In this post, Ellie Kinney examines the summit’s climate outputs and their context.Armed conflicts disrupt social, environmental and economic processes. NATO’s Vilnius summit saw the publication of three new documents on climate action, including its long-awaited Greenhouse Gases Emission Mapping and Analytical Methodology. JNATO’s GHG emissions tracking methodology - a small step forward? Linsey Cottrell assesses NATO's latest Climate Impact Assessment, its methodology for emissions tracking, and its compendium of best practice on military emissions, providing initial recommendations for how NATO should progress its emissions mitigation activities. JAnalysis: how NATO should move forward on emissions reporting Leon Moreland introduces the findings of our rapid analysis, situating them in the wider environmental context of the disaster. The report found that the UK MoD can ‘ do much more to measure and reduce its carbon emissions, without eroding military capacity’.ĪugConference: Military and conflict GHG emissions - from understanding to mitigationĪ one day conference bringing together academia, civil society and industry experts to consider how best to mitigate the military’s contribution to the climate crisis, and how to better understand the emissions footprint of armed conflicts.ĪugAnalysing the environmental consequences of the Kakhovka dam collapseįollowing the destruction of the Nova Kakhovka dam, CEOBS was asked by UNEP to provide an initial assessment of the potential risks to the environment. The UK House of Commons Defence Committee has released the Defence and Climate Change report, following their inquiry launched in May 2022. Reflections on the UK Defence and Climate Change report
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