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The Iran War Is Impacting the Environment in Unseen Ways

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Why This Matters

The ongoing conflict in Iran and surrounding regions is causing significant, often unseen environmental damage, including air pollution, greenhouse gas emissions, and land degradation. This ecological crisis highlights how modern warfare extends beyond human casualties, impacting global climate and regional ecosystems, which can have long-term consequences for both the environment and future peace efforts.

Key Takeaways

War had already darkened Tehran’s skies by March 8. When rain began to fall, residents said it was thick, foul-smelling and dark in color. Some described it as black rain, coating streets, rooftops, and cars in sootlike residue.

That night, Israel had struck more than 30 oil facilities in Iran. The scale of the attacks and the fires that followed were so significant that US officials later questioned their strategic rationale.

But the damage has not stopped there. From smoke over Fujairah and oil risks in Gulf waters to burned farmland and contamination fears in southern Lebanon, the environmental toll of conflict is spreading across the wider region.

A growing body of open-source evidence, satellite imagery, social media footage, and official statements points to an unfolding ecological crisis across Iran, the Gulf, and Lebanon. The picture emerging is a multifront assault on the environment: on land, at sea, and in the air.

Some impacts are visible in smoke, spills, and rubble. Others are harder to see. The first two weeks of the war alone unleashed more than 5 million tons of carbon dioxide equivalent.

Researchers estimate that each missile strike releases roughly 0.14 tons of CO 2 equivalent, about the same as driving a car for 350 miles. That includes emissions from the strike itself and the embodied carbon tied to the missile’s production and supply chain.

Those emissions do not come only from weapons. They also come from aircraft sorties, naval operations, fires, fuel consumption, and reconstruction. Some damage can be counted in emissions. Much of it is physical, local, and harder to fully measure while the war is still unfolding.

It’s often said that the environment is war’s silent victim. Seven weeks after hostilities against Iran began, and as the world marks Earth Day, it is once again paying a devastating price.

Land

According to Lebanon’s National Council for Scientific Research (CNRS), more than 50,000 housing units were destroyed or damaged within about 45 days of war, including 17,756 destroyed and 32,668 damaged units, AFP reported.

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