The number of armed conflicts currently raging around the world is the greatest since the end of World War II. These wars can leave toxic environmental legacies and cause untold damage to human health.
A quarter of the world’s population — or two billion people — live in countries experiencing war. They include Ukraine, Yemen, Syria, Myanmar, Sudan, Haiti and the Sahel region in Northern Africa.
Violent conflict causes substantial environmental damage — polluting air, water and soil, and damaging human health over the long term.
Chemical weapons and toxins are still being used in current wars. The United Nations last month formally adopted principles to protect the environment in armed conflict. Concrete action is now needed to implement them.
What are toxic remnants of war?
Toxic remnants of war are poisonous or hazardous substances resulting from military activities. They include:
- radioactive material
- white phosphorus
- mustard agents
- halogens
- heavy metals
- dioxins and other human carcinogens.
Atomic bombs dropped on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945 are thought to have killed more than 200,000 people immediately; more died from nuclear radiation in subsequent years.
Some toxic remnants are a direct result of armed conflict. Agent Orange used in the Vietnam War contained dangerous dioxins that continue to damage people and the environment today.
The use of poisonous gases and other hazardous substances in warfare has a long history. Chlorine and mustard gas, for example, were used in World War I.
However, unlike many past wars, today’s armed conflicts increasingly take place in urban and industrialised areas, posing a significant risk to civilians and their environment.
And the use of chemical weapons continues. For example, a UN official this month said the Syrian government’s “absence of accountability” for using chemical weapons in the nation’s long-running civil war was “a threat to international peace and security and a danger to us all”.
A threat to human health
Toxic remnants of war can result in many adverse health effects in humans.
In Vietnam, research suggests a greatly increased risk of birth defects among children of parents exposed to Agent Orange. In some locations, extremely high levels of dioxins have been found in soil, sediment and foods, as well as human breast milk and blood.
Research has also linked Agent Orange to human genome instability (or genome mutations) in adults and children.
In Gaza, elevated heavy metal loads have been identified in mothers and newborns exposed to military attacks. Also in Gaza, birth defects have been associated with exposure to white phosphorus and other bombs containing toxic and carcinogenic metals.
In Croatia, higher metal blood concentrations were found in those exposed to heavy fighting.
In Iraq, open burn pits used to dispose of war waste have exposed civilians to poisonous smoke and fumes. And smoke from oil well fires in the 1991 Gulf War, and more recently in Syria, pose a toxic risk.
A scourge on the environment
In addition to human health effects, armed conflicts can cause widespread environmental damage.
Sensitive landscapes can be destroyed by the movement of troops and vehicles. And explosives can release particles, debris and other matter that pollutes the air and soil.