American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON – Climate and
environmental change are emerging as national security threats that weigh
heavily in the Pentagon’s new strategy, Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta told
an environmental group last night.
“The area of climate change has a
dramatic impact on national security,” Panetta said here at a reception hosted
by the Environmental Defense Fund to honor the Defense Department in advancing
clean energy initiatives. “Rising sea levels, severe droughts, the melting of
the polar caps, the more frequent and devastating natural disasters all raise
demand for humanitarian assistance and disaster relief,” Panetta said.
Panetta cited the melting of Arctic ice
in renewing a longstanding call for the Senate to ratify the United Nations
Convention on Law of the Sea. More than 150 nations have accepted the treaty,
which has been in force since the early 1990s, and a succession of U.S.
government administrations have urged ratification.
Among other things, the convention would
guarantee various aspects of passage and overflight for the U.S. military. Panetta
urged his audience to use their influence to push for treaty ratification. “We
are the only industrialized nation that has not approved that treaty,” he said.
The secretary also said he has great
concern about energy-related threats to homeland security that are not driven
by climate change.
“I have a deep interest in working to
try to ensure from a security perspective that we take measures that will help
facilitate and maintain power in the event of an interruption of the commercial
grid that could be caused, for example, by a cyber attack which is a reality
that we have to confront,” he said.
Budget considerations compound the
issue, the secretary said. The Defense Department spent about $15 billion on
fuel for military operations last year. In Afghanistan alone, the Pentagon uses
more than 50 million gallons of fuel each month on average. Combined with
rising gas prices, this creates new budget issues for the department, Panetta
said.
“We now face a budget shortfall
exceeding $3 billion because of higher-than-expected fuel costs this year,” he
told the audience.
Having grown up in pristine Monterey,
Calif., Panetta said, he has a lifelong interest in protecting the nation’s
resources. He pledged to continue to keep the Defense Department on the cutting
edge in the push for clean energy and environmental friendly initiatives, a
chief reason why the Environmental Defense Fund honored the department.
“In the next fiscal year, we are going
to be investing more than a billion dollars in more efficient aircraft and
aircraft engines, in hybrid electric drives for our ships, in improved
generators, in microgrids for combat bases and combat vehicle energy-efficient
programs,” he said. “We are investing another billion dollars to make our
installations here at home more energy-efficient, and we are using them as the
test bed to demonstrate next-generation energy technologies.”
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