SPREAD THE INFORMATION

Any information or special reports about various countries may be published with photos/videos on the world blog with bold legit source. All languages ​​are welcome. Mail to lucschrijvers@hotmail.com.

Search for an article in this Worldwide information blog

zaterdag 27 december 2025

WORLD WORLDWIDE EUROPE UK uk United Kingdom - (en) UK, AF, Organise: COP30 ISN'T A FAILURE - IT'S A FARCE (ca, de, fr, it, pt, tr)[machine translation]

 BELÉM, BRAZIL - As the COP30 climate summit comes to a close here in

Belém, in the Brazilian state of Pará, conference organizers have little
to show after two weeks of highly publicized talks. This is bad for
everyone. The United Nations Climate Change Conference desperately
needed to restore its reputation. After all, last year's COP29 took
place in Azerbaijan, where fossil fuels make up 90% of the exports and
where the government was being accused of carrying out genocide in the
months leading up to the conference. The previous year, the COP28 was
held in Dubai, capital of another petrostate.

This year, the marketing strategy for the climate conference began with
a mea culpa for the historic exclusion of Indigenous peoples. A UN press
release announcing the findings of a recent report on Indigenous peoples
and the climate crisis put it this way: "From green energy projects
imposed without consent to policy decisions made in rooms where
Indigenous voices are absent, these communities are too often excluded
from climate solutions, displaced by them, and denied the resources to
lead the way."

To address this, Brazil's Ministry of Indigenous Peoples (MPI) invited
360 Indigenous leaders to participate in negotiations inside the COP,
after a six-month process in which events were held with 80 Indigenous
peoples whose territories are occupied by the Brazilian state. The goal
was "to ensure the largest Indigenous participation in the history of
the UN Climate Conferences," according to the official COP30 website. In
a sort of call and response, The New York Times and other mainstream
media uncritically echoed these claims, with headlines like "Indigenous
People, Long Sidelined at Climate Talks, Take the Stage."

What these declarations assume is that, while there may be errors in the
process, the solution is greater participation. None of these
institutions - the UN, big media outlets, major NGOs and world
governments - seem willing to face the truth that the COP process is not
simply failing to solve the climate crisis: It cannot solve the climate
crisis. And this farce is getting in the way of actual, active
strategies to protect Indigenous peoples and address the ecocide.

The Times' metaphor of a stage is an appropriate one, given the showy,
spectacular nature of these efforts. Cities across Brazil have been
covered in colorful advertising showcasing Indigenous peoples and
Amazonian wildlife. And on Monday, when an Indigenous peoples march
kicked off the second and final week of COP30, Indigenous
representatives supportive of the government and the conference had
their place at the front of the march, with big banners and a mobile
sound system, while more critical groups talking about a lack of actual
results were relegated to the back.

To condition Indigenous movements, governments use carrots and sticks.
The carrots include promises of investment and funding, like the $1.8
billion that four European countries and thirty-five industry-supported
philanthropies have pledged to Indigenous peoples over the next five
years. Most of that money is destined for NGOs working with Indigenous
peoples. Such investments have a dubious record when it comes to
protecting the land or increasing Indigenous autonomy, though it is
certainly a significant resource for propping up compliant Indigenous
representatives who are often appointed by the states that occupy their
lands.

The sticks, meanwhile, can range from hard to soft techniques of
repression. The day of the march, human rights and environmental groups
published an open letter accusing UN climate chief Simon Stiell of
"creating a chilling effect and a feeling of unsafety for Indigenous
peoples," after Stiell called on Brazil to increase security forces
around the COP venue.

The day before, gunmen attacked the Guarani Kaiowá Indigenous community
of Pyelito Kue in the southern Brazilian state of Mato Grosso do Sul,
killing land defender Vicente Fernandes Vilhalva, injuring four other
community members and burning down all the community's homes and
property. The assault, the fourth of its kind in two weeks, comes as the
Guarani Kaiowá have engaged in a struggle to reoccupy some of their
ancestral lands.

Of all the accomplishments the mainstream climate framework can boast,
not one of them has to do with reducing greenhouse gas emissions or
slowing deforestation and the devastation of wetlands around the world.
When specific countries are able to claim a reduction in emissions, it's
thanks in part to carbon trading and carbon accounting systems that
corporate lobbyists have made sure are included in climate agreements,
as I've reported on previously here, here and here. On the contrary, the
COP's accomplishments have to do with securing investments and funding.
Companies that can claim a green label are enjoying a growing market and
the profits that come with it, but the benefit to Indigenous communities
or the broader movement to stop the ecological crisis is doubtful.

Indigenous peoples across Brazil have made their greatest advances in
recovering their territory not with investment plans but through direct
action. The Ka'apor of the Amazon have been burning logging trucks. The
Guarani of the Atlantic Forest used protests and blockades to force the
government to return a small part of their lands that had been stolen.
Gah Te Iracema, a spiritual leader in the Kaingang community from Porto
Alegre in the state of Rio Grande do Sul who had travelled to Belém for
COP30, tells me that "we have recovered a part of our land, but it's not
recognized by the government. So, we are here to speak about our fight.
We call it land reclamation, but it's like coming back to our house."

Gah Te Iracema, a spiritual leader in the Kaingang community from Porto
Alegre in the state of Rio Grande do Sul, sits in the Indigenous
Pavilion at COP30 in Belém. Photo by Peter Gelderloos
The Guarani Kaiowá, mentioned above, were violently expelled from their
lands in the 1980s. Major cattle ranching interests then moved in and
took over. The Guarani Kaiowá have been trying to reclaim some of their
lands, but FUNAI, the Brazilian government agency assigned to protect
Indigenous peoples, has not followed through with official demarcation.
A report by Survival International, an organization that advocates for
the rights of Indigenous peoples around the world, called the stalling
"a violation of Brazilian and international law" that has forced "the
Guarani to endure violent attacks and killings at the hands of the
ranchers and police backed by local politicians who act with impunity."
The report goes on: "An official agreement made between public
prosecutors, FUNAI, and the Guarani in 2007, and recent land demarcation
promises by[Brazilian]President[Luiz Inácio]Lula[da Silva] - have not
been upheld."

The Guarani Kaiowá are facing food shortages and poisoning from
agricultural chemicals. Meanwhile, those ranchers and plantation owners
have a less publicized but far more effective voice at the COP30: the
agricultural lobbyists, more than 300 of whom have descended on COP30,
where some have been granted "privileged access" to key negotiations.
Currently, cattle ranching and cropland expansion, largely for soy
plantations to feed cattle, is the main driver of deforestation across
the Amazon biome. Brazil's President Lula has proposed a shift to
another profitable industry, and one with a greener reputation: biofuels
that can replace fossil fuels. However, the plantations that grow
biofuels also drive deforestation. A recent study by the thinktank
Transport and Environment found that, when their impacts are tallied up,
biofuels can cause 16% more emissions than fossil fuels.

This points to an incorrigible flaw in the mainstream climate framework.
For all key participants - government ministers, industry lobbyists and
even the directors of major NGOs - the unquestionable foundation of a
climate solution is a growth-based economy organized by governments. The
fundamental question at COP30 and all the previous climate conferences
is not, "how do we stop climate change?" The question they are working
with is, "what responses to climate change are compatible with state
power and growth-based economies?" And the answer they refuse to admit
is that effective responses are not compatible with the present system,
because this system itself - its acceptable forms of political and
economic organization - are the root causes of the crisis.

Investors are not in the business of giving money to programs they can't
profit from. Fully empowering cultures that are eco-centric and
communal, that do not treat land as a commodity, is the real solution -
but that would be bad news for business and for all the governments
worldwide that peg their power to economic growth. It doesn't matter how
many representatives of marginalized peoples are at the table: Economic
growth is at odds with life on this planet. We can't have both.

For all of us trying to survive amidst cascading catastrophes on this
beleaguered planet, the choice between profit and life should not be a
difficult one.

Peter Gelderloos

https://organisemagazine.org.uk/2025/11/26/cop30-isnt-a-failure-its-a-farce/
_________________________________________
A - I N F O S  N E W S  S E R V I C E
By, For, and About Anarchists
Send news reports to A-infos-en mailing list
A-infos-en@ainfos.ca

Geen opmerkingen:

Een reactie posten