COP30 is taking place in Belém, in the heart of the Amazon: yet another
global climate conference that promises to "save the planet" withoutever questioning those who are devastating it. For thirty years, the
scene has been the same: solemn declarations, compensation plans, group
photos, and an increasingly dramatic outcome. Global emissions are
rising, the concentration of capital and power is growing, and
territories continue to be plundered in the name of the "green transition."
Behind the scenes at the COP, governments and multinationals are
competing to manage the disaster they themselves have created. Today,
capitalism presents itself with an ecological face: it talks of "climate
neutrality," "carbon markets," and "clean technologies," but in reality
it is preparing a new phase of accumulation based on the control of
natural resources and the expulsion of populations from their
territories. The "green deal" is merely an updated version of old
colonialism: extracting lithium instead of oil, privatizing biodiversity
instead of forests, capitalizing on catastrophe.
While the powerful treat the planet's limits like budget items,
thousands of peasant, indigenous, feminist, and grassroots movements are
building their own alternative. From the Via Campesina to the Landless
Movement, from Amazonian communities to the agroecological networks of
the Sahel, a common voice is raised: food sovereignty, climate justice,
popular control of territories. The manifesto released ahead of COP30 is
clear: "There are no climate solutions without a systemic transformation
that dismantles capitalist and patriarchal power." It is the language of
resistance that comes from below, not from ministries or conferences.
But even within this front of struggle, difficult questions arise. The
"global South" is no longer just a victim: new powers, led by China, are
replicating extractivist and industrial models that devastate ecosystems
and communities. The challenge is to build a solidarity between peoples
that isn't blind to these contradictions, and that places territorial
autonomy at its center against all forms of domination, whether Western
or "emerging." For those fighting from below, the question isn't how to
make capitalism sustainable, but how to escape it. Agreements, markets,
and compensation aren't enough. We need networks of mutual support,
self-management of common goods, and communities capable of collectively
deciding how to produce and what to consume. It's not a technical issue,
but a political one: whoever controls the land, water, and energy
controls life.
COP30, like its predecessors, will be a great theater of power. But
outside the palaces, another network is growing, made up of peasant
struggles, popular assemblies, self-managed cooperatives, occupations,
and movements for the defense of territories. This is where the true
transition is being built, one that isn't measured in tons of CO2 but in
freedom, dignity, and solidarity.
Against the farce of COP30, let's globalize the struggle, let's
globalize hope.
Totò Caggese
https://umanitanova.org/contro-la-farsa-della-cop30-difendere-i-territori-globalizzare-le-lotte/
_________________________________________
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