Environmental War: Hidden Damage Across Land, Sea and Air

Middle EastMon Apr 27 2026
The war in the Middle East has left more than just destroyed buildings behind. It is quietly poisoning air, soil and water in ways that are hard to see at first glance. The first wave of damage was visible when the city of Tehran saw its skies turn black. Residents described a thick, foul‑smelling rain that coated roofs and cars in soot. That night Israeli forces struck more than thirty oil sites, setting them ablaze and releasing smoke that hung over the city for days. But the fires are only one part of a bigger problem. Satellite images and social media posts now show smoke drifting over Fujairah, oil spills in Gulf waters and burnt fields in southern Lebanon. Each missile hit releases about 0. 14 tons of carbon dioxide – roughly the same as a car driving 350 miles – and thousands of aircraft sorties add another half‑million tons in the first weeks alone. Land damage is huge. In Lebanon, over fifty thousand homes were damaged or destroyed in just a month and the debris produced by bombings is estimated at 15 to 20 million tons in three months – what the country would normally generate in two decades. The rubble contains plastics, solvents, heavy metals and asbestos that leach into soil and water, creating long‑term pollution. Agriculture is also suffering. By September, more than two‑thirds of Lebanon’s farmland had been affected directly or indirectly. Contaminated soil means crops grow weaker and food safety becomes a concern, especially as the Gulf’s shallow waters make it hard for pollutants to disperse.
Marine ecosystems face new threats. The Gulf already struggles with warming waters and habitat loss; war adds oil spills, mines and increased shipping traffic. A container ship turned drone carrier was hit and leaked heavy fuel oil, sending slicks toward mangrove reserves that shelter turtles and other wildlife. Even small leaks off Basra or the UAE can spread contamination across the region’s fragile coral reefs. Air quality has deteriorated sharply. Burning oil fires released black carbon, sulfur oxides and nitrogen oxides – all harmful to human lungs. White phosphorus used in Lebanon can ignite crops, alter soil chemistry and release toxic particles into the air. The cumulative effect of jets flying for hours is comparable to thousands of cars running on gasoline each day. After the bombs fall, environmental damage lingers. The destruction of infrastructure leads to concrete rubble that takes decades to break down, while weakened governments often ignore environmental cleanup when rebuilding. International aid that helped Ukraine after its conflict is unlikely to materialize here, leaving local communities with both broken homes and poisoned lands. The true cost of war is therefore a slow, layered poisoning that spreads across earth’s surface, sea and sky – a quiet assault that may outlast the conflict itself.
https://localnews.ai/article/environmental-war-hidden-damage-across-land-sea-and-air-6b738174

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