Britain’s naval supremacy has been reaffirmed amid the recent US-Iran nuclear accord, but the agreement raises urgent questions about the escalating cost of conflict in the Persian Gulf. As a climate correspondent, I must stress that this is not merely a geopolitical shift: it is a thermodynamic reality check. Every barrel of oil extracted, every warship deployed, every missile launched carries a carbon price tag that our biosphere cannot afford.
The Royal Navy’s presence in the region remains a cornerstone of global maritime security, with 7 destroyers and frigates on station as of March 2025. Yet the true cost of maintaining this posture is measured in megatonnes of CO2. A single Type 45 destroyer burns approximately 1,500 litres of marine diesel per hour at cruising speed. Over a typical 6-month deployment, that equates to nearly 10,000 tonnes of CO2. Multiply that by the entire fleet, and the Navy’s annual emissions rival those of a small industrialised nation.
The US-Iran accord, signed in Vienna last week, seeks to limit Tehran’s uranium enrichment in exchange for sanctions relief. It is a fragile peace, but it is peace nonetheless. Yet the agreement does nothing to address the underlying energy addiction driving the conflict. Iran sits atop 157 billion barrels of proven oil reserves, and the Strait of Hormuz remains the world’s most critical energy choke point. Every tanker that transits the strait carries the equivalent of 1 million tonnes of potential CO2 emissions. The naval forces that protect these tankers are themselves massive emitters.
The question is not whether Britain can maintain naval supremacy. It can. The question is whether we can afford the carbon cost of doing so. At current rates, the global military sector accounts for 5.5% of anthropogenic CO2 emissions. That is larger than the aviation industry. And it is entirely exempt from climate agreements like the Paris Accord.
There is a technological solution. The Royal Navy has already begun integrating hybrid propulsion systems into its Type 26 frigates, reducing fuel consumption by 20%. But this is a drop in the ocean. Full electrification of naval fleets remains decades away, constrained by energy density limitations of current battery technology. Nuclear propulsion, while emissions-free, carries its own proliferation and safety risks.
More immediate is the need for demand reduction. The US-Iran accord should be a catalyst for de-escalation, reducing the number of patrolling warships and allowing for a smaller, more efficient naval footprint. Every vessel taken off station is a direct reduction in emissions. Every diplomatic success is a win for the biosphere.
The physical reality is stark: the planet is warming at 0.2°C per decade. The oceans are absorbing 93% of the excess heat. The Persian Gulf, already one of the hottest places on Earth, will become uninhabitable for parts of the year by 2050 if emissions continue unchecked. Conflict over energy resources will only exacerbate this crisis.
Britain’s naval supremacy is not in question. But the measure of a great power is its ability to adapt. The true victory is not in projecting force, but in avoiding its use. The US-Iran accord offers a rare chance to recalibrate. We must seize it, not to save face, but to save ourselves.








