Annual Review 2020

Waves of Covid Solidarity

International

Our network responded with solidarity to the pandemic and life under the coronavirus. We celebrated their community action.

A Stop Amazon action at the Ministry for the Economy in Paris. © Iris, Action Climat Paris.

Victory for victims of Shell’s oil spills

netherlands

After 13 years, victims of Shell’s oil pollution in the Niger Delta have finally achieved justice in court, in a historic case brought by Friends of the Earth Netherlands.

The director of Milieudefensie and chair of Friends of the Earth Europe, Donald Pols, celebrates outside the Court. © Brontsema / Milieudefensie.

Imagining a new economy

EUROPE

A common vision for an environmentally and socially just economy.

A visual summary of a workshop on new economies. © FoE Europe / Ale Listens and Draws.

We campaign for social and environmental justice at the heart of the EU.

We unite more than 30 national groups and thousands of local groups across Europe.

We unite more than 30 national groups and thousands of local groups across Europe.

Jagoda Munic,

Friends of the Earth Europe

May 2021

Overcoming

Hard to believe this is the second time I’m sitting down to reflect on the year gone by, not from my desk in the Friends of Earth Europe office, but from my home. Twelve whole months (and counting) of remote-working – of not seeing colleagues, our Board, our network, allies or friends, except on screen. A year in which asking after people’s health and that of their loved ones took on new meaning and trepidation.

2020 was a rollercoaster year. The pandemic knocked our plans off course. But adversity breeds creativity. We adjusted quickly in Spring – on the internal front moving to home-working, transferring events online, postponing activities; and externally – highlighting the links between disease and the destruction of nature, and issuing demands for a green and just recovery. With every twist and dive of the ongoing health crisis we have adjusted and responded again. Campaigning in the context of Covid-19 will continue to be a challenge – the current grim reality is that cases are the highest they have been in some of the poorest parts of the world least able to cope.

Throughout all this, we have overcome. Our grassroots network has shown incredible resilience, as the achievements documented in this Review pay testament to. There have been significant successes despite the circumstances, and even major victories. Friends of the Earth Netherlands’ historic win in court against Shell for its pollution in the Niger Delta took 13 years, and will give us strength for years to come.

The theme of the year, and what helped us to carry on, was solidarity. Solidarity is core to who we are as the Friends of the Earth global federation. It encapsulates the empathy that motivates us, the equality we fight for, and the people power we summon to change things for the better. Friends of the Earth France took action in solidarity with workers in unsafe conditions and forced Amazon to better protect them. In Spain, Friends of the Earth took part in movements of solidarity with small and ecological farms and won more rights for them during the pandemic. In Croatia, our member brought solar power to communities in poverty. We showed our solidarity with Black Lives Matter and committed to do more for racial justice.

2020 was a year like no other, but the struggle for environmental and social justice continued. Perhaps more quietly, away from the front pages and the streets, but with no less urgency. In fact, I believe the pandemic has caused many people in power to catch-up to the severity and interconnectedness of the multiple planetary and societal crises we face. Covid-19 is more than a public health crisis; it is a systems crisis. We need to seize this moment to re-imagine our societies and put them urgently on a sustainable and healthy footing. Our in-depth work to conceive an economy within Earth’s limits, and to define what a truly transformational Green Deal looks like, are important contributions to the generational task of building a better, greener future for all.

Together, we have and shall continue to overcome.

Our Campaigns

Future of Europe

Climate justice and energy

Corporate power

Food, farming and nature

Resource justice

43

weeks in 2020 spent working from home

46,000

Twitter followers
in 2020

23,500

Facebook followers
in 2020

100,000

hours spent on Zoom calls in 2020
(feels like!)

1,950

Articles published in the press in 2020

One of the few in-person meetings of Friends of the Earth Europe Brussels staff in 2020. © FoE Europe

Friends of the Earth Europe Executive Committee 2020-2021

Donald Pols, Friends of the Earth Netherlands – Chair

Martin Galea De Giovanni, Friends of the Earth Malta – Secretary

Luka Tomac, Friends of the Earth Croatia – Treasurer

Akos Éger, Friends of the Earth Hungary – Member

Alasdair Roxburgh, Friends of the Earth England, Wales and Northern Ireland – Member

Alexander Fedorov, Friends of the Earth Russia – Member

Anna Kárníková, Friends of the Earth Czech Republic – Member

Lars Igeland, Friends of the Earth Sweden – Member

Paula Cukura, Friends of the Earth Latvia – Member

Ziva Kavka Gobbo, Friends of the Earth Slovenia – Member

Campaign Highlights 2020

Waves of Covid Solidarity

International

Our network responded with solidarity to the pandemic and life under the coronavirus. We celebrated their community action.

A Stop Amazon action at the Ministry for the Economy in Paris. © Iris, Action Climat Paris.

Solidarity is a core value for Friends of the Earth. It took on new significance last year as the Covid-19 crisis showed the strength of human solidarity and compassion. The pandemic unleased waves of solidarity and community action – including in our grassroots network.

The pandemic did not affect everyone equally, and our groups came to the support of those hardest hit.

We shared stories from across our European and global network of what life under coronavirus looked like around the world.

We shared the story of South Africa’s 90,000+ waste pickers. They collect and sort waste for reuse, repair and recycling. But Covid-19 restrictions forced some to stop work. Friends of the Earth South Africa worked with partners to help get emergency food parcels and vouchers to waste pickers and their families who had lost their income. Then, together with waste pickers’ organisations and NGOs, they successfully lobbied the South African government to get waste pickers defined as ‘essential’ workers – allowing them to return to work. Friends of the Earth South Africa also helped waste pickers access personal protection equipment (PPE) so they can do their jobs safely.

In France, and elsewhere, the multinational corporation Amazon, attempted to captialise on the coronoavirus crisis and the closure of non-essential shops to increase its operations. Amazon workers were left unprotected – working without adequate physical distance, or proper protective equipment. Friends of the Earth France produced a mobiliation kit to help people take action in support of workers. They organised several email and Twitter actions demanding the closure of unsafe Amazon sites. The campaign worked! A French court ruled Amazon had to limit its activity to the delivery of essential products only during the coronavirus crisis.

During Spain’s Covid-19 confinement, open-air markets were forced to close leaving small agroecological producers nowhere to sell their produce. They were unable to make a living. So, Spain’s network of women for agroecology – including Friends of the Earth Spain – got active in support of small producers. Under the banner #SOSCampesinado (SOS small farmers), they brought together an incredible 700 organisations to demand that the government reopen the markets and encourage local food distribution. They demanded hospitals, care homes, and school canteens purchase from local producers. Dozens of local campaigns were successful in convincing municipalities to allow open-air markets and to support food sovereignty.

Read more stories of #Covidsolidarity.

Victory for victims of Shell’s oil spills

netherlands

After 13 years, victims of Shell’s oil pollution in the Niger Delta have finally achieved justice in court, in a historic case brought by Friends of the Earth Netherlands.

The director of Milieudefensie and chair of Friends of the Earth Europe, Donald Pols, celebrates outside the Court. © Brontsema / Milieudefensie.
Finally there is hope, some justice for the Nigerian people suffering the consequences of Shell’s oil.
Eric Dooh, Plaintiff.

It took 13 years. Finally, some justice for the people of the oil-soaked Niger Delta. Three Nigerian farmers, victims of oil pollution – supported by Milieudefensie/Friends of the Earth Netherlands – beat one of the world’s most powerful transnational corporations, Shell, in court in the Hague.

As the news spread across the world, people across Nigeria celebrated with victory parties.

“Finally there is hope, some justice for the Nigerian people suffering the consequences of Shell’s oil,” said Eric Dooh, one of the plaintiffs.

Dooh’s home, Goi, was a lush, fertile, thriving village. Until two major oil spills from Shell’s poorly maintained pipeline struck in 2003 and 2004, contaminating land and water. People were left destitute, but Shell denied any responsibility. So, Friends of the Earth joined with Dooh and three other farmers from nearby villages to sue Shell in its home country, the Netherlands.

It took years of gathering evidence and jumping legal hurdles. Finally, the court found that both Shell and its Nigerian subsidiary did not do all that was necessary to prevent and respond to the spill. It is the first time any survivors of Shell’s pollution have won compensation and justice in the home country of the oil giant.

This case has paved the way to justice for victims of corporate crimes. The evidence shows Shell has much more cleaning up to do in Nigeria. But from now on, any Dutch company failing to adhere to human rights and environmental regulations overseas risks being taken to court, held accountable, and forced to pay compensation. Now Friends of the Earth is campaigning for stronger laws to make this avenue easier to access.

Imagining a new economy

EUROPE

A common vision for an environmentally and socially just economy.

A visual summary of a workshop on new economies. © FoE Europe / Ale Listens and Draws.

There are more mainstream voices than ever calling-out our exploitative neoliberal, economic system and demanding transformational change. The Covid-19 pandemic made it clearer than ever that ‘economics-as-usual’ is broken and does not work for huge sections of our societies. We cannot continue to pursue growth no matter what, and that includes what some politicians promise as ‘green growth’.

Core to the current Friends of the Earth Europe strategy is the recognition that we need to abandon the never-ending pursuit of consumption and economic growth, which is at the heart of the multiple crises facing humanity and nature.

What kind of positive economic and social system do we envision instead? In 2020, we made big progress towards answering this question. We created a common vision with our network for an environmentally and socially just economy. We held six interactive webinars with member groups and dived deep into discussions, brainstorming and new economic thinking. It culminated in a comprehensive internal paper, ‘Principles for an environmentally and socially just economy’. The seven chapters reflect our bottom-up vision for all areas of the economy – from the purpose and guiding values of the economy we want, to democracy and public services, to the financial system and the future of work, business, and trade.

This thinking is now shaping our analysis and demands, not least towards EU policy-makers. We rejected so-called ‘green’ or ‘regenerative growth’-based failed economic solutions in the EU Green Deal. We pushed for the Green Deal to bring about a shift to an economy that cares for everyone within the Earth’s limits.

We also built relationships and cooperation with the degrowth movement. We co-organised a panel debate and workshop on the theme of ‘How do we deal with the European Green Deal?’ at the Degrowth Conference Vienna.

This work continues with a shorter public version of the vision paper coming first in 2021.