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Climate Security and the Fiscal Year 2023 National Defense Authorization Act

U.S. Army Reserve soldiers receive an overview of Washington D.C. as part of the 4th Annual Day with the Army Reserve May 25, 2016. The event was led by the Private Public Partnership office. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. 1st Class Marisol Walker)

By John Conger

President Biden signed the Fiscal Year 2023 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) on December 23, 2022, a $858 billion measure setting defense policy and authorizing spending for next year.  While the bill includes thousands of provisions addressing issues across the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD), its biggest impact on climate security this year is its broad support of the efforts the DoD proposed in its budget request.

In recent years, Congress has used this must-pass legislation to highlight and respond to climate threats to national security.  Past NDAAs have directed DoD to deliver strategies and plans addressing climate-related issues such as the opening Arctic or resilience to extreme weather, and have provided a wide range of new authorities to DoD to support resilience efforts. Until now, however, the bill has given less attention to the funding authorization needed to turn the plans into action.  

In the Fiscal Year 2023 budget DoD requested $3.1 billion in climate investments, focused on installation resilience and increasing operational efficiencies. The FY23 NDAA largely approved those requests, and even included modest increases in some resilience programs like the Defense Community Investment Program, the Energy Resilience and Conservation Investment Program and the Readiness and Environmental Protection Integration Program. This embrace of climate-related investments synchronizes with a key theme that CCS embraced in this year’s Challenge Accepted report—the need to adequately resource the climate investments of the Department.

One place the Administration’s budget request had fallen short was infrastructure investment. In places like Tyndall Air Force Base or Camp Lejeune, we have seen that when extreme weather hits, old buildings cannot withstand the impacts and newer buildings are much more likely to do so, or at least sustain less damage. The Administration’s request for military construction was $10.2 billion, but the NDAA dramatically increased that budget, adding $7.3 billion. Not every new building is a climate investment, but a healthy capital reinvestment program using updated building codes (something Congress directed in the recent past) sure is.

As in previous years, Members of Congress included many additional provisions addressing climate change and resilience, energy resilience and sustainability, and international climate collaboration. Key climate change and resilience provisions include: 

Key energy and sustainability provisions include:  

International climate collaboration was also addressed:

In the end, this year’s NDAA builds on several years of bipartisan support for resilience and energy efficiency across the Department with several new constructive provisions.  Most importantly, though, it embraces and funds the billions of dollars of programs the Pentagon spelled out in its FY23 request, an action that will enable the Department to sustain its forward momentum on climate security.  

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