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Carbon offset projects aren’t saving the planet—they’re displacing communities and greenwashing pollution. It’s time for real climate solutions that respect rights and empower communities. Put an end to carbon market exploitation 👉 LINK IN BIO

10,781 görüntüleme • 1 yıl önce •via X (Twitter)

10 Yorum

EcoCreds profil fotoğrafı
EcoCreds1 yıl önce

It's time to move beyond carbon offsets and focus on sustainable, community-centered solutions.

Vege-boss profil fotoğrafı
Vege-boss1 yıl önce

Carbon offset projects are failing us, prioritizing corporate profits over community rights and environmental sustainability, it's time for a change

Winnie Bear Jinping profil fotoğrafı
Winnie Bear Jinping1 yıl önce

How about we just live our lives.

Patrick See profil fotoğrafı
Patrick See1 yıl önce

But please don't criss cross your land and mountains with turbines towers wires access roads, that would really seal the deal on destruction

Reinhild Niebuhr profil fotoğrafı
Reinhild Niebuhr1 yıl önce

There are MUCH BETTER WAYS to handle the carbon offset opportunity in Africa. The Young Africa DEVELOPMENT FOUNDATION is a non-profit organisation that can assist to turn this tragic outcome around!

Hashim Yussif profil fotoğrafı
Hashim Yussif1 yıl önce

African leadership crisis

Ray profil fotoğrafı
Ray1 yıl önce

Please let’s make good use of our power to choose!

Uncleike profil fotoğrafı
Uncleike1 yıl önce

Blaming the developed world for Africa's failures is absurd. They can't even install fresh water wells for needy villages. The corruption is deep.

Frank Belluccia profil fotoğrafı
Frank Belluccia1 yıl önce

Gimme money. Gimme yo money. Gimme mo' money. You're rich, I'm Socialist, it's your fault.

José F Lomelín profil fotoğrafı
José F Lomelín1 yıl önce

Unbelievable!!!!

Benzer Videolar

Today the COP30 climate conference in Brazil witnessed large-scale protests organized by Indigenous peoples both inside and outside the conference venue. The protesters voiced their opposition to international climate policies that marginalize their rights and lands. They argue that their representation in these conferences is often merely symbolic, with little real influence over environmental and climate decision-making, despite being the traditional guardians of the rainforest and among the most affected by climate change. The Indigenous population in Brazil is estimated at around 900,000 people, spread across more than 300 ethnic and linguistic groups, most of whom live in the Amazon region. This region accounts for over half of Brazil's rainforest and is one of the most important ecosystems in the world. These communities play a crucial role in preserving biodiversity and protecting forests from deforestation, which is often driven by mining projects, commercial agriculture, and logging companies. The protesters demand that Indigenous peoples be granted genuine legal and political rights in environmental decision-making, emphasizing that their lands are not commodities to be sold or financial instruments like carbon credits. They strongly criticize so-called carbon markets and environmental governance funds, which are often used as a cover by multinational corporations to continue exploiting natural resources under the guise of environmental protection, without respecting local communities and their rights. At the same time, several African countries, including the Democratic Republic of Congo, Uganda, Mozambique, Angola, Kenya, and South Africa, have seen widespread protests against carbon markets. These markets grant enormous privileges to multinational corporations to take control of local lands and increase demand for natural resources such as cobalt used in electric car batteries, a sector that often relies on child labor and resource exploitation in conflict zones. The protesters also criticize greenwashing, the practice by which companies use tools such as carbon offsets, green investments, and environmental and social governance funds to market themselves as sustainable and ethical, while continuing to exploit cheap labor and pollute the environment without accountability. Protests in Brazil and Africa represent a single face of green capitalism, a system that reproduces the logic of old colonialism: the Global South bears the greatest burden of climate change and the responsibility to protect the planet, while the wealthy Global North continues to pollute and profit.

K.Diallo ☭

133,587 görüntüleme • 8 ay önce