The Clock is Ticking: Invest in the Planet, Not the Pentagon

At the 10 year anniversary of the Paris Agreement, U.S. climate commitments are being swallowed up by military spending.

Alliyah Lusuegro, OtherWords
By:
Alliyah Lusuegro, OtherWords
Alliyah Lusuegro is the Outreach Coordinator for the National Priorities Project at the Institute for Policy Studies.
Topics: Climate Opinion
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National Guardsmen rescuing Florida residents after flooding from Hurricane Fay in 2008. National Guard Bureau Photo by Capt. David Ross

Instead of wasting our taxpayer dollars on the military, we should honor the anniversary of the Paris Agreement (even though President Trump pulled the U.S. out of it) and use that funding to save the planet.

At $1 trillion, our Defense budget (or is it “war budget” now?) is out of control. The Pentagon has not been able to pass the last 7 audits. According to the GAO, it was unable to account for its $824 billion budget in 2024, but the department is hoping to pass an audit by 2028.

An investigation found that the Pentagon’s accounting is so convoluted that it can’t account for the $824 billion in 2024 or the 6 audits prior to that.

So why did the Republicans in Congress increase the budget to $1 trillion this year? It makes no logical sense. Then again, we’re talking about the corrupt Congress, so I guess it tracks.

In my opinion, Congress should have a professional (with a security clearance) to go through the Pentagon’s books, clean them up, and report to Congress any wasteful spending they notice during the process. Or Congress should say, “No budget increase until you pass an audit.” That’s our taxpayer dollars they’re wasting!

In this op-ed, on the 10th anniversary of the Paris Agreement, the author discusses how we should be funding renewable energy projects, not the military.

Paris Agreement

Ten years ago as of December 2025, nearly every country in the world made a promise. By signing the Paris Agreement, governments committed to limit global temperature rises to no more than 2°C — and ideally 1.5°C — to avoid the most devastating impacts of a warming planet.

Recognizing their historic responsibility for greenhouse gas emissions, the Paris Agreement called on wealthier countries like the United States to contribute funding to help poorer countries adapt. And it envisioned the economic and social transformations needed to keep the planet from overheating to unlivable levels.

In practice, that means phasing out fossil fuels, scaling up renewable energy, and investing in sustainable systems — from agriculture to transportation — to keep our world powered and going.

Unfortunately, that’s not what our leaders are doing.

With the world’s largest economy and the greatest chunk of historical emissions, the United States should be contributing an estimated $446 billion per year to meet its fair share of global climate action. Instead, Washington has repeatedly abandoned global leadership — joining the Paris Agreement in 2016, pulling out in 2020, rejoining a year later, and withdrawing again this year.

Offshore wind farms photographed at the port of noshiro at sunset paris agreement
Recently, the government canceled 5 massive offshore wind projects. An offshore wind farm at sunset CC 2.0

For the past century, at least 80 percent of U.S. energy consumption has come from fossil fuels like natural gas, coal, and oil. Today, domestic energy demand is soaring as Big Tech and private corporations race to build massive, water and energy-intensive AI data centers — further locking in fossil fuel dependence.

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Meanwhile, rather than aligning its national priorities with climate commitments, the U.S. government has doubled down on a different and dangerous path: wars and weapons.

The Pentagon is the most carbon intensive institution on the planet, with emissions exceeding those of entire nations like Sweden, Denmark, and Portugal. And those emissions will likely grow as Pentagon spending continues to skyrocket.

Congress recently approved a $900 billion Pentagon budget. When combined with the $156 billion boost for the Pentagon from Trump’s so-called “Big Beautiful Bill,” that brings the total to over $1 trillion for the U.S. war machine.

That’s right: a trillion dollars.

At the same time, the Trump administration made sweeping cuts to environmental programs that took decades to build.

The Environmental Protection Agency’s budget was slashed by more than half — from $9.14 billion for 2025 to just $4.16 billion for 2026. And Trump has cancelled or frozen $29 billion in environmental grants for local communities, undermining efforts to secure clean air and water, clean up contaminated sites, improve public health, and create jobs.

The National Priorities Project of the Institute for Policy Studies, my organization, found that we’ve spent $79 billion on Foreign Military Financing over the last decade alone. In these deals, the U.S. provides grants to other countries to purchase U.S.-made weapons. On the flip side, only $2 billion has gone to the Green Climate Fund, the primary pool of money supporting nations most impacted by, yet least responsible for, climate change. (Under Trump, the figure is actually $0.)

So in addition to cutting our own renewable programs to spend more on the carbon-intensive Pentagon, we’re also spending nearly 40 times more helping other countries do the same rather than helping them adapt to our warming planet.

Ordinary people are already paying the price for these choices. Floods, hurricanes, and wildfires are growing more frequent and destructive, driving up recovery expenses and insurance costs. Utility bills are climbing, too, due to extreme temperatures and energy-thirsty AI data centers.

Ten years after the Paris Agreement, the choice is clear. We can continue down a path of fossil fuels and endless wars, or we can invest in climate solutions that actually keep people safe. Business as usual will leave homes destroyed, families hungry, and people sicker and more vulnerable.

The clock is ticking. It’s time to stop funding destruction and start putting money towards just, healthy futures for all.

This op-ed was originally published on OtherWords.org and republished here under a CC BY-ND 3.0 license.

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Alliyah Lusuegro is the Outreach Coordinator for the National Priorities Project at the Institute for Policy Studies.
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