The Global and Daily Math of Destruction
If you want to understand the true scale of environmental destruction, you have to look past the frontlines and look at the atmosphere and the soil. From massive methane spikes to earth permanently poisoned by heavy metals and shredded synthetic plastics, the numbers make our household recycling efforts look like a drop in a toxic ocean.
Before we even look at active combat, we have to look at the baseline. The Global Military Complex—the everyday operations of the world's armed forces—accounts for roughly 5.5% of all global greenhouse gas emissions. That is about 2,750 million tonnes of CO₂e per year, or roughly 7.5 million tonnes every single day. If the global military were a country, it would be the fourth-largest polluter on Earth.
The military's environmental exceptionalism allows them to pollute with impunity, as if the carbon emissions spitting from their tanks and fighter jets don't count. This has to stop; to tackle the climate crisis we need accountability. — Dr. Benjamin Neimark, Senior Lecturer at Queen Mary University of London and lead researcher on the carbon footprint of the Gaza conflict
When a conflict actually breaks out, the localized spikes are staggering. Ukraine and Gaza are likely the very first conflicts in human history where this environmental impact is being actively measured and tracked in real-time.
The Gaza Conflict: roughly 281,000 tonnes of CO₂e in the first 60 days alone—with a long-term total projected at up to 61 million tonnes when reconstruction is included. The Ukraine War: 237 million tonnes of CO₂e over three years—equivalent to the combined annual emissions of Austria, Hungary, the Czech Republic, and Slovakia. And for historical context: during the 1991 Gulf War, burning Kuwaiti oil wells consumed 4–6 million barrels of crude per day, with CO₂ emissions amounting to roughly 2% of global output at the time.
To offset the entire three-year Ukraine war so far, every resident of Prague would need to live completely carbon-free for about 19 years.
The Micro-Math: The Cost of a Single Strike
To understand how we reach hundreds of millions of tonnes, you have to look at the individual pieces on the board.
Individual Weapons vs. Your Per-Capita Footprint (~26 kg CO₂/day, CZ avg.)
We can measure this destruction, but we cannot undo it. As Kurt Vonnegut famously fantasized in Slaughterhouse-Five while watching a war movie in reverse:
Airplanes suck bombs back up into their bellies, undoing the destruction below. Weapons travel back to their factories, and workers dismantle them and return the materials to the Earth. — Kurt Vonnegut, Slaughterhouse-Five (1969)
In reality, war takes pieces from our world, never to return.
The Carbon Debt of Rebuilding
Climate researchers calculate that roughly 27% of the war's total carbon footprint in Ukraine—about 62 million tonnes—is actually the projected cost of post-war rebuilding. Over a quarter of the climate damage isn't from the bombs exploding—it is the staggering "carbon debt" of manufacturing the millions of tonnes of cement and steel needed to replace every leveled hospital and apartment block. Even without this, the direct warfare still accounts for 82 million tonnes of CO₂e—the single largest category at 36%.
The "Green" War Machine Paradox
Here is where the reality gets cynical. The defense industry is currently playing a bizarre game of environmental optics.
In the West, it's all about ESG marketing. Defense giants publish glossy reports about powering tank factories with solar panels, greenwashing the apocalypse to keep stock prices high.
We believe sustainability strengthens our business model. Our ESG Roadmap drives growth, reduces environmental risk and ensures excellent governance. Sustainability builds trust with our customers. — Eric Béranger, CEO of MBDA (one of the world's largest missile developers, boasting in their 2024 ESG report about doubling missile production without "compromising sustainability")
In the East, "sustainability" is simply about survival and state propaganda. China builds zero-carbon military industrial parks so supply chains are immune to energy grid failures. Meanwhile, Russian leadership masks the leveling of entire regions behind viral, bureaucratic euphemisms.
I have decided to conduct a special military operation. Its purpose is to protect people who have been subjected to abuse and genocide… And for this we will strive for the demilitarization and denazification of Ukraine. — Vladimir Putin, February 24, 2022 (Televised invasion address)
Whether it's Western corporate greenwashing or Eastern "defascisation" propaganda, the green label vanishes the second the trigger is pulled.
The Asymmetry of Purpose
You might point out that the global meat industry and commercial air traffic emit way more carbon than these wars. And you would be right. But here is the critical difference: the asymmetry of purpose.
Civilian industries, as flawed as they are, serve a function. They feed eight billion people and connect the global economy. War, on the other hand, is driven by fiercely protected human agendas. Militaries will gladly poison their own soil to claim Lebensraum, destabilize a rival, redraw lines on a map, or defend freedom. We are permanently sacrificing the earth's biological health for geopolitical ambition.
There is also an asymmetry of measurement. ESG frameworks meticulously track corporate carbon but are structurally blind to what makes war truly destructive. MBDA can publish a credible-looking sustainability report because CO₂-per-missile is a finite, manageable number—while the human cost of that missile is invisible to the ESG framework.
The Invisible Legacy: 300 Years or "Eat It All"
The carbon and the methane are just the headlines. The real tragedy of war is the poison left behind in the dirt and the water. Carbon disperses globally; physical pollution stays exactly where it falls.
The Kakhovka Dam and the Toxic Flush: In June 2023, a massive wall of water scoured the land, picking up landmines, raw sewage, heavy metals, agricultural pesticides, and pulverized plastic. It flushed this toxic soup directly into the Black Sea, burying marine habitats under contaminated mud.
The Poisoned Breadbasket: Every detonated shell impregnates the soil with heavy metals like lead, cadmium, and mercury. It takes nature roughly 100 to 300 years to naturally clean these toxins. In Ukraine—one of the world's largest agricultural exporters—we face a grim choice: spend billions on soil remediation, or let the crops absorb the metals and eventually eat it all ourselves.
Pulverized Plastics: Modern war runs on synthetics. When blown up, the heat and blast wave pulverize drone casings and uniform fibers into nanoplastics that bypass biological barriers, infiltrating the soil's microbiome and the local water table.
The Toxic Dust: When Soviet-era apartment blocks are turned to rubble, they release massive clouds of asbestos and carcinogenic concrete dust, guaranteeing a brutal spike in respiratory diseases for the people who eventually clear the debris.
The Quiet Rebellion of the Everyday
So, where does that leave you and your recycling bin?
When you look at the math, it is easy to feel defeated. A single cruise missile erases over three years of your ecological discipline. And yet carbon captures only one dimension of destruction. The deadliest single event of these conflicts—the October 7 ground assault—barely registered on any emissions chart. Taking care of our environment is a statement of values, not a mathematical exercise. But maybe the math isn't the point.
In a world that is willing to burn 300 years of ecological health to move a border by three kilometers, sweeping your own porch isn't about saving the world by yourself. It is an act of quiet rebellion. It is a fundamental refusal to surrender to the destruction. We sort our plastics and care about our local environment because it proves we still know what it means to build, to preserve, and to give a damn about the ground we stand on.
The war machine will do what it does. But when the smoke finally clears, someone still has to know how to take care of what is left.
“Dear future generations: Please accept our apologies. We were rolling drunk on petroleum.”
— Kurt Vonnegut, A Man Without a Country