Building on the momentum and message of last year’s People’s Climate March in New York City, activists are vowing to convene during the upcoming COP21 talks in Paris for what campaigners hope will be “the largest mass civil disobedience climate justice action that we have ever seen in Europe.”
From a huge march on the eve of the two-week UN climate summit to a mass mobilization on the final day of the conference to decentralized and creative direct actions in Paris and around the world, the events aim to demonstrate the energy and commitment of the people’s movement, even as world leaders and corporate interests meet behind closed doors to try to strike a global agreement.
“If enough people agree that it’s time for the world to move in a new direction, and push together, the world will begin to move.”
—350.org
“We want to have the last word as the climate talks conclude,” 350.org states in its call-to-action for the last day of the summit, December 12. “And we’ll get it by speaking in the language of movements: by putting tens of thousands of people into the streets of Paris, and making sure business as usual cannot proceed as long as world governments fail to do what’s needed.”
The 350 statement continues: “The Paris moment will be defined not by what happens in the negotiating halls, but in the streets of Paris and around the world. Politicians aren’t the only ones with power. If enough people agree that it’s time for the world to move in a new direction, and push together, the world will begin to move.”
The movement has articulated that its demands include a sustainable energy transformation, justice for frontline communities, and “immediate, urgent and drastic emission reductions.”
Beyond marches and rallies, Paris is set to become a playing field for the Climate Games, a global effort supporting acts of creative disobedience on the streets, in public spaces, and in cyberspace during the summit.
Backed by a wide range of grassroots groups including 350.org and Attac France, the Games are the brainchild of London-based artist-activists Isabelle Frémeaux and John Jordan, who say their goal is to “amplify this growing movement for climatic justice” and “highlight and act against the manipulation and engulfment of the negotiations by the power of multinational companies.”
Frémeaux and Jordan have dubbed that corporate power machine “the Mesh.”
SCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT