of the world politically unstable and prompt mass migration and refugee crises.

Some worry that wars may follow.

Yet with few exceptions, the U.S. military’s significant contribution to climate change has received little attention. Although the Defense Department has significantly reduced its fossil fuel consumption since the early 2000s, it remains the world’s single largest consumer of oil – and as a result, one of the world’s top greenhouse gas emitters.

A broad carbon footprint

I have studied war and peace for four decades. But I only focused on the scale of U.S. military greenhouse gas emissions when I began co-teaching a course on climate change and focused on the Pentagon’s response to global warming. Yet, the Department of Defense is the U.S. government’s largest fossil fuel consumer, accounting for between 77% and 80% of all federal government energy consumption since 2001.

In a newly released study published by Brown University’s Costs of War Project, I calculated U.S. military greenhouse gas emissions in tons of carbon dioxide equivalent from 1975 through 2017.

Today China is the world’s largest greenhouse gas emitter, followed by the United States. In 2017 the Pentagon’s greenhouse gas emissions totaled over 59 million metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent. If it were a country, it would have been the world’s 55th largest greenhouse gas emitter, with emissions larger than Portugal, Sweden or Denmark.

The largest sources of military greenhouse gas emissions are buildings and fuel. The Defense Department maintains over 560,000 buildings at approximately 500 domestic and overseas military installations, which account for about 40% of its greenhouse gas emissions.

The rest comes from operations. In fiscal year 2016, for instance, the Defense Department consumed about 86 million barrels of fuel for operational purposes.

Why do the armed forces use so much fuel?

Military weapons and equipment use so much fuel that the relevant measure for defense planners is frequently gallons per mile.

Aircraft are particularly thirsty. For example, the B-2 stealth bomber, which holds more than 25,600 gallons of jet fuel, burns 4.28 gallons per mile and emits more than 250 metric tons of greenhouse gas over a 6,000 nautical mile range. The KC-135R aerial refueling tanker consumes about 4.9 gallons per mile.

A single mission consumes enormous quantities of fuel. In January 2017, two B-2B bombers and 15 aerial refueling tankers traveled more than 12,000 miles from Whiteman Air Force Base to bomb ISIS targets in Libya, killing about 80 suspected ISIS militants. Not counting the tankers’ emissions, the B-2s emitted about 1,000 metric tons of greenhouse gases.

Quantifying military emissions

Calculating the Defense Department’s greenhouse gas emissions isn’t easy. The Defense Logistics Agency tracks fuel purchases, but the Pentagon does not consistently report DOD fossil fuel consumption to Congress in its annual budget requests.

The Department of Energy publishes data on DOD energy production and fuel consumption, including for vehicles and equipment. Using fuel consumption data, I estimate that from 2001 through 2017, the DOD, including all service branches, emitted 1.2 billion metric tons of greenhouse gases. That is the rough equivalent of driving of 255 million passenger vehicles over a year.

Of that total, I estimated that war-related emissions between 2001 and 2017, including “overseas contingency operations” in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq and Syria, generated over 400 million metric tons of CO2 equivalent — roughly equivalent to the greenhouse emissions of almost 85 million cars in one year.

Real and present dangers?

The Pentagon’s core mission is to prepare for potential attacks by human adversaries. Analysts argue about the likelihood of war and the level of military preparation necessary to prevent it, but in my view, none of the United States’ adversaries – Russia,

Chart depicting Department of Defense greenhouse has emissions from 2001 to 2017. 2016 marks the lowest rate at 62 million metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent

Iran, China and North Korea – are certain to attack the United States.

Nor is a large standing military the only way to reduce the threats these adversaries pose. Arms control and diplomacy can often de-escalate tensions and reduce threats. Economic sanctions can diminish the capacity of states and nonstate actors to threaten the security interests of the U.S. and its allies.

In contrast, climate change is not a potential risk. It has begun, with real consequences to the United States. Failing to reduce greenhouse gas emissions will make the nightmare scenarios strategists warn against – perhaps even “climate wars” – more likely.

A case for decarbonizing the military

Over the past last decade the Defense Department has reduced its fossil fuel consumption through actions that include using renewable energy, weatherizing buildings and reducing aircraft idling time on runways.

The DOD’s total annual emissions declined from a peak of 85 million metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent in 2004 to 59 million metric tons in 2017. The goal, as then- General James Mattis put it, is to be “unleashed from the tether of fuel” by decreasing military dependence on oil and oil convoys that are vulnerable to attack in war zones.

Since 1979, the United States has placed a high priority on protecting access to the Persian Gulf. About one-fourth of military operational fuel use is for the U.S. Central Command, which covers the Persian Gulf region.

Social media post from "Climate & Migration" about climate change's impact on sociopolitical conflicts in Africa

As national security scholars have argued, with dramatic growth in renewable energy and diminishing U.S. dependence on foreign oil, it is possible for Congress and the president to rethink our nation’s military missions and reduce the amount of energy the armed forces use to protect access to Middle East oil.

I agree with the military and national security experts who contend that climate change should be front and center in U.S. national security debates. Cutting Pentagon greenhouse gas emissions will help save lives in the United States, and could diminish the risk of climate conflict.


The Defense Department Is Worried about Climate Change – and Also a Huge Carbon Emitter by Neta C. Crawford is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Creative Commons Attribution- NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.


Crawford, Neta C. “The Defense Department Is Worried about Climate Change - and Also a Huge Carbon Emitter.” The Commons: Tools for Reading, Writing, and Rhetoric (2nd ed.), edited by Jill Parrott and Dominic Ashby, Eastern Kentucky University, 2026.

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