Follow Slashdot stories on Twitter

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
United States Earth The Military Science

The Military's Latest Enemy: Climate Change 163

Lasrick writes A surprising report from the Pentagon last month places climate change squarely among the seemingly endless concerns of the US military. Although a Wall Street Journal editorial misrepresented the report in an editorial (subtitled 'Hagel wants to retool the military to stop glaciers from melting'), the report itself is straightforward and addresses practical military issues such as land management of bases and training facilities. "So, this plan is not really about mobilizing against melting glaciers; it's more like making sure our ships have viable facilities from which to launch bombs against ISIS. And the report doesn't just focus on home, though. It casts a wider eye towards how a changing climate will affect defense missions in the future."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

The Military's Latest Enemy: Climate Change

Comments Filter:
    • Because SDI was never mothballed.

    • by dotancohen ( 1015143 ) on Sunday November 09, 2014 @06:18PM (#48346845) Homepage

      Is that parody or is that news? I cannot believe that one-sided, war-mongering, short-sighted propaganda piece is called 'News'. It packs more lies, ridicule, non sequiturs, and manipulation into three minutes than I've even seen before. Are people really expected watch that and then form their own opinions? If that is how Americans get their news, it explains so much about American ignorance, xenophobia, and thirst for war.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        I cannot believe that one-sided, war-mongering, short-sighted propaganda piece is called 'News'.

        I used to work for a guy who founded a software company in Sunnyvale. After Bush got reelected, he decided to sell the company to Agilent for a couple million bucks, went back to Australia, and formed a new company there. He comes back to visit sometimes, and says that he now gets a lot of questions from people in Australia- "What happened over there? Americans used to be smart!" His standard answer: "No, it's not that they're stupid, but the news they get in the U.S. is really bad."

        • Don't worry. When the guys at ABC, MSNBC, and CBS all have someone who works either for, or under the current administration in some form you're going to run into problems. People like to complain about Bush and all that, but under Obama it's been a run of "how can we bury this to protect our guy." At least under Bush they were willing to actually be reporters.

           

          • by Anonymous Coward

            Joe Biden is a square shooter. Joe Biden for 2016.

          • by dywolf ( 2673597 )

            Sorry that is not factually true.

            • by Mashiki ( 184564 )

              Really? How many people from the various news agencies have someone either directly or indirectly working at the Whitehouse these days, or in the recent 6 years. You've got the presidents of ABC and CBS who have relatives who work there. You've got Carney who's married to a ABC news contributor, though he's no longer there. Yeah the list goes on, and on, and on.

              Speaking of which, when was the last time you heard the media trot out the "deaths of american soldiers in Iraq/Afghanistan" bit? I'll bet it w

          • How is that tinfoil hat rant insightful?
        • by delt0r ( 999393 )
          If the news you get makes you stupid... it is because you are stupid.
          • by rioki ( 1328185 ) on Monday November 10, 2014 @10:38AM (#48349659) Homepage

            I would rather put it an other way, if you only hear one side of the story and you can't really be bothered to research the subject, why should you have an other opinion? Do you know how boring most news is? The special problem in the US is that it appears that there is collusion between news sources. In most western countries there are multiple news sources, yes they all push an agenda to a certain degree, but they are in competition. In addition a well informed individual will look at multiple news sources from different countries. But in the US, unless you really go out of your way you will not get different points of view, because the same point of view will be parroted over and over. Most people do not want to spend that mental effort...

      • by Jeremi ( 14640 ) on Sunday November 09, 2014 @10:54PM (#48347915) Homepage

        Is that parody or is that news? I cannot believe that one-sided, war-mongering, short-sighted propaganda piece is called 'News'.

        Personally I'm in great anticipation of the upcoming flag day, when some particularly onerous climate-change related events (e.g. the permanent evacuation of Miami, or perhaps just food shortages due to widespread crop failures) occur, and Fox News shifts seamlessly from denying the existence of global warming to blaming the Democrats for not having done enough to prevent it. Good times.

        • Is that parody or is that news? I cannot believe that one-sided, war-mongering, short-sighted propaganda piece is called 'News'.

          Personally I'm in great anticipation of the upcoming flag day, when some particularly onerous climate-change related events (e.g. the permanent evacuation of Miami, or perhaps just food shortages due to widespread crop failures) occur, and Fox News shifts seamlessly from denying the existence of global warming to blaming the Democrats for not having done enough to prevent it. Good times.

          They don't need to shift. Fox News is perfectly capable of denying it exists, blaming the Democrats for it, and blaming the Democrats for not doing enough about it, all the same time from the same speaking head. That wouldn't even be anything unusual, we call that day Tuesday.

      • by dywolf ( 2673597 ) on Monday November 10, 2014 @09:09AM (#48349135)

        and that idiot just got re-elected to the senate, where he will now be in charge of the Environment and Public Works Committe, giving him direct oversight of the EPA, an agency he wants to kill.

        he is the single worst science denier in the congress now that Broun is gone.
        he thinks Michael Cricton is a climate expert. no seriously, he called him as a "expert" witness at a committee hearing.
        he thinks the earth hasnt warmed. at all. in fact he says its the world's greatest hoax.
        he thinks scientists are secretive liars engaged in a conspiracy and wants to "shine a light” on scientist’s activities.
        he said that AGW is a myth because...the bible:

        The Genesis 8:22 that I use in there is that ‘as long as the earth remains there will be seed time and harvest, cold and heat, winter and summer, day and night.’ My point is, God’s still up there. The arrogance of people to think that we, human beings, would be able to change what He is doing in the climate is to me outrageous."

        The man is dangerous....who who is more foolish?
        the fool? or the fools that all voted overwhelmingly for him?

      • Is that parody or is that news? I cannot believe that one-sided, war-mongering, short-sighted propaganda piece is called 'News'. It packs more lies, ridicule, non sequiturs, and manipulation into three minutes than I've even seen before. Are people really expected watch that and then form their own opinions? If that is how Americans get their news, it explains so much about American ignorance, xenophobia, and thirst for war.

        Aren't you understating what the Americans receive from Fox, CBS, NBC, etc? Americans are for the most part, kept ignorant about whats happening outside of the football or baseball field.

      • by AK Marc ( 707885 )
        No, that's not news. Fox News is unbiased. That's an opinion piece designed to look like news. Those taken in confuse editorial opinions for news. But nobody calls that News, not even Fox News. Well, their viewers call it news, but only the dumb ones. We are still struggling to find a non-dumb one, though.
    • The better question would be why is pure flamebait getting modded informative?

      • Why is it flamebait? (It got modded as flamebait but went back up to a 5). This video is two years old, but that's the new guy who's now going to head the Environment and Public Works Committee in 2015. He's already bragging that his staff is been poring over NSF studies to compile a list of "wasteful studies" to be targeted in 2015, and says that one of his "top three priorities" for that committee is going to be âoeshining a lightâ on wasteful funding of climate scientists.
        • Why is it flamebait?

          Because it's obviously off-topic, worded in a way that's intentionally incorrect and hopelessly hyperbolic, and evidently meant to evict an emotional response. It's the intellectual equivalent of saying "Hurr Durr, FOX is teh dumb and Micro$$$oft maeks crappy computers!". The article is about the military trying to plan for global warming, but you're taken it as an opportunity to slag random talking heads on the news and Lockheed Martin all in one stroke.

          Or did you mean "why am I posting flamebait"? I'm

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Our military can *eliminate* this enemy once and for all!

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Our military can *eliminate* this enemy once and for all!

      Is there something Americans WON'T declare war on ?
      I mean, it's kind of disturbing if you think about it. An entire society devoted to "solving" problems by using weapons.
      No suprise they're so fucked up.

      • I heard that now that the Republicans control the Senate, the US will soon be invading Ebola.
        • We already did (US ground troops in Liberia)...and Republicans had nothing to do with it.

          • Go troops!

            I hope no one mentions to them Ebola is in DRC.
            • Easily fixed. Obviously it's the democracy that's causing the problem, we'll just overthrow the government and install a puppet dictator. It won't actually solve the problem, but why pass up the opportunity?

  • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Sunday November 09, 2014 @03:07PM (#48345953) Journal
    It entertains me when a Slashdot story is insulting other websites' headlines and editing practices. Seriously?
    • But don't you see? Climate change means victory for ISIS!

      • Ah, the propagandas align so nicely.
        • Well, hell. We've been fighting imaginary threats to democracy for 13-14 years now; why not another one?
          • We've been fighting imaginary threats to democracy for 13-14 years now...

            :-) Yes, I too, remember how blissful life was before then...

            • by khallow ( 566160 )
              There were so many fewer imaginary threats to democracy back then. You kids don't know how you have it now.
              • by rioki ( 1328185 )

                Except... Drugs and Communism.

          • We've been fighting imaginary threats to democracy for 13-14 years now; why not another one?

            I was once playing one of those stealth-based games. As I sneaked behind the guards, one asked the other: "yeah, but why do they tell us which way to face?" or something to that effect.

            No idea why your comment reminded me of that. Weird.

      • by dywolf ( 2673597 )

        if that were true, there are 3 possible scenarios that would occur:
        a) the rest of hte country would get on board the science train and we'd solve global warming in a heartbeat because...terrorists
        b) we'd convince the half of the country who's freaked out ignore ISIS and realize they arent actually a threat
        c) half the country would go into apolectic fits trying to choose between a or b

    • I'd say that anyone more competent than the youtube comments section can probably afford to snipe at the WSJ editorials now and again.
  • by Layzej ( 1976930 ) on Sunday November 09, 2014 @03:08PM (#48345959)

    A Wall Street Journal editorial misrepresented the report in an editorial (subtitled 'Hagel wants to retool the military to stop glaciers from melting'),

    The Wall Street Journal has become a tabloid. It is beyond ridiculous.

  • Such as solar cells and hybrids. see http://www.washingtontimes.com... [washingtontimes.com]

    Part of the reason was the number of supply convoys hit by attacks in Iraq and Afghanistan and the strategic problem caused by dependency on foreign fuel suppliers. Protecting supply lines can be expensive. But personally I am waiting for this new Congress to kill the initiatives in favor of fossil fuels and the obsolete methods of powering the military.

    • They already sent a directive in the budget that they are not to spend money preparing for global warming related issues. That includes things like loosing some of the atoll emergency landing strips in the far east, the failure of the south Florida fresh water supply. Coastal base issues etc.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Solar cells are nice, but what we really need is real money (not a token amount) put into battery research. If we can get storage batteries at power substations, that would mean a grid that better can handle varying loads. This way, energy at non-peak levels can be stored to offset peak generation, and once solar can handle all peak, energy can be stored for nighttime.

      Next to that, we need a system of converting CO2 from the air into a usable fuel, ideally propane, because propane is not a greenhouse gas

      • Next to that, we need a system of converting CO2 from the air into a usable fuel, ideally propane, because propane is not a greenhouse gas and inert.

        Really? My reading is that the equation for propane combustion is: C3H8 + 5O2 = 3CO2 + 4H20

        Maybe propane produces less CO2, pound for pound, than say, coal. (I don't actually know, and don't care to look it up.) But it certainly produces CO2 when burned.

        Oh, and anyone who's ever cooked on a propane grill, or used a propane torch, will attest to its distinct non-inertness...

        • If the carbon in the propane is drawn from CO2 in the atmosphere then burning the propane will be carbon neutral. But it's going to take more energy to draw that CO2 from the atmosphere than you'll get back out of the CO2.

      • That process is already running in pilot plants in Germany. They're generating methane using a Sabatier process driven by excess renewable energy. The methane is injected into the national natural gas pipeline network. Typically national natural gas pipeline systems have a buffer of several days to weeks of supply.

        The Wikipedia article is labeled Power to Gas http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P... [wikipedia.org] There's a section for hydrogen and another section for methane. And of course, once you have methane and CO, you h

  • Repeat (Score:2, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward

    This was already posted when it came out last month

    http://news.slashdot.org/story/14/10/13/2044217/pentagon-unveils-plan-for-militarys-response-to-climate-change

  • by perpenso ( 1613749 ) on Sunday November 09, 2014 @03:15PM (#48345983)
    Nothing new here. Climate Change was identified as a global destabilization factor long ago by the US military. Crop failures, droughts, flooding, etc leading to mass migrations and the conflict and strife that will arise our of these migrations.
    • We have met the enemy and he is us?

      • by TWX ( 665546 )
        French author Jean Raspail wrote a novel, Camp of the Saints, about a third-world invasion of the first-world. In part the invasion was successful because the first-world powers weren't willing to sink the massive ad-hoc flotilla of ships with millions of refugees onboard, but even though it was far-fetched in some ways, the concept that millions upon millions of people would be willing to risk it all to leave where they are now, where they have no future and possibly no means to survive, to force their wa
        • Just try to be part of the Coast Guard in any state on the northern border of the Mediterranean. It's not going to get better.

          Fortunately (?) these changes happen fairly slowly. A few more refugee boat sinkings get wrapped up in Kim Kardishain's latest divorce or another Ebola scare. The US is largely immune from this - I'd worry if I were Canadian, however.

          I suppose we could give the refugees an old aircraft carrier ....

        • But that has absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with "climate change". Indeed, the whole thesis is complete tripe given the steady decrease in global poverty and world hunger over the last 25 years. I needn't bother saying there's been no statistically significant warming for 18 years either, need I?
    • by 12WTF$ ( 979066 )

      Recent example:
      Climate change --> drought in Syria --> crop failures --> population movement to cities -->
      Ass-hat regime pushes population to rebellion --> civil war --> [...] --> Islamic State.

  • by AeroMed45N ( 919761 ) on Sunday November 09, 2014 @03:32PM (#48346053)

    It was my sense that the military was examining several factors that can impact their mission and ability to meet that mission over the coming decades. This includes not only the recognized increase in regional conflicts due to displacement of people by flooding and/or changes in food supplies due to climatic changes in rainfall patterns. It also includes thinking about the predictions for ocean rising and that impact on the bases that support the military around the world - naval bases, and airfields near current sea levels aren't something that one moves in a couple of years.

    And lastly, thinking about how the impact on troops and equipment might change - will there be more fighting in high heat locations? Heavy rain? What will be the impacts on availability of fuel sources and on supply chains?

    The military is a huge "ship" that takes much time to turn. Looking out a few decades and postulating what might be needed is not a bad exercise. They would be soundly criticized later if they hadn't. But it is interesting that the main military supports on the right are also the main body of climate change deniers, which puts the military in a dicey political environment. They need to prepare, but carefully.

    Is anyone surprised that a Rupert Murdoch owned paper decided to misrepresent what the military was doing about climate change?

    • The nice thing about professional paranoia is that you can worry about everything. Global warming (err, climate change), Ebola, vaccines, Republicans and Zombies. Even UFOs. There are one hell of a lot of three ringed binders in the Pentagon.

      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by dave420 ( 699308 )

        Global warming = the increase in average temperature of the globe
        Climate change = the changes in the climate which are caused by global warming

        It's not difficult, so you don't really have an excuse to get these confused.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday November 09, 2014 @08:03PM (#48347337)

      The military is a huge "ship" that takes much time to turn.

      And that, right there, is why the military needs to be cut to a fraction of its current size.

      When World War II broke out, the US military was tiny - compared with its enemies', or with itself at any later time. Yet that was the war that established American world dominance. You don't win a major war by having the biggest army at the start, you win it by having the biggest economy. A military establishment that drains that economy is actually counter-productive to national security. (Just ask the Former Soviet Union.)

      • by KORfan ( 524397 )
        Correction: You win World War II by having the biggest economy. We don't get to refight WWII. The flaws in your thinking is called refighting the last war, and you can fill bookcases with what's been written about that.
        • Well said. I might add that as time has pressed onward, so has the the compression of war. Put simply, we're really good at killing people and really good at killing them quickly. What would have taken months in 1940 took us a week in Iraq. Technology tightens the screws on first strike advantage, to the point where you now don't have time to ramp up production.

      • When WWII broke out, the US Army and Army Air Corps were tiny. The US Navy was the second largest in the world.

        We started building up the US Army in 1940. This considerably delayed US participation in the war. US ground forces were not used against the European Axis (if you consider the Vichy as European Axis) until roughly two and a half years after the buildup began, and it was more than another year and a half before US ground forces started to reach their potential.

        Had the US started the buildup

  • It will be interesting to see the Republican controlled congress debate military funding for a problem they deny the existence of.

  • by ad454 ( 325846 ) on Sunday November 09, 2014 @04:40PM (#48346333) Journal

    All that is needed would be for new "climate change industrial complex" consisting of industries with huge growth potentials from climate change after-effects (such as dike/levee builders, water management including reclaimation & desalination, fertilisers for new growing regions with marginal soil, mega construction for displaced infrastructure, etc.) to make more money then the coal and petroleum industries. It may not sound like much, but many trillions of dollars will be needed for this.

    Then they will be able to give/bribe more money to politicians, who will the universally accept climate change as fact and change the public perception.

    Until then there is enough money from a new "climate change industrial complex", public doubt will remain.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Rising sea levels mean we need a larger navy. There is more ocean to patrol, to one.

  • Time to nuke global warming!!!
  • military does this kind of stuff a lot. Anti war demonstrators like to insult the military saying it's stupid and "military intelligence" is an oxymoron, etc. But actually the military has many forward thinkers and they do a lot of planning and debating "what if" scenarios.

    Back in the 60's they did a lot of strategizing about a possible moon base, in the 80's they did thought exercises on the possible implications of a Soviet meltdown, what would happen to our military capabilities in a worldwide AIDS/Anthr

    • Yes in my experience there are a lot of smart people in the military. It is the politicians that send the military into quagmires that are stupid.

  • ... Obama needs to put boots on the ground.

  • Navy is having to consider what's going to happen as sea level inches upwards. At Norfolk (the largest naval base on the East Coast) and the surrounding communities, we're seeing a measurable increase in flooding, particularly in the past two decades. Most of the area is less than 20 feet above mean low tide. Storms like Isabel, which brought 12 feet of storm surge with it, show the area is at risk. It's possible that the base will be under water at some point, possibly within a century if IPCC estimates
  • "It casts a wider eye towards how a changing climate will affect defense missions in the future."

    Tech people have a special obligation to quit using this Orwellian euphemism when talking about the US military.

  • Come on, Lasrick, haven't you heard that aircraft carriers don't need "facilities" from which to launch bomb strikes? Or that the B2/B52/F117 aircraft are more than capable of flying from the US to any damned place in the world to drop a bomb? Mid-air refueling and all that....

    If you want credibility, don't spout inanities.

    • I suppose I should mention that a carrier group is far more expensive than an island airbase, and can't have anywhere near the time on station. Also, that there are great advantages in having aircraft near the front as opposed to having to send them on day-long missions, or that many missions are best done by smaller aircraft that aren't actually transcontinental.

      • Can't spend time on station? Seriously?

        There is a reason that aircraft carriers are the first choice for applying force when long-term force is required.

        I've spent six months at a time tooling around in the Arabian Sea. I know of at least one year-long cruise by the Nimitz where they spent about 5 days in-port (crew relief was the only reason they went off station). American aircraft carriers are refueled, rearmed, and resupplied by a massive fleet of auxiliary stores vessels capable of delivering anything,

        • The original comment was about losing land for land air bases, as I remember. Aircraft carriers and land bases serve somewhat different functions.

          Sure, you can park a carrier somewhere for a long time. It can move there fairly fast, much faster than we could build a land base. It then needs relief every so often, if only for the crew's sake. In the meantime, we have ten carriers in the Fleet, and they won't all be available at the same time, so by keeping an aircraft carrier on station we're losing f

          • Very true. But there have been many times the US has had two thirds of the carriers deployed, and that was when we had had that "600-ship" Navy. While there are ten carriers active, Heck, the JFK, Ranger, Kitty Hawk, and the Indy could all be back in the game in less than a year if necessary. As always, the primary issue is manning.

            I think long-range strategic aircraft will hold the day until sub-orbitals come into play. After that, the aircraft carrier will quickly lose relevance. And once laser/particle w

Kleeneness is next to Godelness.

Working...