According to Common Dreams, hundreds of demonstrations around
the world are demanding a rapid, just, and equitable phase out from fossil
fuels in favor of sustainable renewables. Thee demonstrations began on Friday
ahead of United Nations Secretary General António Guterres' Climate
Ambition Summit in New York City.
"From
Pacific nations, heavily affected by sea-level rise and storms, through Mumbai
to Manila, London to Nairobi, over 650 actions are planned in 60 countries,
culminating in a march in New York City on September 17," according
to protest organizers.
The Global Fight to End Fossil Fuels opposes the fossil fuel
industry, which has made obscene profits at the expense of the world's people,
biodiversity, and a safe and livable climate," added organizers, who
expect millions to join the protests over the coming days. "It calls on
governments and companies to immediately end fossil fuel expansion and subsidies."
The actions come amid the hottest summer on record
and as experts continue to sound the alarm over unwavering environmental
destruction, especially by the fossil fuel industry and its political and
financial backers.
International scientists revealed this week that
six of nine barriers that ensure Earth is a "safe operating space for
humanity" have been breached, which followed recent findings that
greenhouse gas concentrations, global sea level, and ocean heat content hit
record highs last year.
Climate
chaos—fueled by oil and gas giants that have spent decades lying
about their planet-heating pollution along with rich governments and institutions that
continue to break their promises and pump billions of dollars into
the fossil fuel industry—is already killing people. The death toll
from flooding in Libya this week has climbed to 11,300.
"The world is at a tipping point," said Tyrone
Scott of the War on Want and the Climate Justice Coalition in the United
Kingdom ahead of protests this weekend. "Climate catastrophe is already
devastating the lives and livelihoods of people across the world and primarily
those in the Global South, who are least responsible for causing it."
"We must uproot the systems of exploitation and
oppression which keep the majority of the world's population in poverty while
lining the pockets of corporates and rich shareholders. This is a watershed
moment. How we respond will determine how the world is shaped for
generations," Scott stressed. "We demand an end to fossil fuels. We
demand a fast and fair transition. We demand climate justice."
Tens of thousands of activists from across the United States
are expected to join the March to End Fossil Fuels in New York City on Sunday.
Marchers—backed by hundreds of organizations and scientists—have four key
demands for President Joe Biden:
Stop federal approval for new fossil fuel projects and
repeal permits for climate bombs like the Willow project and the Mountain
Valley Pipeline; 2) Phase out fossil drilling on our public lands and waters;
3) Declare a climate emergency to halt fossil fuel exports and investments
abroad, and turbocharge the build out of more just, resilient distributed
energy (like rooftop and community solar) and 4) Provide a just transition to a
renewable energy future that generates millions of jobs while supporting
workers' and community rights, job security, and employment equity.
"Despite
his numerous and explicit pledges to the contrary, President Biden has turned
out to be a strong supporter of fossil fuels," Food & Water Watch Northeast
region director Alex Beauchamp, an organizer of the NYC march, said in
a statement Friday.
"With each passing day, Biden's failure to lead on
clean energy drives the planet deeper into the abyss of irrevocable climate
chaos," he added. "We're marching to send a message that true climate
leadership means halting new oil and gas drilling and fracking, and rejecting
new fossil fuel infrastructure like pipelines and export terminals—beginning
now."
Betamia Coronel, senior national organizer for climate
justice at the Center for Popular Democracy, highlighted in a Friday opinion
piece for Common Dreams that "BIPOC communities have always
lived at the intersection of wealth disparity and the climate crisis and it is
Black, Indigenous, immigrant, working-class people of color who have been
leading the efforts in the lead up to this historic march in NYC."
Dozens of actors, activists, and climate
leaders—including Bill McKibben, Blair Imani, Cornel West, Jameela Jamil,
Jane Fonda, Lennox Yearwood Jr., Mark Ruffalo, Naomi Klein, Rosario
Dawson, Rashida Tlaib, Rebecca Solnit, and Vanessa Nakate—joined more than
700 groups on Friday in sending a pre-march letter to the US
president.
"The
United States is the top global oil and gas producer and the largest historic
greenhouse gas emitter. It is imperative that the US change course and become a
true global climate leader by ending the extraction and use of fossil
fuels," they wrote, urging Biden to commit to phasing out fossil fuels at
the UN summit on September 20. "The world is watching."
Biden has also faced mounting pressure to declare a climate
emergency this year, as the United States has endured a
record-setting number of billion-dollar disasters, from a deadly fire in
Hawaii to Hurricane Idalia. Since last week, eight campaigners have been
arrested outside the White House for a series of protests demanding a climate
emergency declaration and other executive action to end the era of fossil
fuels.
Organizers planned to continue the nonviolent civil disobedience
campaign in Washington, DC on Friday, and warned that each day Biden delays in
taking this step is precious time lost to save lives and secure a livable
future for humankind and countless other species.