57 companies are responsible for 80% of the global greenhouse gas emissions since 2016.
Unless you run those companies, why are you being forced to pay for climate change damage?
💥GOOD NEWS from Denmark💥
Oil and gas permit REVOKED.
The Danish Energy Board ruled that consent for new fossil fuel production at Hejre field was unlawful, upholding a complaint by Greenpeace Nordic.
The full climate impact of oil extraction and burning - on people and planet - cannot be ignored!
At #COP30, world leaders face a choice: crisis or resilience🌍
Join #UmmahForEarth in calling wealthy countries to support climate adaptation and justice.
✍️ Add your name:
Countries like the Philippines and Jamaica contribute next to NOTHING to global carbon pollution, yet climate disasters like hurricanes and typhoons hit them HARDEST.
At #COP30, governments MUST address this injustice.
Polluters MUST pay.
The world’s biggest polluters make BILLIONS as families lose everything to floods and fires. Real CLIMATE justice means ending that system. Let’s MAKE POLLUTERS PAY.
12 years ago, Super Typhoon Haiyan - locally known as Yolanda - struck the Philippines, but for many survivors like Ronan Renz Napoto, it feels like the typhoon never left.
Super Typhoon Haiyan was one of the deadliest typhoon ever recorded in modern history, killing over 6,300 people and displacing millions.
"Twelve years later, we are still here — bruised, battered, but unbowed. We endure not because we want to, but because we must."
Leading up to COP30, a giant bill totalling the cost of the climate crisis has been raised by brave activists in cities across the world.
In Africa, Europe, India, Mexico, the Philippines and more, people are saying it loud and clear: MAKE POLLUTERS PAY.
WORLD LEADERS, WHAT FUTURE DO YOU WANT? 🌍
As #COP30 opens in Belém, Brazil, Greenpeace projected this message near the port where the Rainbow Warrior is anchored.
This first COP ever held in the Amazon must be a turning point: the one that ends deforestation, transitions away from fossil fuels, and ensures climate finance for those most affected.
The world doesn’t need more promises. It needs bold action to keep the 1.5°C climate limit within reach.