The Guardian (USA)

‘It cannot be activism as usual’: Kumi Naidoo and Luisa Neubauer on the way forward for climate justice

- Bill McKibben

If a historian were charting the climate movement, she’d probably set its highwater mark so far as September of 2019, when something like 7 million people, most of them young, took to the streets of thousands of cities around the world. To read the accounts that flooded in from around the world is poignant and in some cases heartbreak­ing (Dom Phillips was providing the updates for the Guardian from Brazil, where Indigenous groups were rallying; this week a suspect admitted to killing Phillips while he was reporting in the Amazon).

I was watching from the wings of a stage setup on New York’s Battery, where Greta Thunberg – whose school strike had helped spur this massive wave of climate action – summed up the situation for a quarter million people flooding the streets of lower Manhattan: “If you belong to that small group of people who feel threatened by us, we have some very bad news for you, because this is only the beginning. Change is coming whether they like it or not.”

That groundswel­l yielded many commitment­s: one company after another vowed to go “net zero”, for instance. But the intervenin­g 30 months have been tough. First the pandemic chased organisers off the streets and on to Zoom, which put a brake on movement momentum: by the time nations reached Glasgow last autumn, Thunberg was accurately describing their offerings as “blah, blah, blah”. And now the Ukraine war, and with it spiking gas prices, has diverted attention and set up a complicate­d (though by no means entirely bad) dynamic for clean energy campaigner­s.

It seemed a good moment, then, to sit down with two of the world’s most dynamic climate activists: the 26-yearold German Luisa Neubauer, who organised her nation as part of the Gretainspi­red Fridays for Future movement, and the veteran South African leader Kumi Naidoo, 57, who from his earliest days as an anti-apartheid campaigner to his tenure running Greenpeace Internatio­nal has always been engaged.

“At the beginning of the war,” says Neubauer, “lots of people thought, ‘Well, now it’s all on the table. We will ramp up for renewables. We will ramp up fossil-free energy, because it’s clear that to like renewables you don’t have to be a climate activist or eco-nerd. It’s enough to kind of mildly dislike Putin and mildly like democracie­s and freedom and safety.’” But as the conflict has continued, she adds, “I think now we’re seeing almost a fossil fuel backlash in places like Germany. “The fossil expansion [is] really happening. There’s new drilling happening in the North Sea coast.”

The ability of the fossil fuel industry to constantly regroup, says Naidoo, is a reminder that “the system is performing exactly how the system was designed to perform. It was to benefit a handful of people at the top: give the people at the middle a little bit more so that they will feel that they have a vested interest to defend that system.” For years, he adds, “we used to say things like: ‘The economic system is broken; the energy system is broken; the agricultur­al system is spoken.’ But, quite frankly, after more than four decades of activism, I must humbly say that I read it wrong, that actually the system was not broken at all.”

So how do we instead work that system to get change on the scale science demands and justice requires? As Naidoo puts it, this “has to be a time of extreme honesty, extreme courage, extreme boldness. If activism is saying: ‘It cannot be business as usual, it cannot be government as usual,’ then surely we must be saying to ourselves: ‘It cannot be activism as usual.’”

Both, in fact, are quite candid about the campaignin­g that doesn’t work. At the start, says Neubauer, “I was doing something which I would now retrospect­ively call ‘handshake activism’. It is this kind of activism that looks very, very good on your CV. It is something that you might be very dedicated to, but you’re also very keen to meet an important minister, to shake their hand and take a photo and prove that you’ve actually done something.”

“The mistake my generation of activists made was that we mistook access for influence,” says Naidoo. “We got access [which] allowed some government official or minister or CEO of a big company to tick off a box saying ‘civil society consulted’. And, quite honestly, it also meant, for many of us who were engaging in those interactio­ns … [we could] claim easy victories.”

Neither Naidoo nor Neubauer, obviously, claim to have a foolproof formula for the way forward, but both have ideas. Too many government­s, they point out, have grown authoritar­ian, limiting the space for protest. “We are seeing that there is deliberate strategy in not just repressing, but oppressing,” says Neubauer. It ranges from the heavy-handed (the Indian government jailing her youth climate colleague Disha Ravi for activism) to more subtle: Germany’s new (and theoretica­lly small-g green) premier Olof Scholz was accused of comparing climate protesters to Nazis. In the face of such political backslidin­g, they each remind campaigner­s to also focus some of their firepower on the financial system.

“There are very few accelerate­d change strategies that are available to us,” says Naidoo. “Really very few. One of them is going extremely hard, extremely purposeful­ly, exceedingl­y strategica­lly against all forms of finance.” The fossil fuel divestment movement – now at $40tn committed by pension funds and university endowments – is “going great,” he says, but it “can be turbocharg­ed and do much better.” The ability of banks and financial institutio­ns to resist public opinion may be “fragile”, says Neubauer, citing recent successes in scaring banks and insurers away from the

East Africa Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) project. Potential insurance carriers for the pipeline “pulled out after five tweets. Many, many banks pulled out. And I think what made a big difference with a project, that’s half a gigaton [of carbon].”

As campaigner­s take on individual financial institutio­ns, Naidoo says, they also need to go after central banks: “I think we can convince the Federal Reserve, the Bank of England and all the regulatory banks that it is not only in the climate interest but in the economic interest of the investors that they shouldn’t be leading them down a road of investing in stranded carbon assets.”

Both activists also insist that thinking about the environmen­t “through a justice lens” was mandatory. “We need to turbocharg­e intersecti­onality,” says Naidoo. Years ago, when he was new on the job at Greenpeace, “I said: ‘As far as I’m concerned, the struggle to end poverty and inequality and the struggle to address climate change can, must and should be seen as two sides of the same coin.’” But it took work to get that message across even within the organisati­on he ran. “It’s something that, I think, needs a mentality shift on the [part] of activists.”

According to Neubauer, that expanded environmen­talism needs to include people sometimes thought of as adversarie­s. Often, she says, she’ll be asked if it’s fair to cost coalminers their jobs to preserve a livable climate. “And I say, ‘Is it fair for a car [worker at] VW or a constructo­r of pipelines, or someone working in a coalmine … to work all day, every day, to pay the bill at the end of the month, knowing that means working against the security of the future, of the children. Is it fair to put people [in] that place?”

A potent weapon, she adds, could be older people increasing­ly joining the movement through groups like Third Act. “Open the space for people who are looking back on their lives and wonder what I’m leaving to my children, my grandchild­ren – I think there’s so much to gain from that.” People “need to talk to the children and their grandchild­ren … Because we need to stop this tendency for each generation to lose each other. You know, children move out and they forget what their parents taught them, and they start their own life.” Intergener­ational conversati­ons could be a “superpower”, she says.

We have to create multiple ways that people can participat­e,” says Naidoo, not just “how those of us sitting in full-time civil society jobs imagine it to be. We have to be thinking about where people are and how people can be enabled to participat­e and enter [the movement]. Only when we have sufficient numbers, substantia­lly larger than we are able to mobilise at this moment, will our political and business leaders eventually be pushed to the urgency that the situation calls for.”

Art and music – even gaming platforms – are one way in, he says. “One of the things that is most missing at the moment is … imaginatio­n. We’ve got to get people to imagine that it is within our grasp to turn this thing around,” said Naidoo. “True, the window of opportunit­y is small and it’s closing fast, but let’s be very clear: this moment of history that we find ourselves in is one where we have to say that pessimism is a luxury that we simply cannot afford, and that whatever the pessimism of our analysis might be at different moments, we can overcome that pessimism best by the optimism of our creativity, of our energy, and of our actions that seek to make change – even if we don’t win the struggle immediatel­y the next day.”

Speed is the crucial question, since unlike most political questions climate change comes with a time limit. “It’s very clear the transition­s are happening,” says Neubauer. “We will decarbonis­e. We will get out of fossil fuels. The question is just when? I mean, fast enough? And will it be just enough? These are the things we have to turn around – now.”

• This interview was conducted by the Nation and Deutsche Welle on behalf of the global media collaborat­ion Covering Climate Now

 ?? Schwarz/AFP/Getty Images ?? Luisa Neubauer with Greta Thunberg during a Fridays for Future demonstrat­ion in 2019 before the pandemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine diverted attention from the climate crisis. Photograph: Tobias
Schwarz/AFP/Getty Images Luisa Neubauer with Greta Thunberg during a Fridays for Future demonstrat­ion in 2019 before the pandemic and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine diverted attention from the climate crisis. Photograph: Tobias
 ?? ?? Luisa Neubauer and Kumi Naidoo Composite: Clemens Bilan/EPA/Niall Carson/PA
Luisa Neubauer and Kumi Naidoo Composite: Clemens Bilan/EPA/Niall Carson/PA

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