This year once again, the climate movement has made great strides. And although the climate breakdown is worse than ever, these victories bring us hope and show what’s possible when we take action together.
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One of the world’s biggest pension funds divested from fossil fuels
In October, ABP – Europe’s largest pension fund – announced it would completely divest from dirty energies, selling its 15 billion euros worth of holdings in fossil fuels! This was the result of years of tireless campaigning by Fossielvrij Netherlands, their partners, civil servants, teachers, garbage collectors, retired people, pension members and more.
This was huge – and paved the way for other big pension funds in the Netherlands to follow suit. Now that ABP is out of the way, all eyes are turning to other big financial institutions in the Netherlands, like ING bank and the PFZW pension fund.
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We stopped France from funding Total’s climate-wrecking gas project in the Arctic
When it became known that France was planning on supporting Total’s gas project in the Arctic, it caused a public outcry. Over 250,000 people signed the petition by 350, SumOfUs and Friends of the Earth calling on the government to immediately withdraw its support. And our collective resistance caused the government to back down – a huge win for the movement.
Now, pressure is mounting against Total after a report revealed they knew about the impact of their destructive activities on people and the planet since the early 1970s, but chose to ignore the science and launched disinformation campaigns to delay climate action.
As a movement we’re determined to take them down and cut off all their funding – join the fight to make Total pay for their criminal behaviour!
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Shell was taken to court – and lost BIG
People and the planet don’t matter to companies like Shell, they only care about their own profits. So Fossielvrij Netherlands, Friends of the Earth and other claimants took them to Court to force them to stop their climate-wrecking activities. And guess what? They won!
Tears. of. joy. 🚨WE WON! 🚨
The Dutch court just ruled Shell must cut its CO2 emissions by 45% by 2030 (relative to 2019 levels).
The climate fight is enormous but we know we can win this thing, beat fossil fuel companies and build a better world. ❤️#StopShell pic.twitter.com/MCGHyfI9Gf
— Friends of the Earth Europe🌍 (@foeeurope) May 26, 2021
In May, the Court ruled that the Dutch company will have to cut down its emissions by 45%. If taken seriously, this would mean Shell will have to stop developing new fossil projects.
Now Shell is planning to relocate its headquarters to the UK – but they can’t run away from the climate movement. We know people aren’t going to let them off the hook, and our UK team is standing by, ready to keep up the pressure. Shell should expect a warm welcome.
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We’ve pushed the European Central Bank to make the climate crisis their priority
After over a year of mobilisation where hundreds of thousands of us signed petitions, sent letters, tweeted, painted banners and took to the streets to protest, the European Central Bank published a new strategy that took the first steps towards cutting off finance to fossil fuel corporations.
This was ground-breaking. For the first time ever, it drew clear plans to address climate risks and end its support to the fossil fuel industry.
We know this is just the beginning and there’s so much more the Bank needs to do to meet the urgency of the climate crisis. But this sends a clear signal to banks around the world that the era of fossil finance is coming to an end.
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Germany’s weak climate law was ruled unconstitutional
When Germany tried to dodge meaningful climate action with a weak law, people across the country, along with groups like Fridays for Future, refused to allow it and took the government to Court to force them to act. And they WON:
A HUGE WIN FOR THE CLIMATE MOVEMENT! 🔥 One year ago, we filed a case against the German government & its climate law. Today, the German constitutional court has decided that climate justice is a fundamental right. Today's inaction mustn't harm our freedom & rights in the future.
— Luisa Neubauer (@Luisamneubauer) April 29, 2021
The Court ruled the law unconstitutional as it failed to take appropriate measures and placed too much burden on future generations to address the crisis. This sends a strong message to Germany and all countries: delay is not an option, now is the time for action!
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We’ve pressured France to commit to end all public funding for oil, gas and coal abroad
Here’s a good thing that came out of the recent UN climate talks (but wasn’t widely reported in mainstream media!): nearly 39 countries and institutions committed to ending all public finance for oil, coal and gas projects internationally.
Initially France dragged its feet on joining. So we called on the French President to join and took immediate action on social media.
By publicly pointing out how the country was lagging behind, people had genuinely embarrassed a government which tried to pose as a leader on the issue. After only a few days, France was forced to join the commitment.
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The new Cambo oil field in the UK is looking increasingly unlikely to go ahead
The UK government knows full well that we can’t allow any new oil and gas extraction for global heating to stay below 1.5C, and for our collective survival. Yet it has given its support to the development of a new oil field project in the North Sea.
People’s resistance has been the only thing standing in the way of this project and keeping it from being approved. And in the last few weeks, the climate movement has not only pushed the Scottish Prime Minister to oppose the Cambo oil field thanks to incredible campaigning by Stop Cambo and Green New Deal Rising, but has also forced Shell to pull out of the project.
For months we’ve been fighting against Cambo on the streets, in the press and online. Today, Shell publicly pulled out of the development and It looks unlikely to go ahead.
Tonight, we celebrate a victory testament to the power of grassroots organising. Yassss! #StopCambo pic.twitter.com/Uxv5yHbAC8
— Coll McCail (@MccailColl) December 2, 2021
This withdrawal is a real blow for the project, as Shell had nearly a third of the stake in it and this funding will be extremely difficult to replace. It’s been a long and tedious battle, but thanks to people power, we’ve never been closer to stopping Cambo once and for all.
Whether we’re going after banks so they stop investing in fossil fuels, pushing pension funds to divest, blocking new fossil projects, pressuring governments to do better on the climate or taking climate criminals to Court, we do whatever it takes to fight the climate crisis. That’s what the climate movement is all about.
Things may seem hopeless sometimes, but we keep winning. And the more of us there are, the stronger we become against the fossil fuel industry and its funders. So join us: sign petitions, send letters, join a local group, take to the streets – let’s keep fighting and together, we will put an end to the era of fossil fuels.