Youth protesters mull new ways to fight climate villains
Leaders of major institutions, climate polluters and their enablers are now directly targeted
01 July 2022 - 10:33
byJack Graham and Joanna Gill
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The lignite (brown coal) power plant complex of German energy supplier and utility RWE is reflected in a large puddle in Neurath, northwest of Cologne, Germany on February 5 2020. Picture: REUTERS/WOLFGANG RATTAY
London/Brussels — Before the Covid-19 pandemic hit, more than 6-million people flooded into the streets in 2019 as part of mass Fridays for Future protests, aiming to force governments and companies to act more swiftly to slash emissions and curb climate change.
But while the protests boosted public awareness of climate threats, the response from institutions was largely reports, letters and “creative accounting”, said German activist Luisa Neubauer, who with Sweden's Greta Thunberg helped organise the strikes.
“They’re trying to blind us with the nice words and promises, and prevent us from looking into the details and [calling] them out,” the 26-year-old told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
Now, with mass climate protests dampened by years of Covid-19 restrictions, youth activists have been exploring new ways to hold institutions to account and accelerate action to avoid the worst effects of a hotter planet.
That includes targeting protests more selectively at leaders of major institutions — from governments to banks — who hold the power to shift both the policies and money behind climate-wrecking emissions.
As fossil fuel emissions continue to rise, despite pledges of cuts, “we need to apply everything we have,” Neubauer said. “We, as a movement, should be everywhere.”
Dana Fisher, a sociologist who studies climate activism at the University of Maryland, said the shift marks a key evolution in climate activism.
“Fridays for Future certainly did bring out young people in ways that we hadn’t seen before — for a very small moment in time,” she said.
“What we’ve seen is that a lot of climate activists have become really frustrated with the lack of progress,” she added, with many now thinking targeted confrontation and disruption are “the only way forward”.
Neubauer said her work has also shifted to trying to call out “greenwashing” by banks and other companies keen to portray themselves as acting on climate threats while making little real change.
This week she met with Deutsche Bank in Frankfurt, working with Ugandan youth activists to pressure the bank to abandon financing for a proposed new oil pipeline in East Africa, and other fossil fuel expansion.
“They invest in fossil fuels and try to show the public that they are doing something else,” said Ugandan activist Evelyn Acham, who insisted Deutsche Bank officially distance itself from the East African Crude Oil Pipeline.
Acham said it is too dangerous to openly protest in the street in Uganda, but her “Rise Up Movement” is finding other ways to pressure banks, such as by organising meetings with bank officials and sending them the latest UN climate change reports.
“I’m so scared of the future,” she said in a telephone interview. “That’s why I speak up and I just can’t go back and stay comfortable when people are dying.”
Climate villains
Many young activists are now directly targeting climate polluters and their enablers in politics, finance and the media, said Oscar Berglund, a lecturer at the University of Bristol who researches climate protest movements.
“There’s a more specific focus on the climate ‘villains’,” he said, adding that many protesters were politicised by the Fridays for Future movement.
One of the movements making headlines in Britain is Green New Deal Rising. Since launching last August, its volunteers have sought — and filmed — confrontations with key politicians such as British finance minister Rishi Sunak.
The activists — primarily in their early 20s — recently disrupted an oil and gas industry event in parliament with loud speeches accusing the companies of driving both the climate crisis and higher energy costs.
“We feel that, too often, decisionmakers go unchallenged,” said Hannah Martin, co-executive director of Green New Deal UK, which organises the movement.
Activists hope to build a multiparty coalition of political support for more radical and swift climate action.
Popularised in the US by politicians such as Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, “green new deal” proposals aim to address climate change alongside social justice problems such as inequality and racial discrimination.
Martin says younger climate activists “understand the interconnectedness of these issues,” which is why they campaign on a variety of political causes, including attacking the British government’s policy to send asylum seekers to Rwanda.
The group has surprised UK parliamentarians at public events and inundated them with persistent questions, something Martin calls an accessible way for grassroots activists to get politicians “on the record” about their green views and actions.
“At the end of the day, they’re our representatives and they should be held accountable,” she said.
Ukraine war links
Some young climate activists have also found ways to link their fight to hot-button issues.
In Poland, the war in neighbouring Ukraine persuaded climate justice activist Wiktoria Jędroszkowiak to drop out of university and travel across Europe to confront politicians on fossil fuel financing.
When her phone buzzed at 5am with a call from a friend saying the Russians had invaded Ukraine, her first reaction was to rush to a Polish train station to help arriving refugees.
“But after a moment we realised, 'Wait, this is not our job,'” the 20-year-old said. “I mean, like, we’re climate justice activists. We know what this war is about.”
For Jędroszkowiak and fellow campaigners, merging action on the Russian invasion and climate change is a natural fit.
Staunching the flow of Russian fossil fuels could help dry up funding for the invasion while curbing climate change and potentially stoking renewables investment, they say.
In May, at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, the East European activists cornered French President Emmanuel Macron, calling him out for not forcing French oil and gas company TotalEnergies to retreat from Russia.
Another recent confrontation posted online showed Jędroszkowiak being accosted by security at the Austria World Summit after repeatedly asking Frans Timmermans, who leads the European Commission’s Green Deal work, about the EU’s policy on green investments.
Jędroszkowiak said politicians seem anxious to avoid youth activists, highlighting this week’s Group of Seven leaders summit in a closed-off castle in Germany’s Bavarian Alps.
But confronting politicians face-to-face and interrupting speeches are an important way to break through to them and to wider audiences, she said.
“We want to shatter all of these theatres they create and reveal their lies,” she said, in a social media message. “Our power now lies in being unpredictable and everywhere.”
Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
Youth protesters mull new ways to fight climate villains
Leaders of major institutions, climate polluters and their enablers are now directly targeted
London/Brussels — Before the Covid-19 pandemic hit, more than 6-million people flooded into the streets in 2019 as part of mass Fridays for Future protests, aiming to force governments and companies to act more swiftly to slash emissions and curb climate change.
But while the protests boosted public awareness of climate threats, the response from institutions was largely reports, letters and “creative accounting”, said German activist Luisa Neubauer, who with Sweden's Greta Thunberg helped organise the strikes.
“They’re trying to blind us with the nice words and promises, and prevent us from looking into the details and [calling] them out,” the 26-year-old told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
Now, with mass climate protests dampened by years of Covid-19 restrictions, youth activists have been exploring new ways to hold institutions to account and accelerate action to avoid the worst effects of a hotter planet.
That includes targeting protests more selectively at leaders of major institutions — from governments to banks — who hold the power to shift both the policies and money behind climate-wrecking emissions.
As fossil fuel emissions continue to rise, despite pledges of cuts, “we need to apply everything we have,” Neubauer said. “We, as a movement, should be everywhere.”
Dana Fisher, a sociologist who studies climate activism at the University of Maryland, said the shift marks a key evolution in climate activism.
“Fridays for Future certainly did bring out young people in ways that we hadn’t seen before — for a very small moment in time,” she said.
“What we’ve seen is that a lot of climate activists have become really frustrated with the lack of progress,” she added, with many now thinking targeted confrontation and disruption are “the only way forward”.
Neubauer said her work has also shifted to trying to call out “greenwashing” by banks and other companies keen to portray themselves as acting on climate threats while making little real change.
This week she met with Deutsche Bank in Frankfurt, working with Ugandan youth activists to pressure the bank to abandon financing for a proposed new oil pipeline in East Africa, and other fossil fuel expansion.
“They invest in fossil fuels and try to show the public that they are doing something else,” said Ugandan activist Evelyn Acham, who insisted Deutsche Bank officially distance itself from the East African Crude Oil Pipeline.
Acham said it is too dangerous to openly protest in the street in Uganda, but her “Rise Up Movement” is finding other ways to pressure banks, such as by organising meetings with bank officials and sending them the latest UN climate change reports.
“I’m so scared of the future,” she said in a telephone interview. “That’s why I speak up and I just can’t go back and stay comfortable when people are dying.”
Climate villains
Many young activists are now directly targeting climate polluters and their enablers in politics, finance and the media, said Oscar Berglund, a lecturer at the University of Bristol who researches climate protest movements.
“There’s a more specific focus on the climate ‘villains’,” he said, adding that many protesters were politicised by the Fridays for Future movement.
One of the movements making headlines in Britain is Green New Deal Rising. Since launching last August, its volunteers have sought — and filmed — confrontations with key politicians such as British finance minister Rishi Sunak.
The activists — primarily in their early 20s — recently disrupted an oil and gas industry event in parliament with loud speeches accusing the companies of driving both the climate crisis and higher energy costs.
“We feel that, too often, decisionmakers go unchallenged,” said Hannah Martin, co-executive director of Green New Deal UK, which organises the movement.
Activists hope to build a multiparty coalition of political support for more radical and swift climate action.
Popularised in the US by politicians such as Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez of New York, “green new deal” proposals aim to address climate change alongside social justice problems such as inequality and racial discrimination.
Martin says younger climate activists “understand the interconnectedness of these issues,” which is why they campaign on a variety of political causes, including attacking the British government’s policy to send asylum seekers to Rwanda.
The group has surprised UK parliamentarians at public events and inundated them with persistent questions, something Martin calls an accessible way for grassroots activists to get politicians “on the record” about their green views and actions.
“At the end of the day, they’re our representatives and they should be held accountable,” she said.
Ukraine war links
Some young climate activists have also found ways to link their fight to hot-button issues.
In Poland, the war in neighbouring Ukraine persuaded climate justice activist Wiktoria Jędroszkowiak to drop out of university and travel across Europe to confront politicians on fossil fuel financing.
When her phone buzzed at 5am with a call from a friend saying the Russians had invaded Ukraine, her first reaction was to rush to a Polish train station to help arriving refugees.
“But after a moment we realised, 'Wait, this is not our job,'” the 20-year-old said. “I mean, like, we’re climate justice activists. We know what this war is about.”
For Jędroszkowiak and fellow campaigners, merging action on the Russian invasion and climate change is a natural fit.
Staunching the flow of Russian fossil fuels could help dry up funding for the invasion while curbing climate change and potentially stoking renewables investment, they say.
In May, at the European Parliament in Strasbourg, the East European activists cornered French President Emmanuel Macron, calling him out for not forcing French oil and gas company TotalEnergies to retreat from Russia.
Another recent confrontation posted online showed Jędroszkowiak being accosted by security at the Austria World Summit after repeatedly asking Frans Timmermans, who leads the European Commission’s Green Deal work, about the EU’s policy on green investments.
Jędroszkowiak said politicians seem anxious to avoid youth activists, highlighting this week’s Group of Seven leaders summit in a closed-off castle in Germany’s Bavarian Alps.
But confronting politicians face-to-face and interrupting speeches are an important way to break through to them and to wider audiences, she said.
“We want to shatter all of these theatres they create and reveal their lies,” she said, in a social media message. “Our power now lies in being unpredictable and everywhere.”
Thomson Reuters Foundation
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