After a decade of wasteful expenditure, the US military is ending its âclimate change crapâ
Hundreds of billions of dollars have been spent by the US military on unsuccessful initiatives such as the Navyâs Great Green Fleet programme. Now, it is coming to an end.
Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth believes that climate change mitigation efforts have no measurable effect on global temperatures and do not improve military readiness. âThe Dept of Defence does not do climate change crap. We do training and warfighting,â he said.
The new policy is to redirect funds to strengthen the US military. âSo begins a new age of realistic military policy and an end to more than 15 years of wasteful climate change spending,â Steve Goreham writes.
Please note: We take the view that what was, and sometimes still is, the âglobal warmingâ narrative and is now, sometimes, the âclimate changeâ narrative is a scam.
Throughout the following article, Goreham uses measurements of carbon dioxide emissions as if they are meaningful. We do not believe carbon dioxide emissions are causing a climate change crisis, nor that there is any meaningful way to measure carbon dioxide emissions; they are all tentacles of the climate change scam.
Further reading:
- A Primer on CO2 and Energy, David Siegel
- The imaginary âclimate crisisâ is a product of climate activists and click-bait media
- David Siegel: âItâs clear that CO2 has almost nothing to do with climateâ (video embedded in the article is no longer available, you can watch it HERE)
- UNâs unprecedented effort to reduce CO2 is really about âgreen financeâ which will be devastating to societies if we donât stop it
Having said all that, Gorehamsâ article is interesting because it demonstrates how the climate change scam is not sustainable and the narrative, as with all lies, is catching itself out. It is also another indication that the climate change era is coming to an end, for the USA at least.
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US Military Exits Climate Change After Wasteful Decade
By Steve Goreham as published by Master Resource on 2 April 2025
âMilitary climate policies under the Biden Administration, even if fully implemented, would not have had a measurable effect on global temperatures. But they would continue to waste hundreds of billions of dollars of taxpayer money. Secretary Hegseth will put these funds to better use to strengthen the US military.â
The United States military has pursued an increasing number of programmes to try to fight climate change for more than a decade. The Air Force, Army and Navy each developed programmes to use alternative energy and to reduce hydrocarbon-based fuels, with aggressive carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions reduction plans. But under the Trump Administration, climate change mitigation will no longer be an objective.
Earlier this month, the new Department of Defence (âDoDâ) Secretary Pete Hegseth wrote, âThe Dept of Defence does not do climate change crap. We do training and warfighting.â The DoD is now cutting Pentagon programmes that involve climate change. So begins a new age of realistic military policy and an end to more than 15 years of wasteful climate change spending.
Under President Joe Biden, the US government adopted a goal of net zero emissions for both the US economy and the federal government by 2050. At the direction of the administration, all branches of the US military developed plans to try to get to Net Zero, the elimination of all hydrocarbon-based energy.
The US military is the largest institutional user of petroleum-derived fuel in the world. It is estimated that the DoD uses 4.6 billion gallons of fuel each year. According to the DoD, military emissions in FY 2021 were Air Force (56%), Navy (31%), Army (9%) and Marine Corps (5%). Aircraft accounted for 76% of emissions and ships emitted most of the remainder at 17%.

Navy
The Navy began climate change programmes more than a decade ago during the administration of President Barack Obama. In 2011, US Secretary of the Navy Ray Mabus stated, âBy no later than 2020, at least half of the energy that the navy uses, both afloat and ashore, will come from non-fossil fuel sources.â The Great Green Fleet initiative was a key part of this effort.
The Great Green Fleet programme attempted to use a drop-in blend of biofuels to replace diesel fuel in ships. In 2016, the navy deployed a carrier task force using a fuel mixture of 90% diesel and 10% biofuels. But the biofuel portion costs about $14 per gallon, seven times as much as the diesel portion. The navy also proposed to install hybrid electric-drive engines in 34 âgreen destroyersâ to allow them to run on either fuel or electricity generated from fuel.

But the Great Green Fleet was a dismal failure. Biofuels were high cost and not available around the world, requiring the use of traditional diesel fuel in overseas ports. The hybrid electric-drive destroyers could not keep up with nuclear-powered carriers when using electric engines.
By the end of 2017, the Navy had spent $57 billion on green fuel programmes. The electric-drive destroyer programme was cancelled in 2018. By 2022, except for nuclear-powered ships, more than 99 per cent of the US Navyâs fuel still came from petroleum.
But the Biden Administration urged the Navy to double down on climate change objectives. The Navy issued its Climate Action 2030 plan in May of 2022, pursuing a âdepartment-wide pathway to net zero by 2050.â The written plan lauds recent climate change âachievements,â including the âMekong Delta Climate Research Collaborationâ with the government of Vietnam, the âCalifornia Organic Recycling and Compostingâ project and a partnership with the armed forces of Ghana to âcombat vector-borne diseases that are exacerbated by climate change.â Itâs not clear that these programmes improve navy military readiness in any way.
Air Force
Since aircraft emit the most CO2, the US Air Force has focused on reducing aircraft emissions. But aircraft emissions are very difficult to eliminate. An aircraft on a long mission produces as much CO2 as the weight of the plane. Fuel engines deliver a 20-to-one energy advantage compared to batteries and electric engines, making electric aircraft impractical.
Air Force climate plans count on Sustainable Aviation Fuel (âSAFâ). SAF is made from biomass or waste, with claims of lower CO2 emissions. SAF would have the same specifications as current aviation fuel, allowing it to be âdropped-inâ to existing aircraft operations. Military SAF would be similar to planned commercial aviation SAF.
But SAF is expensive, not available in large quantities, and may not even reduce CO2emissions. Jet fuel emits 3.16 tonnes of CO2 for each metric tonne of burned fuel. When you burn SAF, 3.16 metric tonnes of CO2 are also exhausted for each tonne of SAF burned. Both jet fuel and SAF are produced in refineries. So how can SAF reduce emissions? In any case, the use of SAF provides no military value, so Secretary Hegseth will likely shut down all SAF programmes.
Army
The âArmy Climate Strategyâ plan of February 2022 called for the near-term use of microgrids and renewable electricity at military bases. It called for a 100% transition of the ânon-tactical vehicle fleetâ to electric vehicles (âEVsâ) by FY 2027. Spending would amount to about $2 billion per year from 2023 to 2027.
The plan also proposed to begin a transition of light, medium and even heavy battlefield tactical vehicles to electric drive by 2027 and the development of âbattlefield chargersâ for these vehicles. Charging electric tanks on the battlefield is another example of âclimate change crapâ with no military value.
Department of Defence climate plans call for adaptation measures, such as building sea walls, erecting flood barriers, hardening military installations and constructing backup power systems. These adaptation measures are sensible policies to build resilience to weather events. But here is no evidence that climate change can be âmitigatedâ enough to be measurable. Switching all US military vehicles to EVs will have no measurable effect on storms or sea-level rise.
Coast Guard
Earlier this month, the US Coast Guard Academy announced that it was removing âclimate changeâ from its academic curriculum. The Coast Guard is part of the Department of Homeland Security in peacetime, the only branch of the military that is not part of the DoD.
Conclusion
Military climate policies under the Biden Administration, even if fully implemented, would not have had a measurable effect on global temperatures. But they would continue to waste hundreds of billions of dollars of taxpayer money. Secretary Hegseth will put these funds to better use to strengthen the US military.
About the Author
Steve Goreham is a speaker on energy, the environment, and public policy and author of the book âGreen Breakdown: The Coming Renewable Energy Failureâ. His previous posts at Master Resource can be found HERE.
Featured image: The Great Green Fleet Explained, Americas Navy, 27 June 2016

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