Nearing the end of 2024, and now more than ever, there are two disconcerting trends at play in the global fight for climate justice: ironically, an increasing decoupling of the climate justice movement from basic human rights. And we, the people, are falling victim to idolizing billionaires as our climate saviors who are, in reality, only increasing the divide in global inequity with their push for green capitalism.
The COP29 managed to put together a deal at the eleventh hour of the talks wrapping up, wherein wealthier nations agreed to provide developing countries worldwide $300 billion annually in climate financing. A laughable offering, well below the estimated $1.3 trillion that experts estimate is needed for developmental and climate goals of countries struggling to fight the devastating impacts of climate change. A bloc representing the 45 nations most vulnerable to climate change have stated that “this is not just a failure; it is a betrayal.”
Vulnerable communities, with little agency in these talks, remained sidelined at this year’s COP, even as they bear the brunt of climate change they didn’t cause. The choice of venue for COP29, hosted in Azerbaijan, added insult to injury, spotlighting the petrostate’s history of crimes against Armenians and its fossil fuel ties to Israel during an ongoing Palestinian genocide. This reaffirms the global communities’ failure to see climate justice as an intersectional fight against all injustices, failing to address the systemic injustices and human rights violations while elevating regimes complicit in violence and environmental exploitation.
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Within the same week of a disappointing COP29 came the news of the U.S. indictment of Gautam Adani, an Indian billionaire accused of a bribery charge to secure a massive $2 billion solar energy contract. Which begs the question, why are corrupt billionaires taking charge of the so-called “clean energy” revolution? Meanwhile, America’s climate future faces a leadership shift that amplifies billionaire saviorism, granting undue influence to people like Elon Musk—despite allegations of human rights abuses, anti-union practices, and authoritarian alliances. This begs yet another question: why do we, ordinary citizens of the world struggling to survive the chaos of ecological devastation unravelling all around us, rallying behind billionaire climate saviorism? Have we not learnt our lessons yet?
The climate justice movement has already been hijacked by opportunists leveraging greenwashed capitalist agendas, delaying the systemic change urgently required. This so-called “green revolution” has become synonymous with battery stored renewable energy as the best path forward to a sustainable future, while undermining the urgency and delaying the work of shifting to an economy that centers degrowth. Only through rejecting capitalism can we reduce our culture of hyperconsumption, which is the only way we can pave a viable path for a future that guarantees harmonial cohabitation with all creation on Earth, a precedent already practiced by Indigenous people around the globe.
The failure of COP29 reflects not only a lack of ambition but also a continued denial of agency to front-line communities, who are often excluded from decision-making despite bearing the greatest burden of climate impacts. Instead, there has been an increase in influence by corrupt industrialists in steering global climate policy with greenwashed capitalist agendas.
Today, the climate action movement is dominated by a push for renewable technology development, an important component for which is battery storage. However, the catastrophic costs of developing this technology is barely garnering attention in these international climate events. The continual ignorance of the plight of Congolese from the rush of cobalt mining is indicative of a movement that is no longer serving the people or planet. How are we, as consumers, urged to expedite the electrification of our communities with a heavy reliance on battery storage sourced amidst the growing calls raising alarm of a silent genocide underway in the DRC? Can we take a pause to reflect why we have signed up for a green revolution that is being delivered through the exploitation of innocent children mining rare metals with their bare hands in extremely hazardous conditions?
This is a crucial junction for grassroots mobilizers and front-line defenders to reclaim the fight for climate justice on their terms, rejecting tokenizing pledges and centering Indigenous and vulnerable voices in the fight for an equitable and just future. By building global alliances grounded in solidarity and resistance, the movement can dismantle the structures perpetuating climate and systemic injustices.