The Long Ecological Revolution

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Re: The Long Ecological Revolution

Post by blindpig » Wed Nov 26, 2025 1:51 pm

China's Major Energy Moves

Roger Boyd
Nov 25, 2025

China’s major energy moves over the next decade may drastically reduce its dependence upon the fossil fuel imports from the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) states as well as Australia and North America. While also possibly turning China into a major coal exporter and reducing its need for iron ore imports. Such major changes will have large impacts on global fossil fuel and other commodity markets, while also greatly increasing China’s energy security.

At the same time, China will gain a reputation as the Green Energy and Climate Change Action global champion; supporting a discourse of China as “the future” and the West as “the past”. Most especially among non-Western nations with populations not extensively propagandized by the Western media.

The Trump administration’s aggressive moves against China, and its attempts to force it to reduce its trade with Russia, have fully rebounded as China strives even more to gain greater energy security while continuing to support its ally Russia.

Oil
In 2024, China imported 11.1 million barrels per day (mbpd); 25% of global oil imports. With domestic production of 4.3 mbpd. As I have detailed separately, China is capable of very significantly reducing its oil consumption in the next 5-10 years through transport electrification, by 2.4 mbpd by 2030 and 6 mbpd by 2035. All of that reduction would be taken by imports, which would fall from 11.1 mbpd to 5.1 mbpd. For geopolitical reasons, China would not reduce its imports from Russia, Central Asia, or Iran and Venezuela (via Malaysia); and perhaps even increase them. These countries accounted for 4 mbpd of imports in 2024, so by 2035 China could be in a position of having no oil imports except from those nations, and oil imports would only fall further in future years.

This would completely remove China’s energy security risks related to the Persian Gulf (Iran has an oil export terminal on the Gulf of Oman), and also perhaps leading to it having little interest in the affairs of the Middle East apart from Iran and the Red Sea link to the Suez Canal. Especially when it may not need any natural gas supplies from the region either.

With oil consumption continuing to decline in Europe, and on a plateau in the US, the Chinese reductions could offset increases in other regions; resulting in falling global oil demand. Especially if cheap Chinese EVs start to make an increasing impact in other nations outside the West (e.g. Southeast Asia, South America and Africa). And that’s with a good few mbpd of production being held off the market by OPEC+, Western sanctions (Iran, Venezuela) and conflict (e.g. Libya).

The global oil supply is highly price inelastic, so even a relatively small drop in demand can have a very large effect on price, an effect that would be secular rather than short term; an existential threat to the Gulf Cooperation Council monarchies that need vast oil revenues to stay in power.



Natural Gas
In 2024, China consumed 435 billion cubic metres (bcm) of natural gas. With 246 bcm coming from domestic production and the balance from imports. With the signing of the memorandum of understanding (MOU) on the Siberia 2 pipeline with Russia, and the increase in supplies through the Siberia 1 pipeline, together with increases in the capacity of the Central Asia gas pipelines, China may be in a position within a decade to meet its gas consumption needs from domestic production (which is still growing) and pipeline gas only:

Siberia 1: 44 bcm/yr

Central Asia: 85 bcm/yr

Sakahalin: 10 bcm/yr

Siberia 2: 50 bcm/yr

Domestic production: 246 bcm in 2024 and growing 5% per year (projected to be 262 bcm in 2025).

China is also replacing natural gas powered heating with heat pumps etc., LNG in trucks with electric vehicles, and fossil fuels in energy generation. So future demand may actually be lower than current demand, although demand is currently still growing. In addition, China’s domestic gas production is growing at a rate of 7% per year; a ten year doubling rate.



The supply of all domestic consumption with domestic production and pipeline imports would completely remove the need for LNG imports; including from Australia and Qatar. As with the reductions in oil supplies, this would remove Chinese dependency upon the Persian Gulf; specifically Qatar. Also, it removes dependency on the US vassal Australia.

With huge amounts of new LNG supply coming on line in the next few years, a drop in Chinese demand could significantly drop prices; a glut is already being predicted without any foreseen reduction in Chinese demand. Very negative for countries such as Qatar and also all of the US and Australian LNG export terminals, but very good news for Europe.

Coal
In 2024, China consumed 4.9 billion tonnes of coal, of which 500 million tonnes were imported; with Indonesia as the biggest import source of thermal coal and Mongolia the biggest import source of coking coal (used for iron and steel production). With the probable rapid reduction in coal consumption over the next decade, China could become a major thermal coal exporter; negatively affecting global coal export prices. Its scale of production would easily overwhelm the non-Chinese global coal industry, even pushing out domestic coal production in other consuming nations and delivering a massive price and volume shock to nations such as India, Indonesia, Russia, the United States and Australia.

The longer-term threat to coking coal is the revolutionary new technique for producing iron and steel that does not require coking coal, produced by Chinese scientists; “flash” iron making. A team in Sweden is also developing a process which replaces coking coal with hydrogen. The Chinese process also utilizes much lower grades of iron ore, which China has in abundance. In contrast to the higher grades that have to be imported from Australia and Brazil. So China would then not just remove the need for coking coal imports, but also for iron ore imports; especially from US vassal Australia.





“Clean Energy Giant” Soft Power
If China successfully executes the moves above, it will be markedly reducing its greenhouse gas emissions year over year, gaining the title of not just Clean Energy Giant but also as the leading nation combating anthropogenic climate change. Compared to a West lead by a US that is doubling down on fossil fuels, together with both Canada and Australia. This will be as part of a large discoursal change as China is seen more and more as “the future”, the position that the US enjoyed in the post-WW2 era, and the West seen as “the past”. Such a change has huge implications for Chinese and Western international soft power and for the success of their brands in foreign markets.





Trade Boost
In 2024, China’s imports of oil were 11.1 mbpd. At an average price of US$60 per barrel, that’s US$243 billion (China’s current account surplus in 2024 was US$424 billion). Compared to China’s GDP of US$18.74 trillion at market exchange rates; 1.7% of GDP (with a greater GDP impact when multiplier effects taken into account). China also spent about US$65 billion on natural gas imports, and about US$35 billion on imported coal.

So, China’s clean energy shift will provide a modest boost to GDP through the trade account in addition to the one-off growth from the installations of wind and solar generation facilities. It will also free up over US$100 billion in the current account that could be used to increase none fossil fuel imports from other nations; amounts which may be significant to many of China’s non-Western trading partners.

https://rogerboyd.substack.com/p/chinas ... ergy-moves

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AI’s water problem is worse than we thought
A new investigation reveals how Amazon is amplifying Oregon’s nitrate pollution crisis.
Emily Atkin
Nov 25, 2025


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Amazon has built seven cloud computer data centers—like this one in Ashburn, Virginia—in Morrow County, Oregon since 2011. Photo by Nathan Howard/Getty Images.

Everyone knows data centers use a lot of water. What’s less known is how they can poison the drinking water that remains.

It’s already happening in eastern Oregon, according to a new bombshell investigation from Rolling Stone and the Food and Environment Reporting Network. (FERN is an independent, nonprofit news organization that seeks to make the food system more sustainable and equitable).

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The headline of FERN and Rolling Stone’s new investigation likens the water crisis resulting from the data center boom to the next Flint, Michigan.

Here’s the gist: At its data centers in Morrow County, Amazon is using water that’s already contaminated with industrial agriculture fertilizer runoff to cool down its ultra-hot servers. When that contaminated water hits Amazon’s sizzling equipment, it partially evaporates—but all the nitrate pollution stays behind. That means the water leaving Amazon’s data centers is even more concentrated with pollutants than what went in.

After that extra-contaminated water leaves Amazon’s data center, it then gets dumped and sprayed across local farmland in Oregon. From there, the contaminated water soaks straight into the aquifer that 45,000 people drink from.

The result is that people in Morrow County are now drinking from taps loaded with nitrates, with some testing at 40, 50, even 70 parts per million. (For context: the federal safety limit is 10 ppm. Anything above that is linked to miscarriages, kidney failure, cancers, and “blue baby syndrome.”)

FERN and Rolling Stone’s new investigation thoroughly explains that process of contamination, follows the people living with that fallout, and exposes the political machinery that enabled all this: namely, a decades-old network of local power brokers who residents literally referred to as “the mafia.”

It’s a remarkable piece of public service journalism that gives a preview of what could happen as data centers multiply across rural America to fuel the artificial intelligence boom, often in places with scarce water, weak oversight, and political systems easily overpowered by Big Tech money. I highly recommend setting aside some time to give it a read.

https://heated.world/p/data-centers-are ... dium=email

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Blandine Sankara: “Agroecology is a form of resistance and decolonization”

Founded by Thomas Sankara’s sister, Yelemani Association inspires the fight against desertification in Burkina Faso.

November 25, 2025 by Pedro Stropasolas

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Yelemani Association works towards food sovereignty in Burkina Faso. Photo: BdF

In Burkina Faso, agroecology flourishes as an act of resistance. In a country where more than 80% of the active population makes their living off agriculture, peasant movements and social organizations have defended the production of healthy food and food self-sufficiency as a path to liberation from the wounds left by French neocolonialism.

Leading this effort is the Yelemani Association, founded in 2009 by Blandine Sankara, sister of revolutionary leader and former president Thomas Sankara, who governed the country from 1983 to 1987, when he was assassinated.

The word Yelemani means “change” or “transformation” in the Dyula language, the second most spoken language in Burkina Faso. The name summarizes the organization’s proposal: to change the relationship between people, land, and food, valuing local resources and restoring the dignity of the peasant world.

At the center of this project is agroecology, seen not only as a production technique, but as an anticolonial instrument. For Blandine, cultivating in an agroecological way is resisting the dominant economic model that puts profit above human life.

“We really see these two concepts, food sovereignty and agroecology, as forms of resistance to the economic model, and also as a form of decolonization,” states Sankara.

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Blandine Sankara in a protest against the presence of multinationals in Burkina Faso in 2018.

Based on four pillars: production, valorization of local products, training, and political advocacy, Yelemani has become a reference in the country. It has recovered degraded lands, created a peasant seed bank, trained hundreds of farmers and students, and has been at the forefront of national mobilizations against GMOs and foreign corporations, such as Monsanto and the Bill Gates Foundation.

In an interview with Brasil de Fato, Blandine Sankara talks about the trajectory of the Yelemani Association, the results achieved, and the challenges faced by agroecology in the Sahel country.

“What I have to say is that agroecology is increasingly at the center of agriculture and policies. I’ll talk about agricultural policies in Burkina Faso because today we have a national strategy. This is rare. A country that has a national strategy in the field of agroecology,” she reflects.

Check it out:

Brasil de Fato: Blandine, can we start by talking a bit about how agroecology entered your life and how the Yelemani Association came about?

Blandine Sankara: First of all, it’s important to say that the Yelemani Association was created in 2009. And especially that Yelemani means “change” or “transformation” in the second most spoken language of Burkina Faso, Dyula.

And what does this change mean? For us, it’s the valorization of local resources, to guarantee the dignity of the peasant world and build our daily well-being. It’s not just about peasants. It’s about the dignity of the peasant, on one hand, but also about building the well-being of every Burkinabe citizen.

This is the first explanation about the name Yelemani. The organization focuses on agriculture and food. Our work is directed toward these two fields, which are broad, because they touch all aspects of life, after all, they concern all of us. And in a country like ours, where more than 80% of the active population works in agriculture, this is a central field, because food concerns everyone.

Parallel to change through valorization of local resources and the peasant world, we speak of a transformation of mentality and behaviors. Even though in agroecology we work to produce healthy food and teach cultivation techniques alongside peasants, if there isn’t a change in the mentality of consumers, of all of us, we don’t advance.

This change is also a change of behavior and deconstruction of prejudiced ideas about our own products. So there are two transformations we seek: one in production and another in mentalities.

Here at Yelemani, we promote food sovereignty and the practice of agroecology. It’s clear that with the rejection of the use of GMOs, chemical fertilizers and pesticides. This is our work. Promoting food sovereignty through agroecology and refusing the chemical model.

We see all of this as a form of resistance to the economic model that puts profit above human life. This is the guiding thread of our activities and our daily life. It’s our vision. We really see these two concepts, food sovereignty and agroecology, as forms of resistance to the economic model, and also as a form of decolonization.

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Aerial view of Sítio Yelemani shows educational work carried out with local children. Photo: Martin Demay/Rasca Production

Not only of what is on our plates and on our lands, the seeds, but also of our spirits. Because, as I usually say, there has been a colonization of mentalities, a kind of violation of our own power to act. To resist is also to refuse that our fields, markets and kitchens are invaded by imported products, hybrid seeds, pesticides and even by flavors and norms that are not ours.

This is Yelemani’s fight, its mark among the organizations that work for food sovereignty and agroecology in Burkina Faso.

At a certain point in our lives, we lived through the Revolution in Burkina Faso in the 1980s, an experience that deeply marked us. Those who were young at the time, students or even pupils, participated in or witnessed what was at stake in the country.

In my case, I studied sociology and had many opportunities to go to villages and regions of Burkina, which made me understand the realities of the peasant world. Later, in Geneva, during my development studies, I deepened this understanding. It was the era of globalization, of economic partnership agreements, and we closely followed the debates.

Another important factor was the period from 2008 to 2011, when we lived through what was called the “high cost of living crisis”, with the surge in prices of basic products worldwide, linked to the increase in oil barrel prices. There were protests in Ouagadougou and several cities across the country against the increase in food prices.

All of this led us to the conclusion that it was necessary to move toward food sovereignty. Not just as a concept, but as practice. We began experimenting with this in 2009, and it was especially from 2012 that we effectively began our activities.

BdF: What can you tell us about the activities you’ve been developing at Yelemani since 2009 and their results?

BS: We work on four main areas. First, the production and transformation of agroecological fruits and vegetables in Lumbila, which is about 30 km from Ouagadougou. There, there are three plots with production, and it’s mainly women who work. Internally displaced women. What we call internally displaced are people who were expelled from their homes due to terrorism.

The second is the valorization and promotion of local food products. Because it’s not enough to produce, we must value what is ours, this is part of the fight for food decolonization.

Then, there’s education and training on agroecology and food sovereignty, because we think that even if we do good work in terms of production and transformation to offer healthy products and everything else, if the consumer, especially young people, aren’t sensitized, we won’t have results. It won’t be a profound change. So, this is the third axis and we’re working in schools.

But it’s also necessary to work on policies, so we added the fourth area, which is advocacy with political decision-makers so they decide to take agroecology into account.

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Work at Yelemani generates income opportunities for women displaced by terrorism. Photo: Yelemani Association/Press Release

Among the results, the first was the recovery of abandoned soil in Lumbila, considered unproductive. In one year, we managed to regenerate the land with agroecological practices. We also created a local products market and, since 2023, a peasant seed bank, where farmers can withdraw seeds and return double after harvest, without commercial transactions.

Another important result is the production of pedagogical material. Since 2015 we’ve developed training modules on agroecology and food sovereignty (12 in total) and trained farmers, students, and teachers.

We also had political victories, such as the expulsion of Monsanto in 2015, after a national mobilization against GMOs, and in 2018, a campaign that managed to block the “Target Malaria” project, funded by the Bill Gates Foundation, which planned to release genetically modified mosquitoes.

In 2019, during FESPACO (Pan-African Film Festival of Ouagadougou), we managed to break the monopoly of a French company that prevented the sale of local juices at the event. After popular pressure, a decree authorized local producers to sell their beverages.

But the greatest result for us remains the recovery of abandoned and unproductive land in Lumbila, a symbol of what agroecology can achieve.

BdF: With the end of the revolution in the 1980s, there was a rupture in the path of food self-sufficiency developed by Thomas Sankara. Multinational companies, mainly French ones, and global agribusiness, recovered their presence, developing a form of agriculture that doesn’t collaborate and, in a way, aggravates the problem of desertification in the Sahel. How do you see the effects of colonization on the agrarian question in your country?

BS: It must be said that it was really during colonization that capitalism penetrated the traditional agricultural sector, forcing the modernization of an agriculture considered backward and subsistence, which was forced to evolve into commercial and mechanized agriculture. At that moment, emphasis was placed on crops destined for export, what were called cash products and cash crops.

Therefore, in Burkina’s case, it was peanuts, but especially cotton and, to a lesser extent, also green beans. When we look at the country today, there’s a large area of land, thousands of hectares of land that were destroyed by the use of these chemical inputs for production mainly of cotton. These are thousands of hectares that today need to be recovered. They need to be restored.

The richest zones, the most fertile lands, were used for cotton cultivation, with excessive use of chemicals to produce more and sell more. Therefore, it was really for export, they were export products to other continents, mainly to France.

There are also floods caused by rains, with the loss of seeds, which forces farmers to go into debt to buy new seeds. Therefore, there were many consequences because of this export culture.

In the 2000s, cotton cultivation was done with great support from Monsanto, which I mentioned earlier, the American company. It made producers believe that the harvest would be more profitable with transgenic cotton, without additional insecticide and with better yield.

We can even say that there was an agricultural and food colonization, and that it never ended. The great powers and multinationals continue to exploit the same mechanisms.

That’s what they told our producers. In 2009, this cotton was profitable in the first three years, but very quickly farmers had to go back to using insecticides because the quality of cotton deteriorated and the quantity was also not as expected, it wasn’t up to standard. And that’s not all. It also destroys neighboring crops, not just cotton, but crops that were alongside, like sesame, for example, which was totally destroyed.

And all of this in conditions of climate degradation in Burkina. Therefore, the application of these policies in the agricultural sector led to the total loss of our food autonomy and local knowledge, and even food security increased with the devaluation of food crops for the benefit of these crops.

This knowledge was lost because we turned to these export crops, and yet we know that our production systems developed ancestrally over 40 years and millennia before receiving the name of agroecology.

Therefore, we knew there were practices, like what we today call half-moons, planting certain trees, which were known by our peasants, a diversity of these forms of small-scale production. And all of this was changed in favor of these crops to sell and have more money.

Agroecology goes against this logic, because it proposes that the farmer first produce to feed his family and his community. It’s a question of sovereignty. As long as we’re dependent on inputs, seeds and standards coming from outside, we won’t be free.

BdF: And how do you see the role of the current government today in this decolonization process? Is there any effective support for agroecology or food sovereignty?

BS: What I have to say is that agroecology is increasingly at the center of agriculture and policies. I’ll talk about agricultural policies in Burkina Faso because today we have a national strategy. This is rare. A country that has a national strategy in the field of agroecology.

A country that has this within the ministry, it’s really very, very strong. Therefore, increasingly, we have actors in agroecology, people who commit themselves, structures that commit themselves and I believe that, at the political level, we’re interested, we’re really closely analyzing the issue of agroecology.

In any case, research from institutes has shown that, until 2050, yields, even with the boost of technical and ecological means, will fall 30%. There will be a drop with climate changes, with good years and bad years.

But this data really comes from private agricultural research institutes that have nothing to do with ecology. With agroecological practices, yields are lower than current yields, this must be said from the beginning, they are lower. But yields balance out at a certain point, they become equal. What does this mean? It simply means that when we put agroecology on one side and the use of agrochemicals to produce on the other, at the beginning, it’s true, we’ll have lower yields with agroecology compared to the other. But over time, gradually, this balances out, reaching the same yield level, but with the difference that agroecology is constant in its yields year after year.

And this allows farmers to be more resilient. They know what they’re going to have next year. This allows them to organize and be more resilient. This is a fact, it’s a reality.

Agriculture, whose supply and flow of goods depend on large supranational markets and, therefore, on some financial actors, whose capital is concentrated in the hands of few people, is not good at all for farmers.

Therefore, the more agriculture industrializes and creates an economic model of supply and sales, the more workers, that is, peasants, farmers and the environment are excluded.

It’s true that the logic of the production chain allowed the development of some regions. This cannot be denied. The logic of the production chain allowed some regions, even in Burkina Faso, to develop. But they also became true deserts when these same markets oriented themselves toward other activities or sectors considered more lucrative.

When Monsanto’s cotton made Burkina Faso’s market fall, because the cotton fiber shortened and, at the global level, no one wanted to buy our cotton anymore, what did we do? What could farmers do with cotton? Nothing, because you don’t eat cotton. We’re not going to eat cotton. And before, when it worked, they could sell it and buy cereals to eat. But since they couldn’t sell, there were people who committed suicide, producers.

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The opening of the tomato pulp factory in Bobo Dioulasso was celebrated across the country. Photo: Presidency of Burkina Faso

So, these are the realities we lived through. If we consider the case of green beans in the 80s, for political reasons, because there was the revolution here, a landlocked country, without access to the sea, and everything was done by plane. Therefore, it was necessary to export by air. For political reasons, the plane that was supposed to come pick up the green beans from Burkina Faso farmers in Ouagadougou didn’t come, leaving tons of beans at the airport.

And what did we do at the time? The government forced people to buy, especially public servants, each employee had to buy a box, two boxes, and they cut from their salary at the end of the month to be able to pay the farmers, because otherwise, what were we going to tell the farmers, that for political reasons we couldn’t take their beans to Europe, it wasn’t possible.

I don’t want to get into political considerations, but I want to say that there’s a global complexity at the moment. And therefore, Yelemani faces this challenge. The climate crises that everyone in agriculture has been facing for years, the loss of biodiversity, the various conflicts, terrorism in our country and all of this causes an increasingly greater food insecurity, it must be said.

Therefore, these realities threaten our agricultural systems, our health, our autonomy and, fundamentally, our dignity. It’s human dignity.

However, there are solutions, as I said earlier, there are ecological agroecological solutions and others are still to be developed. We can still advance toward agroecology, which has already proven its value.

BdF: Blandine, you had a visit from MST militants in 2018 to Yelemani. How was the experience of meeting the MST and how can it inspire the struggle of peasants in Burkina Faso?

BS: I must say that Latin America fascinates me. It fascinates me in its struggle, in its work, since ancient times and permanently. I had the opportunity this year to go to Ecuador and I was able to meet groups and even young people, and that’s what fascinated me most, the ability to understand where the problem comes from. And that’s it, it’s not just about land recovery, it’s not just about recovering your roots, it’s about breaking the system.

And I think the MST, at least when they came here to Yelemani, that’s what they said, that it’s the system that needs to be broken. This ability of theirs to understand this fascinates me and I would like us to work a lot on this in Africa, at least on the issue of agroecology. It’s more than agroecological practices, which are quite advanced, but it’s the political side, the political aspect of saying that, in the end, we must go against the logic.

Today there’s a logic that is concentrated in the hands of some lobbies. And we must face this. Otherwise, we risk getting stuck in practices, and without understanding that all of this leads to nothing, if we don’t work, in my view, to break this system. It’s this system. When the MST was at our house, we understood well that, in the end, we fight against the same enemy. Burkina Faso and Africa must also fight, because they are the same ones who exploit Latin American countries. Therefore, we have no other choice.

I think we could unite to work, at a level of helping each other, of supporting each other in taking the struggle to a political level, to something bigger. Because I’m not talking only about agroecology, because sometimes we have environments that are very different. And agroecology is based on what exists locally in your territory. Even within the same country, territories are not the same.

What I’m emphasizing, from my small experience, whether with the MST when they passed through Yelemani, or through the discussions I had in Ecuador, is that I really could see how Latin America, which is advancing on these issues, can support us in terms of animating peasant groups, animating youth groups. They certainly have tools that can help us. And even the experiences, how they proceeded to manage to reach this level. I would like to see here peasants who have no complex in speaking before enemies, before authorities. I would like to see young people assert themselves, speak and say what they think.

Especially young people from rural villages. Because this is a complex issue in our case. I can’t speak for all of Africa, because Africa is very large, but I speak, for example, of our Francophone countries. There’s a great complexity that causes many barriers between city people and country people, between those who went to school and those who didn’t go to school.

Therefore, there are many differences like this that make everything more complicated, but we must work to deconstruct all of this. It’s a long path, of course. But it’s the path to walk toward food sovereignty. Those who are in the city, those who had the chance, like us, to go to school, to go far, to know other things, like the MST, here we can, together with Latin American movements, read and analyze so that we can improve.

It’s for our parents, after all, our peasant parents. Because in Burkina that’s it, right? Everyone has their village, everyone comes from a village. So, everyone is proud to say: “This is my village, I come from this village.” And in the village, our parents who stayed, our uncles, our aunts, are farmers. More than 80% of Burkinabes live from agriculture.

Therefore, agriculture is at the center. And, for me, it’s at this level that it’s about joining hands, about how to develop this reflection movement. And how they can support us to improve things.

We’re also working to value what we have today and, with current policy, we’re valued as Burkinabes. And this must be said and praised.

https://peoplesdispatch.org/2025/11/25/ ... onization/

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COP 30: It’s no joke
By Michael Roberts (Posted Nov 26, 2025)

Originally published: Counterfire on November 24, 2025 (more by Counterfire) |

The usual joke about the United Nations Climate Change Conferences (COPs) is that each one is a ‘cop-out’. Each time there is a failure to agree on ending fossil fuel production as the source of energy, even though it is now well established that carbon and other greenhouse gas emissions come mainly from the use of fossil fuels. Each time there is a failure to agree to significant planned and implemented reductions in emissions from all sources, production, transport, wars etc. Each time, there is a failure to agree any significant reversal of unending deforestation, the polluting of the seas and the accelerating extinction of species and diversity.

The joke of saying it is a ‘cop-out’ has now worn thin to the bone. COP30 was no joke, even if the ‘agreement’ reached was one. Time has run out. The world is hotting up to the point of tipping into irreversible damage to humanity, other species and the planet itself.

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Harjeet Singh of the Satat Sampada Climate Foundation, said: “Cop30 will go down in history as the deadliest talkshow ever produced.” Negotiators at Belem, Brazil “spent days discussing what to discuss and inventing new dialogues solely to avoid the actions that matter: committing to a just transition away from fossil fuels and putting money on the table.” But the core issue of a “transition away from fossil fuels” was dropped as the fossil fuel nations and most of the Western powers blocked it. Even the weak watered down idea of a ‘roadmap’ to a transition was opposed.

Also at stake was the question of how countries should respond to the fact that current national climate plans, known as nationally determined contributions (NDCs), would lead to about 2.5°C of global temperature above preindustrial levels, far above the 1.5C limit target set by the 2015 Paris COP agreement. The COP30 ‘agreement’ was to “continue talking about” the large gap between countries’ targets and the carbon emission cuts necessary to stay within 1.5C.

The climate scientists at COP30 made it clear—yet again. Emissions must start to bend next year, they say, and then continue to fall steadily in the decades ahead: “We need to start, now, to reduce CO2 emissions from fossil-fuels, by at least 5% per year. This must happen in order to have a chance to avoid unmanageable and extremely costly climate impacts affecting all people in the world.” Emission reductions need to be accelerated:

We need to be as close as possible to absolute zero fossil fuel emissions by 2040, the latest by 2045. This means globally no new fossil fuel investments, removing all subsidies from fossil fuels and a global plan on how to phase in renewable and low-carbon energy sources in a just way, and phase out fossil fuels quickly.

The scientists added that finance—from developed to developing countries—is essential for the credibility of the 2015 Paris Agreement aimed at keeping the rise in global temperature no higher than 1.5C. “It must be predictable, grant-based and consistent with a just transition and equity,” they said. “Without scaling and reforming climate finance, developing countries cannot plan, cannot invest and cannot deliver the transitions needed for a shared survival.” COP30 got an agreement to increase funding from the rich countries to the poor—but the increased funding would be spread over the next ten years, not five years as before!

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Instead , global oil and gas demand is set to rise for the next 25 years if the world does not change course, according to the International Energy Agency in its latest report. Greenhouse gas emissions are still rising despite ‘exponential’ growth of renewables. Coal use hit a record high around the world last year despite efforts to switch to clean energy.

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So global CO2 emissions will rise, not fall. Annual global energy-related CO2 emissions will rise slightly from current levels and approach 40 gigatonnes of carbon dioxide per year in the early 2030s, remaining around this level through to 2050. Emissions may fall in advanced economies, most substantially in Europe, and also decline in China from 2030 onwards, but they increase elsewhere.

And it’s not just carbon emissions. Methane is a greenhouse gas 80 times more powerful than carbon dioxide, and is responsible for about a third of the warming recently recorded. At previous ‘cop-outs’ it was agreed to a cut in methane emissions of 30% by 2030. Yet methane emissions have continued to increase. Collectively, emissions from six of the biggest signatories—the U.S., Australia, Kuwait, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Iraq—are now 8.5% above the 2020 level.

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So the world is getter hotter. This year and the last two years were the three hottest years in 176 years of records, And the past 11 years, back to 2015, will also be the 11 warmest years on record. Tipping points (irreversible) are being reached: glaciers melting; forests disappearing; wildfires, floods and droughts increasing. The world is heading for 2.8°C warming, as the latest UN report reveals climate pledges are ‘barely moving the needle’.

The UNEP’s ‘Emissions Gap Report 2025: Off Target’ finds that available new climate pledges under the Paris Agreement have only slightly lowered the pace of the global temperature rise over the course of the 21st century, leaving the world heading for a serious escalation of climate risks and damages. Fewer than a third of the world’s nations (62 out of 197) have sent in their climate action plans, known as nationally determined contributions (NDCs) under the Paris agreement. The U.S., the country that is the biggest emitter per person, has abandoned the process—the U.S. did not turn up at COP30. Europe has also failed to deliver. None of the 45 global climate indicators analyzed are on track for 2030.

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Levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere soared by a record amount in 2024 to hit another high, UN data show. The global average concentration of the gas surged by 3.5 parts per million to 424ppm in 2024, the largest increase since modern measurements started in 1957, according to the report by the World Meteorological Organization.

Several factors contributed to the leap in CO2, including another year of unrelenting fossil fuel burning. Another factor was an upsurge in wildfires in conditions made hotter and drier by global heating. Wildfire emissions in the Americas reached historic levels in 2024, which was the hottest year yet recorded. Climate scientists are also concerned about a third factor: the possibility that the planet’s carbon sinks are beginning to fail. About half of all CO2 emissions every year are taken back out of the atmosphere by being dissolved in the ocean or being sucked up by growing trees and plants. But the oceans are getting hotter and can therefore absorb less CO2 while on land hotter and drier conditions and more wildfires mean less plant growth.

Reductions to annual emissions of 35 per cent and 55 per cent, compared with 2019 levels, are needed in 2035 to align with the Paris Agreement 2°C and 1.5°C pathways, respectively. Given the size of the cuts needed, the short time available to deliver them and a challenging political climate, a permanently higher rise in global temperature is unavoidable before the end of this decade. The Paris target is as dead as the people and species dying from climate change.

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Indeed, rising global heat is now killing one person a minute around the world, a major report on the health impact of the climate crisis has revealed. The report says the rate of heat-related deaths has surged by 23% since the 1990s, even after accounting for increases in populations, to an average of 546,000 a year between 2012 and 2021. In the past four years, the average person has been exposed to 19 days a year of life-threatening heat and 16 of those days would not have happened without human-caused global heating, the report says. Overall, exposure to high temperatures resulted in a record 639bn hours of lost labour in 2024, which caused losses of 6% of national GDP in the least developed nations.

The continued burning of fossil fuels not only heats the planet but also produces air pollution, causing millions of deaths a year. Wildfires, stoked by increasingly hot and dry conditions, are adding to the deaths caused by smoke, with a record 154,000 deaths recorded in 2024, the report says. Droughts and heatwaves damage crops and livestock and 123 million more people endured food insecurity in 2023, compared with the annual average between 1981 and 2010.

Why are the targets for reducing emissions not being met or now even agreed? The answer is money. Despite the harm, the world’s governments provided $956bn in direct fossil fuel subsidies in 2023. This dwarfed the $300bn a year pledged at the UN climate summit Cop29 in 2024 to support the most climate-vulnerable countries. The UK provided $28bn in fossil fuel subsidies in 2023 and Australia allocated $11bn. Fifteen countries including Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Venezuela and Algeria spent more on fossil fuel subsidies than on their national health budgets.

The world’s 100 largest fossil fuel companies increased their projected production in the year up to March 2025, which would lead to carbon dioxide emissions three times those compatible with the Paris climate agreement target of limiting heating to 1.5C above preindustrial levels, the report says. Commercial banks are supporting this expansion, with the top 40 lenders to the fossil fuel sector collectively investing a five-year high of $611bn in 2024. Their ‘green sector’ lending was lower at $532bn.

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The reason for expanding fossil fuel production is that it is just much more profitable than switching to renewables. The problem is that governments are insisting that private investment should lead the drive to renewable power. But private investment only takes place if it is profitable to invest.

Profitability is the problem—in two ways. First, average profitability globally is at low levels and so investment growth in everything has similarly slowed. Prices of renewables have fallen sharply in the last few years. Ironically, lower renewables prices drag down the profitability of such investments. Solar panel manufacturing is suffering a severe profit squeeze, along with operators of solar farms. This reveals the fundamental contradiction in capitalist investment between reducing costs through higher productivity and slowing investment because of falling profitability.

Brett Christophers in his book, The Price is Wrong—why capitalism won’t save the planet, argues that it is not the price of renewables versus fossil fuel energy that is the obstacle to meeting the investment targets to limit global warming. It is the profitability of renewables compared to fossil fuel production. Christophers shows that in a country such as Sweden, wind power can be produced very cheaply. But the very cheapening of the costs also depresses its revenue potential. This contradiction has increased the arguments of fossil fuel companies that oil and gas production cannot be phased out quickly. Peter Martin, Wood Mackenzie’s chief economist, explained it another way: “the increased cost of capital has profound implications for the energy and natural resource industries”, and that higher rates “disproportionately affect renewables and nuclear power because of their high capital intensity and low returns.”

As Christophers points out, the profitability of oil and gas has generally been far higher than that of renewables and that explains why, in the 1980s and 1990s, the oil and gas majors unceremoniously shuttered their first ventures in the renewables almost as soon as they had launched them.

The same comparative calculus equally explains why the same companies are shifting to clean energy at no more than a snail’s pace today.

Christophers quotes Shell’s CEO Wael Sawan, in response to a question about whether he considered renewables’ lower returns acceptable for his company:

I think on low carbon, let me be, I think, categorical in this. We will drive for strong returns in any business we go into. We cannot justify going for a low return. Our shareholders deserve to see us going after strong returns. If we cannot achieve the double-digit returns in a business, we need to question very hard whether we should continue in that business. Absolutely, we want to continue to go for lower and lower and lower carbon, but it has to be profitable.

For these reasons, JP Morgan bank economists conclude that “The world needs a “reality check” on its move from fossil fuels to renewable energy, saying it may take “generations” to hit net-zero targets. JPMorgan reckons changing the world’s energy system “is a process that should be measured in decades, or generations, not years”. That’s because investment in renewable energy “currently offers subpar returns”.

The only way humanity has a chance of avoiding a climate disaster will be through a global plan based on common ownership of resources and technology that replaces the capitalist market system. Meanwhile, the cop-out continues.

https://mronline.org/2025/11/26/cop-30-its-no-joke/

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Chemical pollution drives prostate cancer, falling sperm counts
November 25, 2025

Pesticides, microplastics and PFAS are causing a precipitous decline in male reproductive health

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(Beyond Pesticides, November 25, 2025) Chemical pollution is having a profound impact on men’s overall health and reproductive function. Endocrine-disrupting chemicals—which prominently include pesticides—are a major factor. The Health and Environment Alliance (HEAL) a European organization funded by the European Union (EU) and several private foundations, has issued a strong call for attention to – and action on – the precipitous decline in male reproductive health owing to chemical exposures, including pesticides.

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The author of Chemical pollution and men’s health: A hidden crisis in Europe, Rosaella Cannarella, M.D., PhD, and the founder and director of HEAL, Génon Jensen, will be speaking at the Forum, The Pesticide Threat to Environmental Health: Advancing Holistic Solutions Aligned with Nature, on December 4. Registration is free. Click image to register

In a new report, Chemical pollution and men’s health: A hidden crisis in Europe, the group states, “The scientific evidence is clear. The costs of chemical pollution – human and economic – are mounting. The solutions exist. What we need now is the political will to act.” The report was written by Rosaella Cannarella, M.D., PhD, an endocrinologist at the Division of Endocrinology, Metabolic Diseases and Nutrition, University of Catania (Italy).

HEAL’s report details alarming indications of catastrophe in male reproductive health: prostate cancer, testicular cancer, crashing sperm counts, and numerous developmental problems including cryptorchidism, urogenital malformations, and hypospadias. The report highlights pesticides, microplastics, phthalates, bisphenols, PFAS and heavy metals as the likely environmental sources of the crisis. There is evidence that all of these endocrine disrupting chemicals (EDCs) adversely affect male reproductive function.

There are 330,000 cases of prostate cancer in the EU. It is the third most-diagnosed cancer in men. Beyond Pesticides has documented research showing that pesticides have been linked to higher risk of prostate cancer, including, specifically, pyrethroid insecticides. See also Beyond Pesticides’ analysis of the positive association between exposure to 22 pesticides and prostate cancer occurrence and as a cause of death. In the EU, testicular cancer has jumped 25% since 2014, and is now the most common cancer in men 15 to 44, according to the HEAL report. Sperm counts declined by more than 50% between 1973 and 2018. Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in men in the U.S., with an estimated 34,780 new cases in 2025, one in eight men will get the disease, which has been increasing at a rate of 3.0% a year.

Chemical exposures to both parents can harm male offspring’s reproductive health. The HEAL report cites EU research that has found strong connections between maternal exposure during pregnancy to phthalates, BPA and pesticides and cryptorchidism, urogenital malformations, hypospadias and testicular cancer in their sons. Paternal exposure to EDCs, such as many pesticides, can have transgenerational effects. Both EDCs and microplastics can cause epigenetic changes in sperm and in genes crucial to development, thus potentially affecting ensuing generations’ reproductive health. These changes mean that the reproductive capacity of offspring can already be impaired even before conception has occurred.

The weed killer glyphosate is a prominent example of an endocrine disrupting pesticide. A recent study of glyphosate exposure in zebrafish by Italian researchers finds that at the acceptable daily intake level, glyphosate “impaired germ cell differentiation and triggered cell-specific changes in histone acetylation within the male germline.” Histone acetylation is an epigenetic process that regulates the activation and deactivation of genes, in this case those involving male reproductive structures and processes. At the higher “no observed adverse effect level,” glyphosate “induced metabolomic and proteomic disruptions linked to impaired steroidogenesis, DNA damage in germ cells, and alterations in testicular architecture, culminating in reduced reproductive capacity.” These differing effects at different doses suggest that glyphosate has a non-monotonic dose-response curve, contradicting the toxicological dogma that the “dose makes the poison.” Further, it suggests that these so-called protective exposure measures are nothing of the kind.

Microplastics are emerging as a potentially severe and intractable contributor to male reproductive dysfunction. A literature review of over 90 scientific articles in Agriculture documents microplastics’ (MPs) increase the bioavailability, persistence, and toxicity of pesticides used in agriculture. According to the HEAL report, studies in Europe, the U.S. and China have found microplastics in 100% of human testicular tissue sampled. They may interfere with sperm formation, disrupt testosterone production, and trigger inflammation in reproductive organs. Microplastics have been found in the olfactory bulb in the brain and there is evidence that they can also reach the brain across the blood-brain barrier.

Both pesticides and microplastics have profound effects on the brain, which is inextricably involved with reproductive development and function. The gut-brain axis is involved in testosterone synthesis and circulation, and microplastics may affect it through interactions with gut microbes. Glyphosate and organophosphates disrupt another important system, the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis (HPG) in animals, according to the HEAL report. Two of these three hormonal axis elements are in the brain. The HPG axis affects testosterone synthesis, the development of testes, and behavior after sexual maturation. There is also a great deal of interaction between microplastics and pesticides, as detailed in Beyond Pesticides’ March 22, 2024 news brief, illustrating the kinds of overlap that can occur among the chemicals the HEAL report considers. These interactions in the brain and throughout the endocrine system need further research.

The HEAL report also demonstrates the deleterious effects on male reproductive health of other environmental toxicants. Prenatal exposure to phthalates is associated with “reduced semen quality, DNA fragmentation, and lower testosterone levels,” the HEAL authors state. Similarly, the report cites research showing that some EU countries had detectable bisphenol A (BPA) in 100% of study participants, and many exceeded the EU’s acceptable daily intake. BPA is linked to reduced sperm concentration, altered motility and morphology along with altered testosterone levels. A biomonitoring study in the Flemish region of Belgium found PFAS in upwards of 95% of the population. PFAS exposure is associated with delayed puberty, poor sperm quality and low testosterone in young men. The heavy metals lead, cadmium and mercury are associated with sperm abnormalities including poor motility and morphology. Lead exposure altered sperm epigenetics in battery and recycling workers. Mercury is an endocrine disruptor and impairs fertility.

Thus, the HEAL report brings together the cumulative impact of all these chemical depredations on male reproductive health, demonstrating the simultaneous and interactive consequences of exposure to the suite of insults everyone is now trying to cope with.

The HEAL report also elucidates the varying costs of male reproductive disorders–direct medical costs, indirect costs of lost productivity and disability, and intangible costs of emotional distress and stigma. The direct costs alone are massive: Treating prostate cancer costs 9 billion Euros ($10.4 billion) annually; male infertility affects a twelfth of European couples and costs 3-4.5 billion Euros ($3.5-$5 billion) a year. A 2015 analysis cited in the report estimated the costs of EDC-related male reproductive health disorders at 15 billion Euros ($17 billion) annually, a figure that is surely much higher now.

“The mounting evidence linking chemical exposure to serious men’s health outcomes—infertility, cancer, hormonal disorders—demands an urgent policy response. While Europe has made important progress in identifying and regulating hazardous substances, human biomonitoring data and public health trends indicate that the current regulatory mechanisms remain insufficient to protect male reproductive health,” the HEAL report states. This position reflects HEAL’s intent to press the European Commission (EC) just as it prepares to adopt a revision of its landmark 2007 Registration, Evaluation, Authorisation and Restriction of Chemicals (REACH) legislation.

The EC has stated an intent to release the revision by the end of the fourth quarter of 2025, but the revision has dropped from the Commission’s final agenda for the year and it appears its current text is not publicly available. According to wca-environment.com, a chemical industry consultancy, the revision will add increasingly stringent criteria for persistent, mobile and toxic chemicals along with an EDC assessment and a mixture assessment factor to the REACH chemical safety assessment. The new REACH will reportedly also introduce a definition of, and compliance guidelines for, nanomaterials.

HEAL is advocating for more focused health measures, including:

Group-based chemical bans – restricting entire groups such as all bisphenols and all phthalates at once rather than piecemeal regulation of individual chemical group members.
Mandatory mixture toxicity assessment to account for combined exposures.
More human biomonitoring data collection.
Regulation of microplastics, to address their toxicity and not just their size.
Regulation of polymers and additives.

Unsurprisingly, the chemical industry has created significant undertow to the momentum of REACH revision. The EC is advised by a Regulatory Scrutiny Board (RSB) that reviews proposed legislation, provides impact assessments, and evaluates revisions to existing laws. In October the RSB issued a “negative opinion” on the impact of proposed REACH revisions. The actual RSB opinion text does not appear to be publicly available, so details are sketchy. According to Enviresearch, a chemical industry consultancy, the opinion says the EC needs to review information on critical hazard classes, uses and exposure and unaddressed risks from polymers. But it also notes concerns that new restrictions would slow the regulatory process, enforcement is inconsistent across member states, and imports, especially from online sales, do not comply with REACH requirements. These concerns reflect industry’s focus on economic values.

An analysis by the Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (SETAC) notes that “According to chemicals policy experts, the RSB’s negative opinion reflects concerns that the proposal lacks coherence with current political priorities….The changing regulatory environment has created tensions between protecting public health and environmental standards while addressing industry competitiveness concerns.” [Emphasis added.]

Against the counterproductive political priorities and industry economic motives, HEAL executive director Génon K. Jensen writes in the report’s preface, “This report is a call to action. For the health of men today and the generations to come, we cannot afford to wait.”

https://climateandcapitalism.com/2025/1 ... rm-counts/
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Re: The Long Ecological Revolution

Post by blindpig » Fri Nov 28, 2025 2:25 pm

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Declaration of the Peoples’ Summit Towards COP30

Originally published: Defend Democracy Press on November 23, 2025 by Defend Democracy Press Staff (more by Defend Democracy Press) | (Posted Nov 27, 2025)

We, the Peoples’ Summit, gathered in Belém do Pará, in the Brazilian Amazon, from 12 to 16 November 2025, declare to the peoples of the world what we have accumulated in struggles, debates, studies, exchanges of experiences, cultural activities and testimonies, over several months of preparation and during these days gathered here.

Our process brought together more than 70,000 people who make up local, national, and international movements of indigenous and traditional peoples, peasants, indigenous peoples, quilombolas, fishermen, extractivists (traditional peoples who live from sustainable forest extraction), shellfish gatherers, urban workers, trade unionists, homeless people, babassu coconut breakers, terreiro peoples, women, the LGBTQIAPN+ community, young people, Afro-descendants, the elderly, and peoples from the forest, the countryside, the peripheries, the seas, rivers, lakes, and mangroves. We have taken on the task of building a just and democratic world, with buen vivir/bem viver/good living for all. We are unity in diversity.

The advance of the extreme right, fascism and wars around the world exacerbates the climate crisis and the exploitation of nature and of peoples. The countries of the global North, transnational corporations, and the ruling classes bear the main responsibility for these crises. We salute the resistance and stand in solidarity with all peoples who are being cruelly attacked and threatened by the forces of the US empire, Israel and their allies in Europe. For more than 80 years, the Palestinian people have been victims of genocide perpetrated by the Zionist state of Israel, which has bombed the Gaza Strip, forcibly displaced millions of people and killed tens of thousands of innocent people, mostly children, women and the elderly. We totally repudiate the genocide perpetrated against Palestine. We offer our support and solidarity to the people who bravely resist, and to the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement.

At the same time, in the Caribbean Sea, the United States is intensifying its imperial presence. It is doing so by expanding joint operations, agreements and military bases, in collusion with the extreme right, under the pretext of combating drug trafficking and terrorism, as with the recently announced “Southern Spear” operation. Imperialism continues to threaten the sovereignty of peoples, criminalising social movements and legitimising interventions that have historically served private interests in the region. We stand in solidarity with the resistance of peoples under imperialist or resource-grabbing attacks in Venezuela, Cuba, Haiti, Ecuador, Panama, El Salvador, Colombia, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Mozambique, Nigeria, Sudan, and with the emancipatory popular projects of the peoples of the Sahel, Nepal and around the world.

There is no life without nature. There is no life without the ethics and the work of care. That is why feminism is central to our political project. We place the work of reproducing life at the centre, which is what radically differentiates us from those who want to preserve the logic and dynamics of an economic system that prioritises profit and the private accumulation of wealth.

Our worldview is guided by popular internationalism, with exchanges of knowledge and wisdom that build bonds of solidarity, struggle and cooperation among our peoples. True solutions are strengthened by this exchange of experiences, developed in our territories and by many hands. We are committed to stimulating, convening and strengthening these processes. Therefore, we welcome the announcement of the construction of the International Movement of People Affected by Dams, Socio-Environmental Crimes and the Climate Crisis.

We began our People’s Summit by navigating the rivers of the Amazon, which, with their waters, nourish the entire body. Like blood, they sustain life and feed a sea of encounters and hopes. We also recognise the presence of enchanted beings and other fundamental beings in the worldview of indigenous and traditional peoples, whose spiritual strength guides paths, protects territories and inspires struggles for life, memory and a world of good living.

After more than two years of collective construction and holding the People’s Summit, we affirm:

1)The capitalist mode of production is the main cause of the growing climate crisis. The main environmental problems of our time are a consequence of the relations of production, circulation, and disposal of goods, under the logic and domination of financial capital and large capitalist corporations.
2)Peripheral communities are the most affected by extreme weather events and environmental racism. On the one hand, they face a lack of infrastructure and adaptation policies. On the other hand, they face a lack of justice and reparations, especially for women, young people, impoverished people, and people of colour.
3)Transnational corporations, in collusion with governments in the global North, are at the centre of power in the capitalist, racist and patriarchal system, being the actors that most cause and benefit from the multiple crises we face. The mining, energy, arms, agribusiness and Big Tech industries are primarily responsible for the climate catastrophe we are experiencing.
4)We oppose any false solutions to the climate crisis, including in climate finance, that perpetuate harmful practices, create unpredictable risks, and divert attention from transformative solutions based on climate justice and the justice of peoples in all biomes and ecosystems. We warn that the TFFF, being a financialised programme, is not an adequate response. All financial projects must be subject to criteria of transparency, democratic access, participation and real benefit for affected populations.
5)The failure of the current model of multilateralism is evident. Environmental crimes and extreme weather events that cause death and destruction are becoming increasingly common. This demonstrates the failure of countless global conferences and meetings that promised to solve these problems but never addressed their structural causes.
6)The energy transition is being implemented under capitalist logic. Despite the expansion of renewable sources, there has been no reduction in greenhouse gas emissions. The expansion of energy production sources has also become a new space for capital accumulation.
7)Finally, we affirm that the privatisation, commodification and financialisation of common goods and public services are directly contrary to the interests of the people. In this context, laws, state institutions and the vast majority of governments have been captured, shaped and subordinated to the pursuit of maximum profit by financial capital and transnational corporations. Public policies are needed to advance the recovery of states and tackle privatisation.

In the face of these challenges, we propose:

1)Confronting false market solutions. Air, forests, water, land, minerals, and energy sources cannot remain private property or be appropriated, because they are common goods of the people.
2)We demand the participation and leadership of peoples in the construction of climate solutions, recognising ancestral knowledge. The multidiversity of cultures and worldviews carries ancestral wisdom and knowledge that states must recognise as references for solutions to the multiple crises afflicting humanity and Mother Nature.
3)We demand the demarcation and protection of the lands and territories of indigenous peoples and other local peoples and communities, as they are the ones who guarantee the survival of the forest. We demand that governments implement zero deforestation, end criminal burning, and adopt state policies for ecological restoration and recovery of areas degraded and affected by the climate crisis.
4)We demand the implementation of popular agrarian reform and the promotion of agroecology to guarantee food sovereignty and combat land concentration. Peoples produce healthy food to feed the people, in order to eliminate hunger in the world, based on cooperation and access to techniques and technologies under popular control. This is an example of a real solution to confront the climate crisis. There is no climate justice without land back in the hands of peoples.
5)We demand the fight against environmental racism and the construction of fair cities and living peripheries through the implementation of environmental policies and solutions. Housing, sanitation, water access and use, solid waste treatment, afforestation, and access to land and land regularisation programmes must consider integration with nature. We want investment in quality public and collective transport policies with zero fares. These are real alternatives for tackling the climate crisis in peripheral territories around the world, which must be implemented with adequate funding for climate adaptation.
6)We advocate direct consultation, participation, and popular management of climate policies in cities to confront real estate corporations that have advanced the commodification of urban life. The city of climate and energy transition should be a city without segregation that embraces diversity. Finally, climate financing should be conditional on protocols that aim at housing permanence and, ultimately, fair compensation for people and communities with guaranteed land and housing, both in the countryside and in cities.
7)We demand an end to wars, we demand demilitarisation. That all financial resources allocated to wars and the war industry be redirected to the transformation of this world. That military spending be directed towards the repair and recovery of regions affected by climate disasters. That all necessary measures be taken to prevent and pressure Israel, holding it accountable for the genocide committed against the Palestinian people.
8)We demand fair and full compensation for the losses and damages imposed on peoples by destructive investment projects, dams, mining, fossil fuel extraction, and climate disasters. We also demand that those guilty of economic and socio-environmental crimes that affect millions of communities and families around the world be tried and punished.
9)The work of reproducing life must be made visible, valued, understood for what it is – work – and shared by society as a whole and with the state. This work is essential for the continuity of human and non-human life on the planet. It also guarantees the autonomy of women, who cannot be held individually responsible for care, but whose contributions must be taken into account: our work sustains the economy. We want a world with feminist justice, autonomy and participation of women.
10)We demand a just, sovereign and popular transition that guarantees the rights of all workers, as well as the right to decent working conditions, freedom of association, collective bargaining and social protection. We consider energy to be a common good and advocate for the overcoming of poverty and energy dependence. Neither the energy model nor the transition itself can violate the sovereignty of any country in the world.
11)We demand an end to the exploitation of fossil fuels and call on governments to develop mechanisms to ensure the non-proliferation of fossil fuels, aiming for a just, popular and inclusive energy transition with sovereignty, protection and reparation for territories, particularly in the Amazon and other sensitive regions that are essential for life on the planet.
12)We fight for public financing and taxation of corporations and the wealthiest individuals. The costs of environmental degradation and losses imposed on populations must be paid by the sectors that benefit most from this model. This includes financial funds, banks, and corporations in agribusiness, hydrobusiness, aquaculture and industrial fishing, energy, and mining. These actors must also bear the necessary investments for a just transition focused on the needs of the people.
13)We demand that international climate financing not go through institutions that deepen inequality between North and South, such as the IMF and the World Bank. It must be structured in a fair, transparent, and democratic manner. It is not the peoples and countries of the global South that should continue to pay debts to the dominant powers. It is these countries and their corporations that need to begin to pay off the socio-environmental debt accumulated through centuries of imperialist, colonialist and racist practices, through the appropriation of common goods and through the violence imposed on millions of people who have been killed and enslaved.
14)We denounce the ongoing criminalisation of movements, the persecution, murder and disappearance of our leaders who fight in defence of their territories, as well as political prisoners and Palestinian prisoners who fight for national liberation. We demand the expansion of protection for human and socio-environmental rights defenders in the global climate agenda, within the framework of the Escazú Agreement and other regional regulations. When a defender protects the territory and nature, they protect not only an individual, but an entire people, benefiting the entire global community.
15)We call for the strengthening of international instruments that defend the rights of peoples, their customary rights and the integrity of ecosystems. We need a legally binding international instrument on human rights and transnational corporations, which is built on the concrete reality of the struggles of communities affected by violations, demanding rights for peoples and rules for corporations. We also affirm that the Declaration on the Rights of Peasants and Other People Working in Rural Areas (UNDROP) should be one of the pillars of climate governance. The full implementation of peasants’ rights returns people to their territories, directly contributing to their food security, soil care and the cooling of the planet.

Finally, we believe that it is time to unite our forces and face our common enemy. If the organisation is strong, the struggle is strong. For this reason, our main political task is to organise the peoples of all countries and continents. Let us root our internationalism in each territory and make each territory a trench in the international struggle. It is time to move forward in a more organised, independent and unified way, to increase our awareness, strength and combativeness. This is the way to resist and win.

“Peoples of the world: Unite”

https://mronline.org/2025/11/27/declara ... rds-cop30/

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Corporate capture undermines progress at COP30

COP30 was met with considerable criticism, including for its failure to meaningfully address the dangers the climate crisis poses to health.

November 27, 2025 by Ana Vračar

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Protesters denounced the contamination of the Cerrado by pesticides at the entrance to COP30's Agrizone. More than 70% of the pesticides used in Brazil are used in the Cerrado, many of which are banned in Europe. Photo: Oliver Kornblihtt / Mídia NINJA

This year’s COP30 was met with considerable criticism, including for its failure to meaningfully address the dangers the climate crisis poses to health. At the same time, major food and agro-industry corporations – playing a central role in the erosion of both health and environment – were present at the forum. Many activists and Indigenous communities sounded the alarm, especially considering these companies continue to threaten people’s health and livelihoods through land grabs, pesticide use, and the marketing of ultra-processed foods (UPFs).

Together with new attempts by Global North governments to avoid taking financial responsibility for their contributions to the climate crisis, concerns over corporate participation and capture left many observers with the impression that COP30 fell far short of what is needed. The hope in Belém rested instead with grassroots initiatives.

UPF and agroindustry giants at COP

Reporters from the Brazilian media project O Joio e o Trigo documented the influence exerted by agribusiness throughout both the preparation and implementation of COP30. They noted that some key documents intended to outline a more sustainable agricultural vision were, in reality, heavily influenced by industry actors. One of the documents, for example, proposed that today’s agro-industrial model is capable of ending world hunger without harming communities or the planet. These claims, the reporters argue, are deeply misleading, not least because they sidestep the most urgent dangers arising from industrial agriculture.

One of the most glaring omissions in this context was the impact of pesticide use in Brazil’s agricultural sector. “If pesticides are ignored, then the harms they cause are ignored as well; that silence is deafening at a time when evidence of communities harmed by pesticide exposure, and growing suspicion about its link to rising cancer rates, is rapidly accumulating,” O Joio e o Trigo warned.

Companies with documented histories of undermining human and planetary health were present front and center at COP30. Bayer and Nestlé, for example, hosted flashy booths. Nestlé apparently drew visitors by offering free coffee and chocolate drinks. This coincided almost perfectly with the publication of a new series in The Lancet, which singled out the company as a major actor in global food industry networks working to derail public health regulations that aim to mitigate the consequences of UPF consumption. The environmental footprint of producing UPFs alone could be reason enough to treat such corporate participation with skepticism, yet similar companies still manage to position themselves as legitimate participants in discussion on climate change.

A radically different vision came from the tens of thousands who participated in alternative events and marches outside COP30 official spaces. Many, including activists from the People’s Health Movement (PHM), assembled through the People’s Summit. The meeting’s declaration identifies actors such as Big Food as central drivers of the climate crisis. “Transnational corporations, in collusion with governments in the Global North, are at the center of power in the capitalist, racist and patriarchal system, being the actors that most cause and benefit from the multiple crises we face,” the document states.

Activists argue that a genuine shift in addressing the climate crisis can only be achieved by placing grassroots movements at the center. “If today, here in Belém do Pará, international politics, the environment, and climate change are under debate, those who are most affected by these climate shifts must be at the forefront,” physiotherapist and parliamentarian Vivi Reis told Outra Saúde.

“It’s already clear that, in practice, COPs have had little influence in the fight against climate change, and that real answers and alternatives are actually built by those on the ground,” Reis said.

Unlike corporations, whose so-called solutions rely on fossil fuels, land devastation, and extractivism, grassroots movements are advancing models rooted in social justice and ancestral knowledge. “Peoples produce healthy food to feed the people, in order to eliminate hunger in the world, based on cooperation and access to techniques and technologies under popular control,” the People’s Summit declaration states. “This is an example of a real solution to confront the climate crisis,” it adds, emphasizing the need for popular agrarian reform and agroecology.

The declaration also names connections between other ongoing trends in the Global North, namely militarism, and the climate crisis, emphasizing again that a meaningful transition must be comprehensive and address all sources of injustice. “We demand an end to wars, we demand demilitarization,” it reads. “That all financial resources allocated to wars and the war industry be redirected to the transformation of this world. [We demand] that military spending be directed towards the repair and recovery of regions affected by climate disasters.”

https://peoplesdispatch.org/2025/11/27/ ... -at-cop30/

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Plastic pollution is worsened by climate change
November 27, 2025

Warmer climate increases plastics’ toxicity, disproportionately poisoning large mammals

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A new review published in Frontiers in Science says climate change conditions turn plastics into more mobile, persistent, and hazardous pollutants. This is done by speeding up plastic breakdown into microplastics — microscopic fragments of plastic — spreading them considerable distances, and increasing exposure and impact within the environment.

This is set to worsen as both plastic manufacturing and climate effects increase. Global annual plastic production rose 200-fold between 1950 and 2023.

The authors, from Imperial College London, urge eliminating non-essential single-use plastics (which account for 35% of production), limiting virgin plastic production, and creating international standards for making plastics reusable and recyclable.

“Plastic pollution and the climate are co-crises that intensify each other. They also have origins—and solutions—in common,” said lead author Prof Frank Kelly, from Imperial’s School of Public Health. “We urgently need a coordinated international approach to stop end-of-life plastics from building up in the environment.”

Joint crises

The researchers conducted a comprehensive review of existing evidence that highlights how the climate crisis worsens the impact of plastic pollution.

Rising temperatures, humidity, and UV exposure all boost the breakdown of plastics. Furthermore, extreme storms, floods, and winds can increase fragmentation as well as dispersal of plastic waste — with six billion tons and rising — into landfill, aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems, atmospheric environments, and food webs.

There are growing concerns about the persistence, spread, and accumulation of microplastics that can disturb nutrient cycles in aquatic ecosystems, reduce soil health, and crop yields. They also adversely affect feeding, reproduction, and the behavior of organisms that are capable of ingesting them, should levels exceed safe thresholds.

Microplastics can also act as ‘Trojan horses’ to transfer other contaminants like metals, pesticides, and PFAS ‘forever chemicals’. Climatic conditions may also enhance the adherence and transfer of these contaminants, as well as the leaching of hazardous chemicals such as flame retardants or plasticizers.

There is also historical plastic to consider. When ice forms in the sea, it takes up microplastics and concentrates them, removing them from the water. However, as sea ice melts under warming conditions, this process could reverse and become a major additional source of plastic release.

“There’s a chance that microplastics — already in every corner of the planet — will have a greater impact on certain species over time. Both the climate crisis and plastic pollution, which come from society’s over-reliance on fossil fuels, could combine to worsen an already stressed environment in the near future,” said co-author Dr Stephanie Wright from Imperial’s School of Public Health.

Apex predators particularly vulnerable

Combined impacts when both stressors occur together are particularly apparent across many marine organisms. Research into corals, sea snails, sea urchins, mussels and fish shows that microplastics can make them less able to cope with the rising temperatures and ocean acidification.

Filter-feeding mussels can concentrate microplastics extracted from the water, transferring this pollution to predators: effects like this can increase levels of microplastics higher in the food chain.

Species at these higher trophic levels are often already vulnerable to a host of other stressors, whose effects may be amplified by plastics. For instance, a recent study found that microplastic-induced mortality in fish quadrupled with a rise in water temperature. Another study showed that increased ocean hypoxia, which is also driven by warming, caused cod to double their microplastic intake.

Apex predators such as orcas may be particularly susceptible to the double hit of microplastics and climate change. These long-lived mammals are likely to experience significant microplastic exposure over the course of their lifetime.

The potential loss of keystone species that shape the functioning of the wider ecosystem could have far-reaching implications.

“Apex predators such as orcas could be the canaries in the coal mine, as they may be especially vulnerable to the combined impact of climate change and plastic pollution,” said co-author Prof Guy Woodward from Imperial’s Department of Life Sciences. Microplastics are also known to affect ecosystems on land, but these interactions are even more complex and harder to predict than for aquatic life.

Urgent action required on microplastics

The evidence showing increased amounts, spread, and harm of microplastics adds further impetus to calls for urgent action on plastic pollution.

The researchers say we must rethink the whole approach towards using plastics in the first place. “A circular plastics economy is ideal. It must go beyond reduce, reuse, and recycle to include redesign, rethink, refuse, eliminate, innovate, and circulate — shifting away from the current linear take–make–waste model,” said co-author Dr Julia Fussell from Imperial’s School of Public Health.

This review also demonstrates that integrating interactive effects of plastic pollution and climate stressors offers a way to steer, coordinate and prioritize research and monitoring, along with policy and action.

According to Wright: “The future will not be free of plastic, but we can try to limit further microplastic pollution. We need to act now, as the plastic discarded today threatens future global-scale disruption to ecosystems.”

“Solutions require systemic change: cutting plastic at source, coordinated global policy such as the UN Global Plastics Treaty, and responsible, evidence-based innovation in materials and waste management,” said Kelly.

https://climateandcapitalism.com/2025/1 ... te-change/
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Re: The Long Ecological Revolution

Post by blindpig » Thu Dec 04, 2025 3:09 pm

The Earth Is Unhappy with the Capitalist Climate Catastrophe: The Forty-Ninth Newsletter (2025)

As Global North countries fail to meet their climate finance obligations, the recent COP30 exposed the importance of class struggle in winning binding commitments for climate justice.

4 December 2025

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Nazgol Ansarinia (Iran), Dissolving Substances, 2020.

Dear friends,

Greetings from the desk of Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research.

During the closing plenaries of the 30th Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP30) in Belém do Pará in the Brazilian Amazon, United Nations Climate Change Executive Secretary Simon Stiell gave a rousing speech. Stiell, from Grenada, came to his post after a long career in the corporate sector and then as his country’s environment and climate resilience minister under the pro-corporate New National Party. In his speech he said that ‘denial, division, and geopolitics [have] dealt international cooperation some heavy blows this year’. He nevertheless insisted that ‘climate cooperation is alive and kicking, keeping humanity in the fight for a liveable planet with a firm resolve to keep 1.5°C within reach’. When I heard Stiell’s speech I thought he was talking about another planet.

In May 2025, the World Meteorological Organisation released a report warning that there is an 86% chance that global mean near-surface temperature will exceed 1.5°C above the pre-industrial (1850–1900) average – the threshold set in the Paris Agreement in 2015 – in at least one year between 2025 and 2029; it also warned of a 70% chance that the five-year mean for 2025–2029 will exceed 1.5°C above that average. In late October 2025, just weeks before COP30, the American Institute of Biological Sciences published The 2025 State of the Climate Report: A Planet on the Brink, which found that ‘the year 2024 set a new mean global surface temperature record, signalling an escalation of climate upheaval’ and that ‘22 of 34 planetary vital signs are at record levels’. To be fair to Stiell, he did not imply that one should be complacent. ‘I’m not saying we’re winning the climate fight’, he said. ‘But we are undeniably still in it, and we are fighting back’.

On that, we agree.

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Su Yu (China), Iceberg Melting, 2022.

That same month the United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP) published an alarming report titled Adaptation Gap Report 2025: Running on Empty. The report paints a picture not merely of insufficient climate finance from the Global North but of systematic abandonment of the Global South; it describes a world ‘gearing up for climate resilience – without the money to get there’. The issue of money is key. Promises to fund the climate transition first came at COP3 (Kyoto, 1997) through the Clean Development Mechanism, then at COP7 (Marrakech, 2001) through the Least Developed Countries Fund and the Special Climate Change Fund. But the breakthrough moment came at COP15 (Copenhagen, 2009), when the wealthy countries of the North pledged to mobilise $100 billion per year in climate finance for developing countries by 2020. Even the Copenhagen promises were hollow: there was no treaty obligation on the wealthier nations to meet this $100 billion goal, no enforcement mechanism to force those who made promises to follow up on their pledges, and most of the money that was pledged came as loans and not grants.

The $100 billion per year pledge from Copenhagen was reaffirmed at COP21 (Paris, 2015) and extended to 2025. At COP26 (Glasgow, 2021) the wealthier nations admitted that they had not met their goals and recommitted themselves to the $100 billion per year target. UNEP’s report provides a severe account of the missed pledges and false statements. Three points are essential to grasp:

Developing countries will require between $310 billion and $365 billion per year by 2035 for climate adaptation alone (setting aside mitigation as well as loss and damage). If inflation is taken at 3% per year, then real adaptation needs will reach between $440 billion and $520 billion annually by 2035.
In 2023 adaptation finance flows from developed to developing countries were just $26 billion, less than in 2022, and 58% of the money came through debt instruments and not through grants – a kind of green structural adjustment. The countries that are least responsible for the climate catastrophe are the ones that are driven to borrow in order to cope with the impact of the looming disasters.
By a simple calculation, needs are twelve to fourteen times larger than current flows, producing an adaptation finance gap of $284 billion to $339 billion per year.

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Nor Tijan Firdaus (Malaysia), Just Scan It, 2021.

One of the great tragedies of the entire debate around the climate catastrophe is that 172 countries – mostly the poorer nations – have already developed national adaptation plans, policies, and strategies. But as UNEP’s report points out, one fifth of these plans are outdated due to weak institutional frameworks, limited technical capacity, lack of access to climate data, and funding that is both unpredictable and delayed. For the poorer nations, the obstacle is less political apathy than resource constraints. Even when they try to prepare for the worst, they cannot secure the resources needed to do the work properly. This chronic underfunding reduces the whole process to a hollow ritual: documents are produced for compliance.

As climate debt is put on the table, claims are made that green finance will attract private capital. But this, too, is a myth. UNEP’s report shows that private sector investment in adaptation is less than $5 billion, and that even in the best-case scenario private capital will not raise more than $50 billion a year for adaptation (far less than what is needed). In practice, private financiers only enter adaptation projects when public funds are used to guarantee or subsidise their returns – so-called ‘innovative finance’ or ‘blended finance’ mechanisms designed to ‘de-risk’ private investment. So, in the end, the cost is borne by the treasuries of the poorer nations, whose governments effectively underwrite the money they borrow to fund adaptation projects that private investors consider too risky without such guarantees. As we argued in dossier no. 93 (October 2025), The Environmental Crisis Is a Capitalist Crisis, this model of green finance entrenches rather than resolves the climate debt owed to the Global South.

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Tapas Das (India), Suffocated Life, 2021.

This year, members of our institute went to Belém for COP30. They took part in the People’s Summit Towards COP30 – held from 12 to 16 November 2025 to confront the official conference – where they shared the findings of dossier no. 93. After the summit – which brought together over 25,000 participants and more than 1,200 organisations – our Nuestra América office asked Bárbara Loureiro of Brazil’s Landless Workers’ Movement (MST) to write a newsletter on COP30. In her letter she wrote that the ‘invisible general’ of the proceedings was the Brazilian agribusiness industry, which sought to greenwash its practices, expand its access to public funds, and shift the debate from mitigation to rebranding.

Watching the proceedings inside the hall of the official COP nevertheless raises a simple question: is it worth being part of the process or should we just let the COP regime die? There are three key reasons why it is important to continue to engage with the COP process:

COP provides a global stage where the Global South can demand reparations, loss and damage finance, and adaptation support. It is at COP that the argument can be made against climate debt finance and against voluntary targets. COP is not a site of salvation, but it can still be a site of struggle.
COP allows the Global South to maintain the principle of ‘common but differentiated responsibilities’ established in the Rio Declaration at the United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (1992).
COP forces the wealthy states to negotiate in the open rather than retreat to backrooms, where climate governance would be taken fully into the hands of private capital and the informality of the rich. The fight over the meaning of climate finance (either as debt or as reparations) can remain in the open.
After COP30 I asked Asad Rehman of Friends of the Earth why he thought it was worth fighting in the streets outside the halls of the COP. For Asad the first battle is to convince the climate movement to accept that the fight is not about fossil fuel use alone but about a crisis in our economies and societies, which must be transformed. At the same time, he told me, ‘There is actually some hope’. This is because the climate movement is saying that the problem is not a lack of finance but a lack of political will. The finance is available (as the UN Conference on Trade and Development argues in a new report, All Roads Lead to Reform: A Financial System Fit to Mobilise $1.3 Trillion for Climate Finance). While COP30 was taking place there was a meeting in Nairobi, Kenya, of the United Nations Framework Convention on International Tax Cooperation, where the richest countries blocked progress on a fair corporate tax that would make polluters pay for the environmental damage they cause. If implemented, such a tax could raise $500 billion per year, a good start toward climate reparations. Yet just as the Global North insists that there is no money for climate finance, NATO countries agree to increase military spending to 5% of GDP – even as there is clear evidence that militarism is a major driver of greenhouse gas emissions. ‘To see the climate movement arguing for debt cancellation, for wealth taxes, and for reforming the trade rules is a positive move’, Asad said. ‘Now, the climate movement is beginning to understand that this is an economic question. This is a paradigm shift’.

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Joan Miró (Spain), La masia (The Farm), 1921–1922.

In her letter for our Nuestra América office the MST’s Loureiro described COP30 as a mirror with two sides: ‘on one side, the celebration of the so-called “market solutions” and financial decarbonisation; on the other… the growing strength of the popular movement, which made Belém a territory for denunciation, internationalist solidarity, and the construction of real alternatives’. In her conclusion she calls on us to understand the climate catastrophe as a site of class struggle, one that can only be overcome beyond capitalism:

There is no real way out of the climate crisis without a rupture with the capitalist model, and there is no possible rupture without popular organisation, without collective struggle, and without confronting the structures that profit from devastation.

Warmly,

Vijay

https://thetricontinental.org/newslette ... tastrophe/

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Cuba Aims for Energy Independence By 2035

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X/@BrunoRguezP.

November 28, 2025 Hour: 2:03 pm

The most advanced solar park has a capacity of 21.8 MWp.

On Thursday, the Cuban Energy Ministry announced the ‘National Energy Transition Strategy’ at the Havana International Fair (FIHAV) 2025. This proposal aims for energy independence by 2035 and 100% renewable energy by 2050.

The plan is to achieve 24% renewable electricity from solar and biomass sources, then 40% by 2035 with energy independence, through adding 2,000 megawatts of solar power and 500 megawatts of bioelectric and wind power, while maintaining 60% from heavy oil and domestic gas.

The final phase projects fully renewable electricity generation by 2050, since thermoelectric plants built between 1970 and 1990 are operating at only 40% capacity, dependent on imported diesel, fuel oil, and insufficient development of renewable energy sources.

On Nov. 19, Vietnam donated four photovoltaic solar parks to Cuba, which will be installed in Mayabeque province. The goal is to expand the use of renewable energy and strengthen the national energy matrix, according to the National Electric System (SEN).


Solar parks contribute a minimal fraction of energy consumption and lack backup power at night or on cloudy days. At the moment, the most advanced project is the ‘La Lucila’ solar park in Pinar del Rio province, with a capacity of 21.8 megawatts peak (MWp). It has already been synchronized with the SEN and is in the commissioning phase.

The installation reached a power output of 20.55 MWp during initial testing, and Yosleiby Izquierdo, energy specialist at the Pinar del Rio Electric Company, explained that inverters, concentrator boxes, and solar panels are being verified.

Izquierdo noted that, although the assembly is being carried out rigorously, only synchronization allows for verification of the correct operation. The process seeks to ensure that the new infrastructure provides stable and secure energy to the Cuban electrical system.

https://www.telesurenglish.net/cuba-aim ... e-by-2035/

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Profitable Poisons
November 30, 2025
Beginning a series of articles on the deadly chemicals that capitalism spreads worldwide

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by Ian Angus

“The most alarming of all man’s assaults upon the environment is the contamination of air, earth, rivers, and sea with dangerous and even lethal materials. This pollution is for the most part irrecoverable; the chain of evil it initiates not only in the world that must support life but in living tissues is for the most part irreversible.” — Rachel Carson[1]

One of capitalism’s fundamental characteristics is a drive to innovate, to find new ways to generate profits and accumulate capital, as quickly as possible. The system’s defenders typically present that as an unalloyed good, but different is not the same as better. All too often those profitable new products have deadly side effects that are only discovered (or only made public) after they are in widespread use.

As the Marxist philosopher István Mészáros wrote, capitalism is “capable of adopting corrective measures only after the damage has been done; and even such corrective measures can only be introduced in a most limited form.”[2]

This problem has accelerated in the 20th and 21st centuries, as industrial laboratories have developed ever more chemicals, compounds and products that have no natural counterparts. In most cases, we have no idea what damage they might do in the short- or long-term, or in combination with other substances, because they’ve never been properly tested, if they’ve been tested at all.

How many might there be? We don’t know. There is no international database that lists all chemicals currently in commercial production, or what they all do — and the various national databases have different requirements for registration and for the information provided.

A study published in 2020 found over 350,000 different chemicals and mixtures of chemicals in 22 government inventories in 19 North American and European countries. Of those, the chemical identities of over 50,000 registered substances are claimed as trade secrets, and in another 70,000 cases the information provided was insufficient.[3] So we know nothing about the possible effects of more than a third of the commercially registered chemicals!

Those figures don’t include Asia, where total chemical production is 2.5 times larger than in Europe and North America.[4] Even allowing for a great deal of duplication between regions, there might be over half a million different chemicals in active production, and there is little or no public information about most of them.

How likely is it that those numbers include chemicals that are dangerous to life? It’s absolutely certain.

In the first place, the registered chemicals include thousands of pesticides, which by definition kill living organisms. In the United States alone, about 390,000 kilograms of pesticides are applied to farms, lawns and elsewhere, every year.[5] You don’t have to actually use them to be at risk: in 2023, the US Department of Agriculture found pesticide residues in over 60 percent of the food samples it tested.[6] The UN estimates that 200,000 people die from acute pesticide poisoning every year, almost all of them in poor countries where regulation is weak or non-existent.[7]

Pesticides aren’t the only registered chemical killers. In the U.S., the Toxic Substances Control Act requires industries to register any substances they make, distribute, use or dispose of that “may present an unreasonable risk of injury to health or the environment.” In 2025 the registry included 86,862 such substances of which half— 42,578 substances—are known to be currently in use by U.S. companies.”[8]

That’s far too many to track, but at least those substances have been registered. Even more frightening is an unofficial category that may be much larger: substances that present an unknown or deliberately concealed risk of injury to health or the environment.

To be continued in Part 2: The Devil’s Piss

Notes

[1] Rachel Carson, Silent Spring (Hughton Mifflin, 1962), 6.

[2] István Mészáros, The Challenge and Burden of Historical Time (Monthly Review Press, 2008), 383.

[3] Zhanyun Wang et al., “Toward a Global Understanding of Chemical Pollution: A First Comprehensive Analysis of National and Regional Chemical Inventories,” Environmental Science and Technology, January 2020.

[4] UNEP, Global Chemicals Outlook II: From Legacies to Innovative Solutions, United Nations Environment Program, 2019.

[5] Pesticides, US Geological Survey, https://www.usgs.gov/centers/ohio-kentu ... pesticides.

[6] USDA, Pesticide Data Program Annual Summary Calendar Year 2023, U.S. Department of Agriculture Agricultural Marketing Service, 2024, 19.

[7] Report of the Special Rapporteur on the right to food, UN Human Rights Council, 2017.

[8] U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, “Now Available: Latest Update to the TSCA Inventory,” press release, August 14, 2025.

https://climateandcapitalism.com/2025/1 ... e-poisons/

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Report Shows How Recycling Is Largely a ‘Toxic Lie’ Pushed by Plastics Industry
Posted on December 4, 2025 by Yves Smith

Yves here. Although the Greenpeace report discussed below no doubt has more detail, yours truly has long been frustrated by vendors of supposedly healthy products, such as “organic” or “natural” cleaners, who use plastic packaging. My rough and ready understanding was that only clear or white containers could be recycled (and that of course assumes collection and trucking to recycling centers) when I see just about none like that. Why is it so hard to use a clear vessel with a colored label? Or as one company does, an outer cardboard sheath with a paper label and one hopes a clear inner liner?

This recap of the Greenpeace report does not discuss the energy cost of recycling, which is another offset to supposed benefit .

More generally, our former and much appreciated writer Jerri-Lynn Scofield covered the (not successful) war on plastics. She traveled regularly to India, and pointed out that the use of plastic packaging was vastly lower there than in the US. That demonstrated that vastly more could be done to reduce plastic waste by not using as much in the first place. But don’t ask Americans to give up on their vaunted convenience.

By Brett Wilkins, staff writer at Common Dreams. Originally published at Common Dreams

A report published Wednesday by Greenpeace exposes the plastics industry as “merchants of myth” still peddling the false promise of recycling as a solution to the global pollution crisis, even as the vast bulk of commonly produced plastics remain unrecyclable.

“After decades of meager investments accompanied by misleading claims and a very well-funded industry public relations campaign aimed at persuading people that recycling can make plastic use sustainable, plastic recycling remains a failed enterprise that is economically and technically unviable and environmentally unjustifiable,” the report begins.

“The latest US government data indicates that just 5% of US plastic waste is recycled annually, down from a high of 9.5% in 2014,” the publication continues. “Meanwhile, the amount of single-use plastics produced every year continues to grow, driving the generation of ever greater amounts of plastic waste and pollution.”

Among the report’s findings:

Only a fifth of the 8.8 million tons of the most commonly produced types of plastics—found in items like bottles, jugs, food containers, and caps—are actually recyclable;
Major brands like Coca-Cola, Unilever, and Nestlé have been quietly retracting sustainability commitments while continuing to rely on single-use plastic packaging; and
The US plastic industry is undermining meaningful plastic regulation by making false claims about the recyclability of their products to avoid bans and reduce public backlash.

“Recycling is a toxic lie pushed by the plastics industry that is now being propped up by a pro-plastic narrativeemanating from the White House,” Greenpeace USA oceans campaign director John Hocevar said in a statement. “These corporations and their partners continue to sell the public a comforting lie to hide the hard truth: that we simply have to stop producing so much plastic.”

“Instead of investing in real solutions, they’ve poured billions into public relations campaigns that keep us hooked on single-use plastic while our communities, oceans, and bodies pay the price,” he added.

Greenpeace is among the many climate and environmental groups supporting a global plastics treaty, an accord that remains elusive after six rounds of talks due to opposition from the United States, Saudi Arabia, and other nations that produce the petroleum products from which almost all plastics are made.

Honed from decades of funding and promoting dubious research aimed at casting doubts about the climate crisis caused by its products, the petrochemical industry has sent a small army of lobbyists to influence global treaty negotiations.

In addition to environmental and climate harms, plastics—whose chemicals often leach into the food and water people eat and drink—are linked to a wide range of health risks, including infertility, developmental issues, metabolic disorders, and certain cancers.

Plastics also break down into tiny particles found almost everywhere on Earth—including in human bodies—called microplastics, which cause ailments such as inflammation, immune dysfunction, and possibly cardiovascular disease and gut biome imbalance.

A study published earlier this year in the British medical journal The Lancet estimated that plastics are responsible for more than $1.5 trillion in health-related economic losses worldwide annually—impacts that disproportionately affect low-income and at-risk populations.

As Jo Banner, executive director of the Descendants Project—a Louisiana advocacy group dedicated to fighting environmental racism in frontline communities—said in response to the new Greenpeace report, “It’s the same story everywhere: poor, Black, Brown, and Indigenous communities turned into sacrifice zones so oil companies and big brands can keep making money.”

“They call it development—but it’s exploitation, plain and simple,” Banner added. “There’s nothing acceptable about poisoning our air, water, and food to sell more throwaway plastic. Our communities are not sacrifice zones, and we are not disposable people.”

Writing for Time this week, Judith Enck, a former regional administrator at the US Environmental Protection Agencyand current president of the environmental justice group Beyond Plastics, said that “throwing your plastic bottles in the recycling bin may make you feel good about yourself, or ease your guilt about your climate impact. But recycling plastic will not address the plastic pollution crisis—and it is time we stop pretending as such.”

We have all been duped into play-acting our roles in the blue-bin fantasy that plastics recycling is real. It’s not.https://t.co/KacqPvAiQJ

— Sheldon Whitehouse (@SenWhitehouse) December 2, 2025



“So what can we do?” Enck continued. “First, companies need to stop producing so much plastic and shift to reusable and refillable systems. If reducing packaging or using reusable packaging is not possible, companies should at least shift to paper, cardboard, glass, or metal.”

“Companies are not going to do this on their own, which is why policymakers—the officials we elected to protect us—need to require them to do so,” she added.

Although lawmakers in the 119th US Congress have introduced a handful of bills aimed at tackling plastic pollution, such proposals are all but sure to fail given Republican control of both the House of Representatives and Senate and the Trump administration’s pro-petroleum policies.

https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2025/12 ... ustry.html
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Re: The Long Ecological Revolution

Post by blindpig » Sat Dec 06, 2025 3:17 pm

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On Becoming The First Species To Go Extinct From Politeness

Gonna follow the dinosaurs out the door because it was too uncomfortable and confrontational to tell a few billionaires and empire managers to fuck off.

Caitlin Johnstone
December 5, 2025

We’re on track to become the first species to go extinct due to politeness. Gonna follow the dinosaurs out the door because it was too uncomfortable and confrontational to tell a few billionaires and empire managers to fuck off.

As Howard Zinn put it:

“As soon as you say the topic is civil disobedience, you are saying our problem is civil disobedience. That is not our problem…. Our problem is civil obedience. Our problem is the numbers of people all over the world who have obeyed the dictates of the leaders of their government and have gone to war, and millions have been killed because of this obedience. And our problem is that scene in All Quiet on the Western Front where the schoolboys march off dutifully in a line to war. Our problem is that people are obedient all over the world, in the face of poverty and starvation and stupidity, and war and cruelty. Our problem is that people are obedient while the jails are full of petty thieves, and all the while the grand thieves are running the country. That’s our problem.”

Or as Utah Phillips put it, “The earth is not dying, it is being killed. And the people who are killing it have names and addresses.”

They have names and addresses, but we don’t stop them. We let them wave armageddon weapons around for global power agendas and let them destroy our biosphere for profit, and who knows where they’re headed with all this AI stuff with zero regulations or accountability. They just get to play games with the lives of every organism on this planet, completely unimpeded.

We don’t allow this for any good reason. We just don’t want to be rude. Stopping them would feel like a bit much, you know? A bit too much shrill woke-policing. Nobody likes a humorless scold.

What a ridiculous reason for the world to end.


I like to think about the Fermi paradox sometimes. You know, the apparent contradiction between the fact that we can’t detect any signs of extraterrestrial life in our galaxy and the fact that the Drake equation suggests we should be seeing some due to the sheer number of stars in the Milky Way.

People have come up with all kinds of theories to resolve this paradox. Maybe the ETs are keeping signs of their existence hidden from us for some reason. Maybe there has been life on other planets many times throughout our galaxy’s history, but whenever life advances up to a certain level of intelligence it always self-destructs by cannibalizing its own biosphere or annihilating itself with nuclear weapons.

One theory I like to contemplate is the possibility that there is life on other planets and that those life forms will one day evolve high levels of intelligence, but we’re not seeing any signs of extraterrestrial technology because humans are the first life forms to arrive at this stage.

Isn’t that trippy to imagine? If WE’RE the grown-ups here? If we are the eldest sibling in our galactic family? The aliens never came to rescue us with technologies from a civilization millions of years more advanced than ours because there ARE no civilizations more advanced than ours. We got here first.

Imagine how silly it would be if we went extinct due to politeness, and then other civilizations came here millions of years later and found out that’s what happened to their galaxy’s firstborn intelligent life. If they showed up and found a bunch of ruins on a poisoned planet, with a sign that says “Sorry, we tried to stay alive but we didn’t feel entitled enough to make Sam Altman stop being a dick.”

What an embarrassment that would be. We’d be the laughing stock of the Milky Way. Whole insults would be made out of us.

“Someone needs to put a stop to this nonsense, but I don’t want to make a scene.”

“Ah, quit being such a little homo sapiens!”

What a dopey legacy for a species to leave behind.

Let’s turn things around before it comes to that, shall we?

https://caitlinjohnstone.com.au/2025/12 ... oliteness/

Thirty years ago public radio had environmental programming which did just that: called out specific environmental criminals. Then came Newt Gingrich's 'Contract on America' which largely defunded public broadcasting and turned your radio station into a begging machine completely beholden to capitalists. Surprise, that sort of thing disappeared, replaced by individualistic feel-good palp. It was far from what was needed, you cannot expect public broadcasting to endorse revolution, but it did raise awareness and stoke anger.

******

The Point of No Return for the Warm Water Atlantic Current Is Coming Up Fast
Posted on December 5, 2025 by Yves Smith

Yves here. It seems that due climate change signs coming in generally at the bad end of the range of forecasts, the timing for reaching various tipping points is coming sooner than earlier warnings indicated. One example is the slowdown of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, which could kick in as soon as ten years from now.

By Thomas Neuburger. Originally published at God’s Spies


Image
A simplified animation showing the overturning circulation. Red lines are surface currents, blue are underwater. NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio (source)

We will probably pass the tipping point for an AMOC shutdown in the next ten to twenty years or so.
—Climate scientist Stefan Rahmstorf

Does death make our lives less sweet? For most of us, no.
—Yours truly

Time for a climate update. Tipping points are approaching. To present this information this systematically, consider the following:

• Bad things are already happening, and they’ll continue.
• Over not much time, the bad things will also get worse.
• Then tipping points will be reached, after which the worst is baked in.
• Some years after that, the worst arrives in full.

This process is true in a great many areas: sea level rise, for example, and coastal destruction.

The seas are already rising, due partly to ocean expansion (warm water takes up more space than cold water), but due mainly to melting ice in Greenland and Antarctica. Once the tipping point for glacial melt has been reached, all ice will be guaranteed gone at some future time, and a full sea level rise disaster is bound to occur.

What will that look like? Greenland ice melt will cause 24 feet of sea level rise; Antarctica ice melt, 230 feet. The world’s coastal cities, where 15% of world population lives, will erode with the shores and be drowned. In the U.S., 45% of GDP will be lost.

The point to remember: this all occurs in stages. First, pain. Then greater pain. Then a tipping point, which may not be marked by an event, but which nonetheless guarantees, at some future time, complete collapse of the system under discussion.

For most of our systems, we’re at the first point now, or possibly the second — a point of considerable pain. Yet tipping points silently lurk, some quite nearby.

The ‘AMOC’, Europe’s Personal Heat Pump

With that, let’s look at one system under threat, the system of oceanic Atlantic currents that keeps northern Europe from freezing like Canada.

Image
Winter in Montreal (source)

Europe’s personal heat pump is the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation, or AMOC — what most of us call the “Gulf Stream,” though those two are not quite the same. The AMOC is part of the world-ocean circulatory system that takes warm water from Equatorial zones and moves it across oceanic surfaces to the north and south, where it cools and sinks, then returns as deep water currents (see image above).

The part Europeans care about is the part that runs from the Gulf of Mexico to very near Scotland. Paris, for example is three degrees latitude closer to the North Pole than Montreal, and Scotland is closer still. Yet northern Europe is warmed by the AMOC, while Canada is not.

Image
Northern Europe is warmed by the AMOC, while Canada is not. The two pins above are cities on the same latitude line. (Image source)

Now consider the video below. In it, notable (very notable) climate physicist Stefan Rahmstorf discusses in scientific terms the future of AMOC. The whole thing is just 15 minutes, but you can start, if you like, at 12:43 to hear his tipping point prediction.



Rahmstorf’s bottom line: “We will probably pass the tipping point for an AMOC shutdown in the next ten to twenty years or so.” In other words, sometime between 2035 (ish) and 2050.

We won’t see it happen, most likely, that tipping point passed. But it will be passed nonetheless.

A Note for Skeptics

I understand that some readers here are climate skeptics. These are, after all, projections, and models can err. (Most of our climate models, in fact, have erred already, but on the side of complacence.)

These doubts don’t trouble me. No one’s optimism will change the future; nor will anyone’s doubt. Things will be what they are — decent or rough — regardless of anyone’s thoughts.

I will say this briefly, though, to the skeptically inclined: Watch your local environment for signs of increasing pain: diminishing water supplies; long and deep droughts; more costly insurance; bigger, more frequent hurricanes, storms and fires; fewer insects (sorry, that’s already here); more frequently canceled sporting events perhaps.

If you see these signs, prepare, regardless of what you believe to be the cause. Protect yourself. And if it turns out you’re right after all, I’ll be among the first to celebrate with you.

A Note for Believers

It’s easy to look at all this and become depressed. After all, this represents a kind of death, if not of ourselves as individuals, of the future the stories we constantly tell ourselves is certain to come — a future that’s somehow continuous with our own.

Consider our films and novels. Most stories that are set ahead some number of years ignore the climate and focus on new technology. Makes for a great film. But the climate — whose kingship is certain so long as we’re ruled by our current pathological lords — will kill off our tech. The wave of smart-phone delights that has given such joy is due to recede, and won’t return, perhaps, for a thousand years.

The way to stay centered is this: We all understand we will die, a personal destruction, yet most live unbowed by that weight — we eat, watch sports, fall in love, mourn losses, cheer gains, hug children, meet friends; in general we still attempt to live happy lives.

Does death make our lives less sweet? For most of us, no. Though death can’t be stopped; we don’t let it drag us down.

Same here. If you think the destruction of our climate and way of life, which the arrogant and greedy are dead-on determined to cause, can’t be stopped, then think of it as you do your personal future loss, and try to live well anyway. That choice is no different than the one you faced yesterday.

And if you think of a way to stop those pathological souls, those less-than-a-thousand folks who have charge of our lives, then do it. There’s joy in that too.

https://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2025/12 ... -fast.html

It's not that "less than a thousand" but the ten percent next on the wealth pyramid too and the system which made and sustains the ruling class.

******

PFAS: The Devil’s Piss
December 5, 2025
Part Two of a series on the poisons that capitalism spreads worldwide examines deadly ‘forever chemicals’

Image
Graphic: https://pfas.co

[Part One] [Part Two]

by Ian Angus

On June 26, 2025, eleven chemical company executives were sentenced to up to 17 years in prison, for poisoning water and soil in Italy’s Veneto region. The convicted men include three executives from the Japan-based multinational Mitsubishi, which owned the Italian company that polluted an aquifer that provides water to more than 30 municipalities, home to 350,000 people.

The pollutants involved were part of large family of synthetic chemicals called PFAS—per- and polyfluorenealkyl substances—often called forever chemicals because under normal conditions they break down either extremely slowly or not at all. As a result, they accumulate in living organisms and the environment, posing serious threats to health and environmental stability.

Groundwater tests in Veneto in 2013 had found concentrations of PFAS that were up to 1000 times above recognized safety levels. The affected communities installed filters to remove the chemicals from drinking water, only to learn that vegetables and fruit grown in the area were absorbing the toxins from the soil. A 2024 study found that the chemicals caused 3,890 excess deaths in the affected area between 1985 and 2018.[1]

These were the first executives to be jailed for PFAS pollution. If justice is served, they won’t be the last.

+ + + + +

PFAS is the umbrella term for a vast alphabet soup of chemicals with jawbreaking scientific names—PFOS (Perfluorooctane sulfonic acid), PFOA (Perfluorooctanoic acid), PFTE (Polytetrafluoroethylene), PCFTE (Polychlorotrifluoroethylene), and many more, each with somewhat different properties. What they have in common is fluorine and carbon atoms linked in some of the tightest bonds known to science. They are extremely long-lasting and extremely slippery—nothing breaks them, they repel water and grease and resist heat. The simple versions of the molecules last virtually forever, while more complex versions eventually degrade into the simple ones.

PFAS didn’t exist at all until the 1930s, when they were accidentally created in very small amounts in a Dupont Company laboratory. As with many other synthetics, the demands of war took PFAS from lab curiosity to practical application. Producing plutonium for atomic bombs used chemicals that were so corrosive that no container could hold them for any length of time. Millions of dollars of military research developed techniques to mass produce corrosion-proof PFAS containers. Mass production of PFAS for the Manhattan Project began during the war, in a Dupont factory in New Jersey.

This was dangerous stuff. In a 2025 interview, historian Mariah Blake, author of They Poisoned the World, outlined some of the hidden history she uncovered.

“It was clear from the beginning that these were dangerous chemicals. So, the plants where they were produced commonly had fires and explosions. Workers who worked in these plants were constantly being hospitalized with breathing problems and chemical burns. And in fact, Manhattan Project inspectors warned their supervisors that the fear of injury was causing unrest at these plants and that people in other parts of the DuPont facility had come to fear an assignment to this, to the fluorocarbon or PFAS production, as an exile to devil’s island.

“But it wasn’t just workers who were affected…. around 1943, farmers downwind of this plant in New Jersey began to complain that their peach crops were burning up, that their cows were so crippled, they couldn’t stand. They had to graze by crawling on their bellies. And in some cases, farmers were also falling ill after eating the produce that they picked.”[2]

By 1947, Manhattan Project scientists knew that the chemicals were toxic and that they accumulated in the blood of people who had contact with them—but when most records of the Manhattan Project were made public in the late 1940s, information about medical research and area pollution was not included, on the grounds that they would harm the government’s prestige and lead to lawsuits.[3]

In a deal that was supposed to prevent war profiteering, DuPont had agreed that patents on PFAS production would belong to the US government. Shortly after the war the government sold those patents to a small company called Minnesota Mining and Manufacturing, later renamed 3M—and it partnered with DuPont to develop commercial PFAS products.

The best known of those are Dupont’s Teflon, used in nonstick cookware, and 3M’s Scotchguard, a stain-repellant for clothing and furniture, but there are many more. PFAS of various kinds are used in lubricants, pesticides. raincoats, dental floss, cosmetics, food packaging, paints, ski waxes, and firefighting foams, not to mention uncounted industrial applications. No one knows how many kinds of PFAS there are—over 15,000 is a good guess—or how many products contain them.

What we do know is that the fluorine-carbon bond is so tight that although one type of PFAS may change into another, they don’t go away—every gram ever made is still in the global environment somewhere. Because they were first mass marketed in the 1950s and last so long, some scientists have suggested that their presence could be used as a marker for the beginning of the Anthropocene.[4]

“One of the reasons for the current notoriety of PFAS is the ease with which they spread through water: today they are widespread in the surface waters of lakes and rivers, have been widely detected in ocean waters from the equator to the poles, and are now spreading deep below ground, into our groundwater resources. So, one part of their legacy will be as an eternally shifting, long-lasting haze, ever more diluted within the fluid envelope that surrounds the Earth….

“Only a few materials can chemically break the super-tough carbon-fluorine bonds of the large but simple PTFE [Teflon] molecule, such as pure sodium or potassium (so reactive that they are not found by themselves in nature) and, at higher temperatures, pure magnesium and aluminium metal (both vanishingly rare in nature). This is a chemical compound, therefore, that looks set to persist within strata over geological timescales—and this time not as an invisible chemical signature that needs sophisticated chemical analysis to reveal it, but as a solid plastic-like material. Indeed, when a non-stick frying pan fossilizes, the metal itself might dissolve away over millions of years underground, but the PTFE film should persist, more or less unchanged, as a thin flexible film.”[5]

Mass-produced chemicals that can last millions of years and that travel easily in water are bound to become ubiquitous in the Earth System. As a 2025 Canadian government report says:

“Globally, PFAS can be found in virtually all environmental compartments, including air, surface and groundwater, oceans, soils, and biota, as well as in wastewater influent and effluent, landfill leachate, sewage sludge, and biosolids. The highest reported concentrations are typically in proximity to known sources of PFAS that may be released into the environment, such as contaminated sites where concentrations of PFAS may occur at levels which can pose negative human health and/or environmental effects. PFAS are also routinely reported in locations far removed from these sources. Similarly, although the highest concentrations of PFAS in organisms have been noted in proximity to known releases, their ubiquitous presence has been noted in tissue samples collected from organisms worldwide.”[6]

PFAS have been found in falling rain in Antarctica and Tibet, and in up to 98% of humans tested in multiple studies.

In factories that make or use PFAS, workers can absorb them through breath or skin. Elsewhere, exposure is most often in food or drink that contains PFAS from soil or water or packaging material.[7] The pollution most commonly originates in areas around PFAS factories; in areas near military airports where PFAS-based firefighting foam was used; in areas near landfills where PFAS from commercial and residential waste has leached into groundwater; and in areas where wastewater treatment does not include filters for removing PFAS from sewage.

A PFAS source of growing concern is the sewage sludge that is used as a fertilizer on as much as 28.3 million hectares (70 million acres) of agricultural land in the United States. The Environmental Working Group, an NGO that focuses on environmental health and agriculture, says this creates “a toxic pipeline from sludge to food.”

“Industrial discharges of PFAS, along with PFAS-laden waste from residential areas, flow into wastewater treatment plants. The wastewater treatment process separates liquids and solids, creating sewage sludge as a byproduct.

“But this process doesn’t remove PFAS, so the chemicals end up in both the solid sludge and also the treated liquid, which can contaminate drinking water supplies. And federal rules limiting pathogens and metals in sludge do not apply to PFAS.

“After the treatment process, the utility can then choose to put the sludge in a landfill, incinerate it or sell it to farmers who use it as fertilizer on their land. The sale of sludge is in some cases completed through third-party companies who are responsible for managing the sludge.

“There are no national requirements to test biosolids for the presence of PFAS or warn farmers they could be using contaminated sludge on their crops….

“Once PFAS-contaminated sludge is applied as a fertilizer, the forever chemicals can leach into food crops, and crops of animal feed, such as corn and hay. Then it can also be absorbed by animals that eat these feed crops.”[8]

No one knows how many highly contaminated areas exist. A 2023 study in Europe found 23,000 sites that are definitely PFAS hotspots and another 21,500 that are probably contaminated.[9] In the United States in 2025, the Environmental Working Group found 9,552 sites with “detectable levels of PFAS” in the U.S., but that figure is low, because many communities have not been tested.[10]

Our bodies have not evolved metabolic systems to deal with these chemicals, so the PFAS we absorb through water, food and air accumulate in our organs, particularly the liver, kidney and thyroid, faster than the body can excrete them. They can even move across the barriers that normally keeps foreign substances from passing from blood to brain and from placenta to fetus.

In 2025, a comprehensive review of the known effects of PFAS on human health found:

“PFAS exposure is associated with adverse health risks such as cancer, steroid hormone disruption, infertility, lipid and insulin dysregulation, higher cholesterol levels, liver and kidney disease, altered immunological and thyroid function, and cardiovascular effects. In infants and children, PFAS exposure can cause adverse effects on infants and premature babies and can lead to reduced growth parameters, lower visual motor skills and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in childhood, lower levels of antibody concentrations against mumps and rubella, reduced lung and respiratory function, along with increased levels of glucocorticoids, progestogens, and uric acid.”[11]

Only a dozen or so of the thousands of PFAS have been studied in depth, so the actual list of health problems caused by this large family of chemicals is likely much longer. And because these chemicals are found in everything from drinking water to rain to house dust to clothing, it is pretty much impossible to avoid them. As the host of a U.S. television report on PFAS said, “the world is basically soaked in the devil’s piss.”[12]

They Knew

The executives jailed in Italy were not convicted just for polluting soil and groundwater, although that should have been sufficient cause, but for doing so knowing that the chemicals were toxic to human beings.

As we’ve seen, PFAS pollution is by no means limited to a small manufacturer in rural Italy. The largest manufacturers of PFAS, the chemical giants 3M and DuPont, knew for decades that the substances are toxic. Their executives have not faced criminal charges, but series of civil lawsuits, beginning in 1999, have forced the release of previously secret documents that reveal what those companies knew, and when. In 2023 a peer-reviewed study of those documents concluded:

“The two largest manufacturers of PFAS, DuPont (makers of Teflon) and 3M (makers of Scotchguard), were aware of the hazards of PFAS long before the public health community ….

“[C]ompanies knew PFAS was “highly toxic when inhaled and moderately toxic when ingested” by 1970, forty years before the public health community. Further, the industry used several strategies that have been shown common to tobacco, pharmaceutical and other industries to influence science and regulation—most notably, suppressing unfavorable research and distorting public discourse.”[13]

That confirms what the Environmental Working Group found in industry documents that it obtained and released in 2019.

“For nearly 70 years, chemical companies like 3M and DuPont have known that the highly fluorinated chemicals called PFAS build up in our blood. They’ve known for almost that long that PFAS chemicals have a toxic effect on our organs….

As far back as 1950, studies conducted by 3M showed that PFAS chemicals could build up in our blood.
By the 1960s, animal studies conducted by 3M and DuPont revealed that PFAS chemicals posed health risks.
By the mid-1970s, 3M knew that PFAS was building up in Americans’ blood.
In the 1980s, both 3M and DuPont linked PFAS to cancer and found elevated cancer rates among their own workers.”[14]
Despite that knowledge, the PFAS makers continued to reap profits from manufacturing and selling those chemicals, without warning anyone of the dangers. And since the facts have became public, they have spent hundreds of millions of dollars fighting legal liability in court, and on lobbying to block regulation of PFAS production.

In Europe, two of the deadliest forever chemicals—PFOA and PFOS—have been banned. Denmark, Germany, the Netherlands, Norway, and Sweden have jointly proposed a Europe-wide ban on all forms of PFAS, but a multi-million dollar lobbying campaign by the chemical industry seems to have derailed the plan: In August 2025, the Commission responsible announced that it will not make a decision until the end of 2026, and will not even consider restrictions on PFAS use in printing, sealing, machinery, explosives, military, technical textiles, broader industrial uses, and medical applications.

Similar lobbying in the United States has led to effective capitulation by the Environmental Protection Agency, which in May 2025 announced that it would give water utilities until 2031 to remove PFOA and PFOS from public water systems, and would soon eliminate restrictions on most other PFAS in drinking water. In November, it approved ten pesticide products that contain isocycloseram, a PFAS developed by Syngenta, for use in agriculture, lawn maintenance and indoor pest control. The EPA’s own documents show that it gives rise to 24 other forever chemicals, 11 of which pose known health threats in drinking water.[15]

So much for the myth of environmentally and socially responsible corporations. Abetted by the agencies that are supposed to police them, corporate poisoners are successfully defending their right to spread the devil’s piss everywhere.

To be continued.

Notes

[1] Annibale Biggeri et al., “All-cause cardiovascular disease and cancer mortality in the population of a large Italian area contaminated by perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances (1980–2018),” Environmental Health, April 2024.

[2] Mariah Blake, Interviewed by Amy Goodman, Democracy Now, August 25, 2025. Transcript: https://www.democracynow.org/2025/8/8/forever_chemicals

[3] Mariah Blake, They Poisoned the World: Life and Death in the Age of Forever Chemicals, (Penguin Random House, 2025), 67.

[4] June Breneman, “Global Reach: Visiting scientist taps NRRI expertise,” news release, University of Minnesota Natural Resources Research Institute, July 6, 2023.

[5] Sarah Gabbott and Jan Zalasiewicz, Discarded: How Technofossils Will Be Our Ultimate Legacy (Oxford University Press, 2025), 183, 184.

[6] State of Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS) Report, Environment and Climate Change Canada and Health Canada, March 2025. publications.gc.ca/pub?id=9.947283&sl=0

[7] Shelia Zahm et al., “Carcinogenicity of perfluorooctanoic acid and perfluorooctanesulfonic acid,” The Lancet Oncology, January 2024.

[8] Jared Hayes, “‘Forever chemicals’ in sludge may taint nearly 70 million farmland acres,” Environmental Working Group, January 14, 2025.

[9] Forever Pollution Project, https://foreverpollution.eu/map/dataset-and-maps/.

[10] PFAS contamination in the U.S. (August 14, 2025), Environmental Working Group, https://www.ewg.org/interactive-maps/pf ... amination/.

[11] Csilla Mišl’anová and Martina Valachovičová, “Health Impacts of Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFASs): A Comprehensive Review,” , April 2025.

[12] John Oliver, Last Week Tonight, HBO, October 3, 2021.

[13] Nadia Gaber, Lisa Bero, and Tracey J. Woodruff, “The Devil they Knew: Chemical Documents Analysis of Industry Influence on PFAS Science,” Annals of Global Health, June 2023.

[14] Jared Hayes and Scott Faber, “For Decades, Polluters Knew PFAS Chemicals Were Dangerous But Hid Risks From Public,” Environmental Working Group, August 28, 2019.

[15] Submission to the EPA from the Center for Food Safety, June 10, 2025. Isocycloseram meets the OECD’s definition of PFAS, which the EPA has decided is too restrictive.

https://climateandcapitalism.com/2025/1 ... vils-piss/
"There is great chaos under heaven; the situation is excellent."

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