Saudi Arabia / Arab Group/ G77+China Proposal for a sales tax on developed nations’ defence industries as part of a climate finance package

Saudi Arabia / Arab Group/ G77+China Proposal for a sales tax on developed nations’ defence industries as part of a climate finance package

The arms industry finds itself in the climate finance frame

At Bonn talks, G77 group floats a 5% sales tax on tech, fashion and defence firms to fund green spending in the Global South’

Climate Home News reported in the first days of the Bonn Climate Conference, the annual mid-year preparatory conference that precedes COP each year.

Early on in the conference the debate about how to fill the coffers of the new climate finance goal (NCQG) – in other words, how to move from billions to trillions (and fast) – was clearly taking priority.  While rich nations  (Annex II ) are obligated to pay for international climate finance under the Paris Agreement, they are now saying they are struggling to find the funds to do so and are calling on countries like China to step up also.

As a route to pushing this back, Saudi Arabia, endorsed by the Arab Group and G77+China offered a proposal whereby developed countries can raise $441 billion “without compromising spending on other priorities entirely by adopting targeted domestic measures” such as a “financial transaction tax”, a defence company tax, a fashion tax and a “Big Tech Monopoly Tax”.

‘Referring to the document in talks on the new finance goal yesterday, Saudi Arabia’s negotiator justified a tax on arms manufacturers by saying that military emissions of planet-heating gases represent 5% of global historical emissions. “One… potential idea is to have a tax on defence companies in developed countries,” he said, suggesting it could be put forward….  Around $21 billion a year could come from a 5% tax on the annual sales of the top 80 defense firms in developed countries, the paper says.’  Climate Home News

Credit: Climate Home News

Some eyebrows raised – was Gaza a reason?

A proposal on an arms industry tax from one of the world’s biggest arms buyers left some asking very obvious question: what’s this about?

Anabella Rosemberg and Tasneem Essop protest at the opening plenary (Photo: Kiara Worth/IISD ENB)

It certainly raised eyebrows in some quarters. Why bother to include it alongside the much bigger industries of  finance, tech and fashion? Supported by the Arab Group and G77+China, one can only wonder if the war on Gaza played some role in the inclusion of arms in this proposal. Gaza was ever present in many ways at Bonn.

And Mohamed Adow, Director of Powershift Africa and a leading media spokesperson on climate and climate finance referenced military emissions and spending at a CAN Int’l press conference ‘ Defund the genocide.’

Inevitably the sales tax proposal was widely covered by the climate media with special interest in the arms sales tax component. There are questions that will need to be addressed concerning the arms industry aspect of the sales tax: after all, it’s not the public who procure arms as they do tech or fashion – it’s governments via  defence budgets. So how will that work? The arms companies add it to the cost and the buying governments simply pay more?

However, there remains no way to avoid the elephant in this particular room:  the oil-military-arms industry nexus. The latter are utterly dependent on the former and of course, oil has been a cause of war and instability decade in and decade out.  The proposal also does not deflect from the hard truth that Saudi Arabia is in the hottest of hot seats in relation to the ‘make polluters pay’ demands by civil society.

The idea ‘is in the air’ and we support it

The timing of the Saudi /Arab Group/G77+China Sales Tax proposal chimed exactly with our report released for Bonn ‘Excess profits tax on the arms Industry to fund climate finance.’

The G77+China proposal clearly reinforces the in-principle value of such a call. It’s time has come.

We are watching its development closely while we continue to advocate an excess profits tax, not a sales tax and one that is universal, not just levied on rich world arms companies.

Taking these differences into account, the numbers in each proposal are not far from each other – the G77+China proposal and our Transform Defence proposal arrive at very similar revenues from taxing arms companies for funding climate finance.

And critically, our call for a global arms profiteering tax is not to call into question the Paris Agreement decision that only Annex 2 – highly developed countries – should pay for climate finance. They should. And in this sense, we applaud the inclusion of the arms industry in the G77+China proposal, directed at developed country arms industries. There must be no rule change. No more disingenuous delaying tactics to avoid paying up.

Big step forward

For all of us who work to get military emissions taken much more seriously and urgently addressed alongside the interlinked (and big) problem of runaway military spending and arms industry profiteering, this proposal by Saudi/Arab Group/G77+China is a huge step forward. Any effort – especially one led by states – that places the arms industry alongside other industries such as tech, finance and fashion in the climate finance frame – is of value to the wider debate. 

Bolivian negotiator Diego Pacheco, who often speaks for the influential Like-Minded Developing Countries group, told Climate Home that

“The [argument of a] lack of public finance is not true,” he said. “There is a lot of finance available and political will is lacking.”  He suggested that developed countries should shift military budgets towards tackling climate change or tax luxury products “because luxurious patterns of consumption are also a driver of the climate crisis”.

The climate justice movement wholeheartedly agrees.

The appetite is there

Since we attended our first COP at Sharm El Sheikh in November 2022 there has been a quantum shift in awareness concerning military emissions and it has been catapulted onto the UNFCCC agenda – primarily due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and Israel’s genocidal war on the Gazan population. This in turn has enabled some of us to connect the emissions narrative to another: runaway military spending, and the madness of ever rising investments in war while the greatest threat to human safety – climate chaos – is de-prioritised.  

 

Our work has shown that the wealthiest countries (Annex II in the UN climate talks) are spending 30 times more on their militaries than on providing climate finance for the world’s most vulnerable countries.

This situation is becoming ever less tenable. From the UN Secretary General to calls by states at UNFCCC meetings, military spending vs climate finance is becoming an ever more present issue. In the call for the move from billons to trillions for climate finance, it is clear that the $2.4tr p/a spent on militaries is an ever more legitimate source to tap for climate finance. And within that, a tax on the close military spending bed-fellow: the arms industry polluters and profiteers.

This, coupled with the worldwide recognition that fair taxation is central to lifting all our societies up, from public services to climate finance, means that we are getting ever closer to putting both the arms industry and military spending in the climate finance frame.

The sooner the better.

*******

Notes

  1. TPNS’s Transform Defence project proposes an excess profits tax on the arms industry to be applied to fund climate finance needs. It estimates that a global excess profits tax on arms companies could deliver $30 billion dollars every year to fund international climate finance. In times of war, we estimate that an additional punitive excess profits tax on war profiteers could deliver considerably more. Had this war profiteers tax been applied in 2024 (for Ukraine and Gaza wars), an extra $52bn would have brought the 2024 annual total to $82 billion. This tax alone would be more than four fifths of the pledged (but never fully fulfilled) $100 billion a year climate finance by developed countries to developing countries
  2. Annex I Parties include the industrialized countries that were members of the OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) in 1992, plus countries with economies in transition (the EIT Parties), including the Russian Federation, the Baltic States, and several Central and Eastern European States. Annex II Parties consist of the OECD members of Annex I, but not the EIT Parties. They are required to provide financial resources to enable developing countries to undertake emissions reduction activities under the Convention and to help them adapt to adverse effects of climate change.
Presenting military emissions and spending to the Degrowth community

Presenting military emissions and spending to the Degrowth community

It was a pleasure to be part of the Joint Conference of the International Degrowth Research Networks and the European Society for Ecological Economics in Pontevedra, Spain 18 to 21 June 2024.

With an attendance of more than 1100 people from 48 different countries, the conference had the participation of academics, activists, students and teachers of secondary education.

Deborah Burton joined Corinne Lamain to present the sessionDegrowing the military: reducing military emissions and rethinking responses to socio-ecological conflicts.’ Continue reading

Bonn Climate Conference attendance + arms industry tax & military spending filtering through

Bonn Climate Conference attendance + arms industry tax & military spending filtering through

The Bonn UN Climate Change Conference is a midway point in each year in the lead up to the annual COP. It serves as the mid-year meeting of the Subsidiary Body for Implementation and the Subsidiary Body for Scientific and Technological Advice. This year, 7000 delegates attended from governments, UN, civil society and media.

For our work on military emissions and military spending, it has become an important calendar moment and we attended our second Bonn conference in June 2024. We were able to deepen conversations started at previous gatherings (COP, Bonn, CAN International) as well as develop new climate finance conversations. Both military emissions and military spending were widely referenced and the latter gives hope we are making progress in getting it included in the climate finance debate.

However, overall, Bonn concluded after two weeks of intensive work across a range of issues where the urgent progress needed on GHG reductions and climate finance failed.

“We’ve taken modest steps forward here in Bonn,” said UN Climate Change Executive Secretary Simon Stiell in his closing speech. “[But] too many items are still on the table… We’ve left ourselves with a very steep mountain to climb to achieve ambitious outcomes in Baku.”

Genocide in Gaza

For civil society attending Bonn, the war on Gaza could not be ignored. It became centre stage when a protest was made inside the opening plenary to draw attention and which was picked up by media around the world.

Anabella Rosemberg and Tasneem Essop protest at the opening plenary (Photo: Kiara Worth/IISD ENB)

Military emissions

Given Gaza and Ukraine, it was concerning – and surprising – that Bonn did not accept any one or more of the four side events proposals on military emissions submitted by parties (governments) or civil society NGOs , bringing an abrupt halt to the progress we and others had hoped to build on at Bonn. This as the world has witnessed genocide in Gaza, and the was in Ukraine still ongoing. Side events remain vital to the introduction of new research and advocacy to delegates and this Bonn saw new emissions work released on both Gaza and Ukraine.

Nevertheless, military emissions are now being noted inside the formal negotiations and more widely, in general conversation, including as context for an arms industry sales tax (more below).

Climate finance, military spending + a sales tax on the arms industry

Arms industry tax proposal

‘At Bonn talks, G77 group floats a 5% sales tax on tech, fashion and defence firms to fund green spending in the Global South.’  Climate Home News

Early on in the conference, the debate about how to fill the coffers of the new climate finance goal – in other words, how to move from billions to trillions (and fast) – was clearly taking priority.  While rich nations are obligated to pay for international climate finance under the Paris Agreement, they are now saying they are struggling to find the funds to do so and are calling on countries like China to step up also. To take the initiative back, Saudi Arabia, endorsed by Arab Group and G77+China offered a proposal whereby developed countries can raise $441 billion “without compromising spending on other priorities entirely by adopting targeted domestic measures” such as a “financial transaction tax”, a defence company tax, a fashion tax and a “Big Tech Monopoly Tax”.

‘Referring to the document in talks on the new finance goal yesterday, Saudi Arabia’s negotiator justified a tax on arms manufacturers by saying that military emissions of planet-heating gases represent 5% of global historical emissions.“One… potential idea is to have a tax on defence companies in developed countries,” he said, suggesting it could be put forward….  Around $21 billion a year could come from a 5% tax on the annual sales of the top 80 defense firms in developed countries, the paper says.’  Climate Home News

A proposal on an arms industry tax from one of the world’s biggest arms buyers, not to mention oil producers, certainly raised eyebrows in some quarters. It is supported by the Arab Group and G77+China and one can only wonder if the war on Gaza played some role in the inclusion of arms in this proposal.

The Saudi /Arab Group Sales Tax proposal resonated with our newly released report and reinforced the value of the call. We believe the inclusion of the arms industry in the sales tax proposal is a significant step in the right direction and will watch its progress closely. We remain committed to our excess profits tax idea which taxes 100% excess profits, not just 5% on sales, and which is universal, not just levied on rich world arms companies.

Military Spending at Bonn

Press Conferences

TPNS has worked hard to advocate for military spending to be part of the climate finance demands within the larger climate networks. Several of the Climate Action Network press conferences saw military spending & climate finance referenced to a packed media room.

Mohamed Adow, Director of Powershift Africa and a leading media spokesperson on climate and climate finance referenced military emissions and spending at a CAN Int’l press conference on Gaza.

Side Events

Military spending as (a) a comparison with and/or (b) a potential source to tap for climate finance was also referenced in a good number of NGO hosted climate finance side events.

Interfaith dialogue / strategy group

TPNS was able to make a presentation to this important group in their discussion on preparing for COP29.  Deborah was invited to speak about the links between war, climate and military spending.

Media

TPNS and publications at Bonn

   

Our attendance at Bonn is made possible with support from the Movement for Abolition of War and the Quaker UN office.

Press Commentary

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/article/2024/jun/21/climate-activists-bemoan-scant-progress-on-finance-as-cop29-looms

https://climatenetwork.org/2024/06/13/sb60-press-release-climate-action-network-outcome-reaction/

https://www.climatechangenews.com/2024/06/10/bonn-bulletin-crunch-time-for-climate-finance/

COP28 to COP29: Webinar for Movement for Abolition of War

COP28 to COP29: Webinar for Movement for Abolition of War

Deborah was invited to share her experience of the recent COP28 in Dubai with specific reference to TPNS events on military emissions and spending, and to reflect on the activities throughout 2024 which will deepen awareness and action on both issues as we move towards COP29 in Azerbaijan.

MAW is a supporter of TPNS activities at the annual climate conferences in Bonn and COP.

Webinar here: https://abolishwar.net/From-COP28-to-COP29/

Continue reading

TPNS at Climate Action Network annual meeting

TPNS at Climate Action Network annual meeting

TPNS was delighted to be invited to speak and participate at the Climate Action Network’s Annual Strategy Meeting, held in February in Mombasa, Kenya. We took the issue of military emissions, spending and climate finance into a number of key spaces at the conference including a panel presentation on new issues to be potentially considered as part of CAN’s climate finance ‘escalation’ work in 2024.

The conference hosted approx 120 participants, representing member organisations, CAN Int’l regional networks (Asia, Latin America, Africa, Europe) and the CAN Secretariat. Continue reading

This MLK Day: Watch Adjoa Andoh & Paterson Joseph perform Dr. King’s last Xmas sermon

This MLK Day: Watch Adjoa Andoh & Paterson Joseph perform Dr. King’s last Xmas sermon

MARKING MLK DAY – 15TH JANUARY

Dear friends, colleagues and supporters,

‘PEACE ON EARTH’

With the Vietnam war at its height, the support of Dr. King and his wife Coretta Scott King for the anti-Vietnam war movement was becoming ever more vocal. It was in this context that he delivered what proved to be his last sermon on 24th December 1967.

We are sharing the video of our BHM event at St. John’s Church Waterloo, in London, where we were honoured to have actors Adjoa Andoh and Paterson Joseph memorably perform Dr. King’s final Christmas Sermon.

Continue reading

A Christmas sermon from Bethlehem like no other + Is Gaza enduring one of the most intense bombardments in history?

A Christmas sermon from Bethlehem like no other + Is Gaza enduring one of the most intense bombardments in history?

Gaza: still under bombardment as we enter the New Year.

Not far off three months on, with no ceasefire in sight, it seems there is no end to the hell being visited upon the children, women and men of Gaza as Israel continues commit war crimes and genocide in its determination to eradicate Hamas. Meantime, on Christmas Day, Israel intensified its raids on the occupied West Bank – Bethlehem included.

As we end this year we join with millions around the world calling CEASEFIRE NOWincluding the release of all remaining hostages. Our hearts are heavy with the incomprehensible collective punishment being inflicted on a trapped and innocent civilian population, by a nation armed by the USA administrationUK government and others.

Below are links to the Christmas sermon from the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Bethlehem, calling out the West’s support for Israel’s war on Gaza; the latest research from our colleagues at Scientists for Global Responsibility on the intensity of the Gaza bombardment; and a piece on Gaza by our colleague Leila Sansour (Open Bethlehem) for ITV News.

As we end 2023, we wish everyone a peaceful New Year.

To all our grant-givers, major donors and regular givers who have supported our work throughout the year – we say THANK YOU.

With very best wishes from everyone at TPNS. Continue reading

Our COP28 round-up: TPNS events, presentations & media

Our COP28 round-up: TPNS events, presentations & media

This COP28 was the one that finally recognised fossil fuels as the primary culprit in the climate crisis. But it held back from calling for a phase-out, and instead called for a “transition away”. Not enough since the consensus at COP was this: we are headed for 2° Celsius or more of warming by 2100.

On climate finance the Loss and Damage fund was officially made operational, with $700m committed at COP28. The Green Climate Fund (GCF) received a boost to its second replenishment with six countries pledging new funding at COP28 with total pledges now standing at a record USD 12.8 billion from 31 countries, with further contributions expected. Eight donor governments announced new commitments to the Least Developed Countries Fund and Special Climate Change Fund totalling more than USD 174 million to date, while new pledges, totalling nearly USD 188 million so far, were made to the Adaptation Fund at COP28.

But these new climate finance numbers still pale into insignificance when compared to the $13trillion the big fossil fuel reliant militaries will receive between now and 2030 – the year when we must also hit 45% cuts to global annual GHG emissions.

As Russia’s invasion of Ukraine brought attention to this issue at COP27 in Egypt, so Israel’s bombardment of Gaza meant our message was loudly heard at COP28. The excessively funded fossil-fuel-reliant big militaries of the world – and the arms industry that supply them – are now in the climate change frame for all to see. As a result, COP28 saw the climate justice movement begin to include this issue in their broader analysis.

TPNS took its message to civil society, country delegates, UN departments and media. We built on our presence at COP27 as part of an ever growing civil society movement calling for this issue to be centre-stage. We look forward to building on both existing and new connections in our work to get military emissions and spending on the UNFCCC and climate finance agendas respectively.

We are indebted to the following for their support of our COP28 attendance: Jam Today, Movement for the Abolition of War, Quaker UN Office, Perspectives Climate Group.

Meantime, as the holiday season nears, we send you the very best Season’s Greetings and wish everyone a peaceful Christmas.

Deb, Ho-Chih, Dionne & all at TPNS.


COP28 ATTENDANCE 2nd-11th DECEMBER

SIDE EVENTS

December 4th  Official Side Event

Watch here. December 6th  Green x Digital Pavilion

Watch here.

December 10th Official Side Event

Watch here.

December 12th    SDGs Pavilion

Watch here.

COP28 Live Webinar
Hosted by IPB, TPNS, TNI, Scientists for Global Responsibility (SGR), Stop Wapenhandel, WILPF

Watch here.

MEDIA – CLIMATE CROSSFIRE REPORT & SIDE EVENTS

HIGHLIGHTS

Democracy Now with Amy Goodman at COP28

Guardian: Climate Crossfire Report and the 5% cut call
Divert military spending to fund climate aid, activists urge Cop28

Climate Home News
Wars are closing down the window for climate action (Op Ed)

Twitter
Our COP28 Feed https://twitter.com/TransformDef
UNCS News

Full media listing here.

COP28: Military Spending Enters the Climate Finance Debate

President Lula De Silva of Brazil

It is unacceptable that the promise of 100 billion dollars a year made by the developed countries will not come to fruition while, in 2021 alone, military spending reached 2 trillion and 200 billion dollars.

Climate Action Network COP28 Policy Document

“At the same time, it is important to point out that the world’s militaries contribute at least 5.5% of global emissions and reporting is voluntary and mostly lacking. We ask leaders to reduce and re-allocate military spending to reduce emissions and to provide adequate, scaled-up finance as this is a critical enabler of ambitious climate action.”

Mohamed Adow, director of Power Shift Africa, a Nairobi-based climate and energy think-tank.

The war on Gaza is also affecting how much funding can be diverted to climate initiatives. Adow says wars and conflict are using up much needed climate cash that could have otherwise been very useful to help protect vulnerable communities from climate disaster. He used the example of Ukraine, where he says trillions of dollars were sent at a time that the international community was struggling to mobilize a hundred billion for climate finance.“Demilitarization across the world must be a key component of climate justice,” Adow said.

Mitzi Jonelle Tan Convenor and international spokesperson of Youth Advocates for Climate Action Philippines (YACAP), the Fridays For Future (FFF) of the Philippines.  Mitzi has long pushed for the climate movement to address militarism. She co-ordinated this action at COP28 before heading over to join our 4 December official side event.

Yasmine Sherif, Executive Director of Education Cannot Wait, the UN global fund for education in emergencies

“Don’t tell me that there are no resources. If we took 5 per cent of military expenditures and move them towards a education and to address climate crisis… We would have $100 billion a year to address climate change. So, the message is that you need to start reprioritizing.”

COP28 – OUTCOMES

Below are links to various commentaries on COP28 conclusion.

COP28: Side Events + New Report & Webinar

COP28: Side Events + New Report & Webinar

TAKING MILITARY EMISSIONS & SPENDING
INTO THE BLUE ZONE AT COP28 UAE

Dear friends, supporters, colleagues,

As COP28 looms, despite some positive commentary (the recent Biden/XI meeting), the ever-rising sense that COP28 will not deliver the action we so urgently need is everywhere. Whether cuts to emissions, no new oil and a rapid move away from fossil fuels across all sectors, there is still so far to go if we are not to overshoot the 1.5 degrees of warming that will further accelerate runaway climate change.

And critically, governments also need to commit to massively scaling up climate finance to countries in the global south on the ever expanding frontline of climate change. Finance rich countries are legally bound to deliver.

Nevertheless, we feel it is right to attend COP28 because of the windows of opportunity to speak at official side events to delegates (UN, governments, media, NGOs) on the still relatively new topic of military emissions, linked to spending and climate finance and Loss and Damage.

And sadly, with this vital COP so close, the climate community is mourning the unexpected death of Professor Saleemul Huq – a driving force at every climate negotiation and the beating heart of the Loss and Damage movement. He was a brilliant, generous man. His support of our work on military emissions and spending was invaluable.  His spirit will be felt everywhere the loss and damage cause is debated and our side event on 6th December is dedicated to him.

Below is our COP28 events listing plus news on our latest report & associated webinar. Also some thoughts on how the war on Gaza will impact COP28.  All official COP side events inside the Blue Zone are live-streamed on the UNFCCC youtube channel. Continue reading

Sharing MLK events + ID refresh

Sharing MLK events + ID refresh

Campaigning latest:
Sunday’s MLK event with Adjoa Andoh & Paterson Joseph
This coming Thursday’s film event
Who we are

MLK’s 1967 Christmas Sermon

Dear friends and supporters,

This Sunday we sat in the beautiful St. John’s Church Waterloo and listened to the words of Revd Dr Martin Luther King interpreted beautifully, sensitively and passionately by actors Adjoa Andoh and Paterson Joseph. The sermon was from Christmas Eve 1967, as bombs rained down on Vietnam and Dr. King’s commitment to the anti-Vietnam war movement was at its height.

MLK’s last Christmas sermon can be read here – it reads as if written for today, such is the brilliance of his mind. His writing, his empathy for all humanity and his consummate skill in framing contemporary concerns through the lens of his profound faith are peerless.

Both the performed reading and the brilliant discussion with Adjoa Andoh, Priya Lukka, Dionne Gravesande, Shanon Shah – chaired  by Canon Giles Goddard – were filmed and we will be sharing at Christmas time.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

Continue reading

Gaza: sharing reactions from our friends and colleagues

Gaza: sharing reactions from our friends and colleagues

Dear Friends,

Since Tipping Point North South began, with its Film Fund, we have been committed to doing all we can in support of, and in solidarity with, those in the Palestinian struggle to free their homeland from Israel’s 75 years long occupation.

As Gaza endures extreme bombardment from Israel, the 15th largest military spender ($24bn p/a) in the world, in its war declared upon a people not even in control of their water, let alone their nationhood, we are sharing some of the thoughts and actions of some of the friends and colleagues with whom we have worked over the years.

Gaza Emergency appeals
MAP Medical Aid for Palestinians,
https://www.unicef.org.uk/donate/children-in-gaza-crisis-appeal/UNICEF

In peace.

Deborah, Ho-Chih and all at TPNS.
Continue reading

Media release: NATO 2% SPENDING GOAL COULD DIVERT $2.6 TRILLION FROM CLIMATE FINANCE BY 2028

Media release: NATO 2% SPENDING GOAL COULD DIVERT $2.6 TRILLION FROM CLIMATE FINANCE BY 2028

Embargoed: 00:01am CET, 17 October

NEW RESEARCH: NATO 2% SPENDING GOAL COULD DIVERT $2.6 TRILLION FROM CLIMATE FINANCE BY 2028 

NATO’s goal of 2% spending of GDP on the military will accelerate climate breakdown by diverting millions of dollars from climate finance and increasing greenhouse gas emissions, concludes a new report that urgently calls for a ‘climate dividend’ similar to the ‘peace dividend’ that was won with the end of the Cold War.

The report, Climate Crossfire, produced by Tipping Point North South (UK), together with Transnational Institute (International) and Stop Wapenhandel (Netherlands), estimates the likely financial implications as well as increased greenhouse gas emissions that would result if all NATO members meet their commitment to increase military spending to a minimum of 2% of GDP. 

The report finds that:

  • NATO’s military spending this year – $1.26 trillion-  would pay for 12 years of promised climate finance of $100 billion a year.
  • If all NATO members meet its 2% military spending targets, it would divert an estimated additional US$2.57 trillion by 2028 away from climate spending, enough to pay for climate adaptation costs for all low- and middle-income countries for seven years.
  • NATO’s estimated military carbon footprint this year – 205 million tCO2e – is comparable to the total annual greenhouse gas emissions of many countries. If NATO’s militaries were a country, it would rank 40th in the world in terms of greenhouse gas emissions.
  • If all NATO members meet its 2% military spending targets, this would lead to an estimated additional 467 million tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions.
  • NATO members export arms to 39 of the 40 most climate-vulnerable countries, fuelling conflict and repression at a dangerous moment of climate breakdown.

Continue reading

BHM October 22 and 26: MLK Events with Adjoa Andoh, Paterson Joseph, Robert Beckford and others

BHM October 22 and 26: MLK Events with Adjoa Andoh, Paterson Joseph, Robert Beckford and others

Join us for two special Black History Month events at
St. John’s Church Waterloo

We are delighted to be a part of the Black History Month Exploring Spirit programme at the stunning, newly renovated St. John’s Church in Waterloo.

We have two MLK focussed events and both events are free but booking is essential. The first event is MLK’s final Christmas Sermon, 1967. It’s relevance to the climate emergency, with war as a metaphor for climate chaos, is explored in our latest blog.

We hope you may be able to join us.

Dionne, Deb & Ho-Chih Continue reading

Presentations & Conferences, Publications & Performances

Presentations & Conferences, Publications & Performances

Dear friends and supporters,

We hope you’ve had a good summer, with time to recharge your batteries, as we move into autumn.

And we hope there is plenty of interest in our Spring/Summer catch up below, along with some event dates for your diary.

Once again, a HUGE thank-you to all our regular givers, our major donors and the grant-makers who sustain our work.

You can keep up with our work on social media at

FACEBOOK, TWITTER and
Transform Defence social media: TwitterFacebook

Best wishes,
Deb, Ho-Chih and all at TPNS.

*************

TPNS’S TRANSFORM DEFENCE project continues to take its messages to various fora as it draws the ever clearer connection between rising military spending and greater military emissions. At the same time, it makes the case that military spending is a legitimate source to tap for climate finance for vulnerable countries along with loss and damage.

THE BIG WEEKEND/XR PEACE

We were delighted to be invited by the Movement for the Abolition of War to take part at XR Peace’s programme for the Big Weekend in April, where our presentation made in front of the MOD building revealed the scale of the impact of military emissions on climate change; action at UNFCCC and COP and why present day foreign and defence policy- making is not fit for purpose in this era of climate chaos.

BONN UN CLIMATE CONFERENCE

Following on from our COP27 Official Side Event in Egypt entitled Dealing with military and conflict related emissions under the UNFCCC TPNS were co-organisers of a 4-speaker side event at the Bonn Climate Conference in June.  Our session was entitled ‘Closing the Global Stocktake’s military emissions gap. Deborah Burton’s contribution focussed on the positive correlation between military spending and military emissions.

The side event built on our submission to the Global Stocktake (GST) addressing military emissions reporting to the GST and co-signed by Conflict and Environment Observatory, Concrete Impacts, Costs of War Project, Norwegian People’s Aid, Scientists for Global Responsibility, Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, Zoï Environment Network. A poster was produced for the GST TD poster session to accompany this submission.

Productive meetings were held with IPCC and UNFCCC officials as well as a number of country and NGO delegates. The Quaker UN Office published their overview on Fair Finance for Loss & Damage and cited TPNS’ 5% formula as potentially part of the funding solution.

Video: Side Event Presentation Deborah Burton

Bonn / Global Stocktake related media
TPNS quotes carried across various media via

UPCOMING:  26 SEPT MILITARY EMISSIONS ACADEMIC CONFERENCE, OXFORD

Along with our June 2022 Report calls for an IPCC Special Report on the role of the military in climate change and inclusion of military emissions full reporting to the Global Stocktake, we called for an academic conference that could begin to draw existing and new research together which could advance our IPCC call.

We are delighted that a number of academic institutions have come together to deliver the first such event at the King’s Centre in Oxford. Our colleague Axel Michaelowa from Perspectives Climate Group will make his presentation on a panel alongside Prof Neta Crawford, Oxford University, and Dr Stuart Parkinson, Scientists for Global Responsibility

This conference is being predominantly funded by UKRI-ESRC Concrete Impacts and is jointly organised by Concrete Impacts, Conflict and Environment Observatory, Initiative on GHG Accounting of War, Scientists for Global Responsibility, University of Oxford, Department of Politics and International Relations, QMUL, Institute for Humanities and Social Sciences.

NEW PUBLICATIONS

We are delighted to be included in the inaugural volume
of Degrowth Journal organised as a free, open-access, international, trans-disciplinary, and peer-reviewed journal that focuses on advancing the goals of degrowth. Our paper wanted to draw largely unaddressed connections between degrowth and the global military.

In October we shall be publishing the second collaborative report with Transnational Institute and Stop Wappenhandel (Netherlands) on the topic of climate collateral, military spending and emissions.

It will be released in advance of our attendance at COP28 and will be shared in our October pre-COP newsletter along with our finalised COP plans.

HIGHLIGHTS – MEDIA DIGEST

Our work and the work of colleagues on military emissions and spending is securing ever more media coverage. From BBC World Service to Al Jazeera, Reuters to China Global TV Network, the TV, radio and print highlights are here.

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EVENTS – SAVE THE DATES

October 22 & 26 – BHM and MLK’s legacy at St John’s Church Waterloo

We are pulling together a mini-programme of events to mark Black History Month and which will be a part of the BHM Exploring Spirit programme at the stunning, newly renovated St. John’s Church in Waterloo. We are delighted to be bringing two MLK focussed events with contributions from actors Adjoa Andoh (Richard II, Bridgerton – and founding TPNS board member), Paterson Joseph (Othello, Julius Caesar, The Beach, Peep Show) and Professor Robert Beckford – prolific author, broadcaster and film-maker.

We are finalising the programme and will send out booking details in the coming week or two.

Palestine: The Nakba marks 75 years

The call to Make Apartheid History is more resonant than ever as we mark the 75th anniversary of the start of the NAKBA – the Palestinian Catastrophe – as the state of Israel was founded, along with the expulsion of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians from their homeland in 1948.  MAH shared its short videos  in solidarity with NAKBA 75 and BDS including BSC calls for both a cultural boycott and military boycott of Israel until it complies with international law.

October 27 Palfest literary event at the Royal Geographical Society, 7.30pm

Our own MAH supporter Juliet Stephenson joins some of the biggest names of stage and page to mark 75 Years of ongoing Nakba and steadfast resistance – a night of performance, poetry, music and reflection that will journey through a century of struggle, colonization and insistence on life. Admired actors will bring to life words from the past, beloved authors will reflect on the present – all to a live improvised score.

Rashid Khalidi — Julie Christie — Harriet Walter — Abdulrazak Gurnah — Juliet Stevenson — Esther Freud — Isabel Adomakoh Young — Andrew O’Hagan — David Morrissey — Sabrina Mahfouz — Khalid Abdalla — Mohammed Hanif — Tamim Barghouti!

Book here  https://www.palfest.org/full-schedule/londonrgsevent

Upcoming:  26 Sept Military Emissions Academic Conference, Oxford

Upcoming:  26 Sept Military Emissions Academic Conference, Oxford

Along with our June 2022 Report calls for an IPCC Special Report on the role of the military in climate change and inclusion of military emissions full reporting to the Global Stocktake, we called for an academic conference that could begin to draw existing and new research together which could advance our IPCC call.  

We are delighted that a number of academic institutions have come together to deliver the first such event at the King’s Centre in Oxford. Our colleague Axel Michaelowa from Perspectives Climate Group will make his presentation on a panel alongside Prof Neta Crawford and Dr Stuart Parkinson, Scientists for Global Responsibility. Continue reading

New article published in Degrowth Journal

New article published in Degrowth Journal

We are delighted to be included in the inaugural volume of  Degrowth Journal organised as a free, open-access, international, trans-disciplinary, and peer-reviewed journal that focuses on advancing the goals of degrowth. Our article wanted to draw largely unaddressed connections between degrowth and the global military. Continue reading

ATTENDANCE at BONN CLIMATE CONFERENCE (JUNE 2023)

ATTENDANCE at BONN CLIMATE CONFERENCE (JUNE 2023)

Following on from our COP27 Official Side Event in Egypt entitled Dealing with military and conflict related emissions under the UNFCCC. TPNS were co-organisers of a 4-speaker side event at the Bonn Climate Conference in June.  The event would also address military emissions.

SIDE EVENT  

Our session was entitled ‘Closing the Global Stocktake’s military emissions gap’. Deborah Burton’s contribution focussed on the positive correlation between military spending and military emissions. The room was fairly full and excellent feedback received after the event – mainly ‘we didn’t know this issue was so big and so off radar’. Many follow-up conversations took place during the remainder of the conference addressing both emissions and military spending

The side event built on our submission to the Global Stocktake, signed by Conflict and Environment Observatory, Concrete Impacts, Costs of War Project, Norwegian People’s Aid, Scientists for Global Responsibility, Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, Zoï Environment Network, and Tipping Point North South. A poster was produced for the GST TD poster session to accompany this submission. Continue reading

Commemorating Nakba 75

Commemorating Nakba 75

15 May 1948-15 May 2023

The call to Make Apartheid History is more resonant than ever as we mark the 75th anniversary of the start of the NAKBA – the Palestinian Catastrophe – as the state of Israel was founded, along with the expulsion of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians from their homeland.

On 15 May MAH shared its short videos  in solidarity with NAKBA 75 and BDS including BSC calls for both a cultural boycott and military boycott of Israel until it complies with international law.

NAKBA 75:  DISMANTLE ISRAEL’S APARTHEID SYSTEM

Why Make Apartheid History.  A short explanatory video with Leila Sansour, Reem Talhami,  Iman  Aoun, Sliman Mansour, Atef Abu Saif, Issam Aruri, Adjoa Adoh, Juliet Stephenson, Ken Loach, Dave Randall, and our beloved Jeremy Hardy.

https://makeapartheidhistory.org/portfolio/mah-rationale/ Continue reading

TPNS at XR’S THE BIG ONE 

TPNS at XR’S THE BIG ONE 

Friday 21st April was an amazing day of XR organised activity. Day one of four days was dedicated to pickets of every major government department.

Under the banner Unite to Survive more than 200 organisations came together to form a ‘movement of movements’. The demand was for elected representatives do all and everything necessary to act now on the climate emergency, affecting across so many inter-connected issues at home and globally.

TPNS was invited to make a presentation (hyperlink) at the XR peace picket outside the Ministry of Defence. A large crowd gathered on the lawn in front of the MOD building to hear about the scale of the impact of military emissions on climate change; action at UNFCCC and COP; the link between military spending  and emissions; and why present day foreign and defence policy- making is not fit for purpose in this era of climate chaos.

https://xrpeace.org/

https://extinctionrebellion.uk/the-big-one/peoples-pickets/#ministry-of-defence

Anniversaries & films; talks & UN submissions

Anniversaries & films; talks & UN submissions

Dear friends, supporters and colleagues,

It hardly seems possible but it is 20 years since the world mobilised to speak out and tell their governments ‘Not in Our Name’ – no invasion of Iraq. Marches took place on every continent, including Antarctica.

Did it stop the war? No. Were the arguments made by those against the invasion proven right? Yes. Deborah Burton and Ho-Chih Lin have co-written a blog with Amir Amirani, director of We Are Many to mark this 20th anniversary. One of the core messages of the film – foreign and defence policy-making built upon lies and misinformation can only lead to long term often catastrophic consequences – now remains at the heart of our Transform Defence project.

BLOG: We Are Many – More Than Ever

Reflecting on 20 years since the global anti-Iraq war marches and the invasion that followed  

In the nine years of the Iraq War, according to the Costs of Wars Project, around 300,000 people (including civilians) were killed directly and many more killed indirectly. The invasion of Iraq by the United States-led coalition was estimated to have released around 250 million tCO2e. Despite this enormous climate impact, there is a shocking lack of transparency and accountability to the UNFCCC for this particular sector. Ever rising military budgets fund the big GHG emitting hardware. The richest countries are spending 30 times as much on their armed forces as they spend on providing climate finance for the world’s most vulnerable countries

Read the blog here.
Watch the film here.

TALK: Military Emissions, Military Spending and Climate Change, Drexel University USA

Post COP27 Deborah was invited to give a webinar as part of a series for Drexel University’s Green Infrastructure, Climate and Cities programme followed by a panel discussion with Prof Franco Montalto and Kristy Kelly PhD, a specialist in gender and development.

Watch the talk here.
Also delighted to have joined CODEPINK in the USA for a webinar on unpacking COP27 – the highs and the lows; what was achieved for the issue of military emissions and spending; and what we might expect from COP28 in Dubai.

FILM: MLK Global

MLK Day 16 January: To mark MLK Day our MLK Global team – Yolande Cadore in NYC, Dionne Gravesande and Deborah Burton – wrote this piece.

March 29th:  We look forward to returning to Union Chapel in Islington, north London, for another screening of the outstanding film: From Montgomery to Memphis. Check Union Chapel website for more information nearer the date.

UN SUBMISSION: Missing Military Emissions

The Global Stocktake is a new UNFCCC process to gather information on GHG emissions with the results to be presented at COP28 this year in Dubai. The stocktake enables the assessment of global collective progress on mitigation, adaptation, means of implementation and support.

Critically, the process needs information about what is not being ‘counted’ and unreported military emissions are just that. We are working to get military emissions on the Global Stocktake and with seven other research and advocacy groups (Europe & USA) we have just made a joint submission based on the recommendations of our June 2022 report on military emissions reporting to the UNFCCC.

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@MLK_Global