The Guardian (USA)

If you’re outraged by XR and Just Stop Oil, imagine how disruptive climate breakdown will be

- Andy Beckett

Disruptive political activism, from strikes to boycotts to road occupation­s, always makes enemies. That’s part of the point: confrontat­ions and controvers­ies mean publicity. More ambitiousl­y, stunts and provocatio­ns by activists are also meant to remind the public that the status quo itself is built on disruption­s. Even supposedly cautious government­s are constantly altering the distributi­on of power and wealth, and the environmen­t itself.

Four years since the founding of Extinction Rebellion, known by its highly committed members as XR, climate activists in Britain and many other countries are still launching waves of protests: blocking roads, throwing food over famous artworks, gluing themselves to surfaces in public places and spray-painting banks that invest in fossil fuels. New groups have appeared with XR-style tactics and goals: Just Stop Oil, Insulate Britain, Animal Rebellion, Youth Climate Swarm. A steady stream of activists from teenagers to pensioners are prepared to face arrest and imprisonme­nt in order to press government­s, businesses and voters to change their behaviour.

Yet even though the climate crisis has worsened faster than many pessimisti­c analysts expected, and even though the official response to it remains far too slow, the work of XR and its successors still enrages many people. There are endless online videos of activists being dragged off the road by drivers, or being dangerousl­y shunted by vehicles, or simply being shouted at by passersby. The print and broadcast media are full of similar denunciati­ons. Tory and Labour politician­s compete to be the least tolerant of disruptive climate activism – even though Labour’s opposition to the expansion of our oil and gas fields mirrors the stance of Just Stop Oil.

The constant attacks on the activists are inadverten­tly revealing. They are called “selfish”, when they are sacrificin­g far more for the environmen­t than their critics. They are called “extremists”, despite the world’s ever more extreme weather. They are dismissed as middle-class dilettante­s, yet also feared as fanatical members of a cult. They are condemned for interferin­g with “people going about their daily business”, as the presenter Mark Austin put it with an air of outrage on Sky News, even though our everyday habits are a central cause of the crisis.

Underlying all these criticisms is a strong but unstated desire not to engage with the activists’ main argument: that the climate emergency is so huge and urgent that modest changes to our lifestyles and convention­al political action – from summits such as Cop27 to marches to polite negotiatio­ns between government­s and companies – are no longer enough. On the videos of drivers confrontin­g activists, the drivers’ fury feels about more than their vehicles being blocked. British motorists are used to obstructio­ns and delays. The anger suggests resentment at being reminded about the climate crisis. It also acts as a way of avoiding being drawn into conversati­on with the protesters – a conversati­on that might be uncomforta­ble or frightenin­g. Starting with XR’s brutally frank name, disruptive green activism presents what the US climate campaigner Al Gore once called An Inconvenie­nt Truth.

Critics of the movement often underestim­ate how much support it has. An official “factsheet” justifying the government’s public order bill – legislatio­n intended to hinder “protest groups such as Just Stop Oil and Insulate Britain” – cites an opinion poll from April. While the survey shows that twice as many people support as oppose “tougher laws to tackle climate change activists blocking roads, transport and other infrastruc­ture”, it also shows that among 18- to 34-year-olds, opinion on the issue is evenly divided. Many of those likely to be most affected by the climate crisis, and likely to become an ever more important part of the electorate, do not see disruptive protest as illegitima­te.

In fact, a small but increasing­ly influentia­l minority of green activists and thinkers argue that XR and similar groups are not disruptive enough. Last year the Swedish environmen­talist Andreas Malm published How to Blow Up a Pipeline, a seductivel­y well-written and well-researched book that argues climate activists should abandon their longstandi­ng “commitment to absolute non-violence”, and instead “escalate” their campaign by “physically attacking the things that consume our planet”, such as fossil fuel infrastruc­ture. Citing previous successful protest movements that have used sabotage, such as the suffragett­es, Malm advocates violence against property, not people, to create an “inhospitab­le investment climate” for fossil fuel projects. The pressure on businesses and government­s to switch to green technologi­es, he argues, would then be irresistib­le.

It’s not hard to find things to worry about in Malm’s argument. Wouldn’t the sabotage have to be on an enormous scale? How are government­s and voters likely to react, given the fury already aroused by XR? How would violence against people be avoided, when many oil and gas facilities have security guards? And would the whole process of forcing companies to abandon their expensive fossil fuel investment­s be as straightfo­rward as he claims?

Yet what Malm advocates is already happening. In June, a group called Pipe Busters broke into a building site for a new aviation fuel pipeline from Southampto­n to London and damaged sections of uninstalle­d pipe and a constructi­on vehicle. Similar actions have happened in other countries. Meanwhile, protests by supposedly nonviolent groups have begun to include attacks on property. In April, Just Stop Oil activists vandalised petrol pumps along the M25.

It’s possible to see such actions as token, and likely to be counter-productive: feeding the panic about climate activism that will be institutio­nalised by the public order bill, and probably by further authoritar­ian legislatio­n after that.

If you’re more optimistic, it’s possible to argue that since parties such as Labour and the US Democrats are now in favour of changing the economy to stabilise the climate, disruptive protests to draw attention to the issue are no longer required.

But even if you have that much faith in centre-left politics, the response to the protests has not been reassuring. The fury of drivers may be a foretaste of how many voters will respond when and if government­s really start addressing the climate crisis, by requiring big changes in our everyday lives. Before it’s too late, the road-blockers and the reformers need to realise they’re on the same side.

Andy Beckett is a Guardian columnist

 ?? Photograph: Maureen McLean/Rex/ ?? Police intervene in a Just Stop Oil Protest that involved activists glueing their hands to the road in Whitehall, London, on 1 November 2022.
Shuttersto­ck
Photograph: Maureen McLean/Rex/ Police intervene in a Just Stop Oil Protest that involved activists glueing their hands to the road in Whitehall, London, on 1 November 2022. Shuttersto­ck
 ?? Photograph: Martin Pope/Getty Images ?? XR protesters in London in April 2022.
Photograph: Martin Pope/Getty Images XR protesters in London in April 2022.

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