Donald Trump is living proof that billionaires should be abolished. He spreads the politics of hate and greed. He has delivered huge tax cuts for his fellow billionaires. He has cut food stamps and health services for the poorest. While the world is burning and drowning because of the climate crisis, he keeps cutting climate regulations and steered the United States away from the Paris Agreement. He is a billionaire president, ruling on behalf of his billionaire friends. And now, he is attending the World Economic Forum, a meeting officially billed as ‘addressing inequality and climate change’. Nothing can be more hypocritical than that.
Njoki Njehu, Pan-Africa Coordinator of the global Fight Inequality Alliance
We need to reimagine a world where all billionaires, including Donald Trump, do not exist. Where their obscene wealth is spent on schools and hospitals, teachers and nurses, instead of being hidden in the secret bank accounts of billionaires. It is just common sense to abolish billionaires. The planet and the people cannot afford billionaires like Mr. Trump.
People are dying from climate change. Every fraction of a degree matters.
Our house is still on fire. Your inaction is fueling the flames by the hour. And we are telling you to act as if you loved your children above all else.
One year ago I came to Davos and told you that our house is on fire. I said I wanted you to panic. Iâve been warned that telling people to panic about the climate crisis is a very dangerous thing to do. But donât worry. Itâs fine. Trust me, Iâve done this before and I can assure you it doesnât lead to anything.
And, for the record, when we children tell you to panic weâre not telling you to go on like before. Weâre not telling you to rely on technologies that donât even exist today at scale and that science says perhaps never will.
We are not telling you to keep talking about reaching ânet zero emissionsâ or âcarbon neutralityâ by cheating and fiddling around with numbers. We are not telling you to âoffset your emissionsâ by just paying someone else to plant trees in places like Africa while at the same time forests like the Amazon are being slaughtered at an infinitely higher rate.
Planting trees is good, of course, but itâs nowhere near enough of what is needed and it cannot replace real mitigation and rewilding nature.
Letâs be clear. We donât need a âlow carbon economy.â We donât need to âlower emissions.â Our emissions have to stop if we are to have a chance to stay below the 1.5-degree target. And, until we have the technologies that at scale can put our emissions to minus, then we must forget about net zero. We need real zero.
Because distant net zero emission targets will mean absolutely nothing if we just continue to ignore the carbon dioxide budget â that applies for today, not distant future dates. If high emissions continue like now even for a few years, that remaining budget will soon be completely used up.
The fact that the U.S.A. is leaving the Paris accord seems to outrage and worry everyone, and it should. But the fact that weâre all about to fail the commitments you signed up for in the Paris Agreement doesnât seem to bother the people in power even the least.
Any plan or policy of yours that doesnât include radical emission cuts at the source, starting today, is completely insufficient for meeting the 1.5-degree or well-below-2-degrees commitments of the Paris Agreement.
And again, this is not about right or left. We couldnât care less about your party politics. From a sustainability perspective, the right, the left as well as the center have all failed. No political ideology or economic structure has been able to tackle the climate and environmental emergency and create a cohesive and sustainable world. Because that world, in case you havenât noticed, is currently on fire.
You say children shouldnât worry. You say: âJust leave this to us. We will fix this, we promise we wonât let you down. Donât be so pessimistic.â
And then, nothing. Silence. Or something worse than silence. Empty words and promises which give the impression that sufficient action is being taken.
All the solutions are obviously not available within todayâs societies. Nor do we have the time to wait for new technological solutions to become available to start drastically reducing our emissions. So, of course, the transition isnât going to be easy. It will be hard. And unless we start facing this now together, with all cards on the table, we wonât be able to solve this in time.
In the days running up to the 50th anniversary of the World Economic Forum, I joined a group of climate activists demanding that you, the worldâs most powerful and influential business and political leaders, begin to take the action needed.
We demand at this yearâs World Economic Forum, participants from all companies, banks, institutions, and governments:
Immediately halt all investments in fossil fuel exploration and extraction.
Immediately end all fossil
Immediately end all fossil fuel subsidies.
And immediately and completely divest from fossil fuels.
We donât want these things done by 2050, 2030 or even 2021. We want this done now.
It may seem like weâre asking for a lot. And you will, of course, say that we are naĂŻve. But this is just the very minimum amount of effort that is needed to start the rapid sustainable transition.
So either you do this or youâre going to have to explain to your children why you are giving up on the 1.5-degree target. Giving up without even trying. Well, Iâm here to tell you that, unlike you, my generation will not give up without a fight.
The facts are clear, but theyâre still too uncomfortable for you to address. You just leave it because you think itâs too depressing and people will give up. But people will not give up. You are the ones who are giving up.
Last week I met with Polish coal miners who lost their jobs because their mine was closed. And even they had not given up. On the contrary, they seem to understand the fact that we need to change more than you do.
I wonder, what will you tell your children was the reason to fail and leave them facing climate chaos that you knowingly brought upon them? That it seemed so bad for the economy that we decided to resign the idea of securing future living conditions without even trying?
Our house is still on fire. Your inaction is fueling the flames by the hour. And we are telling you to act as if you loved your children above all else.
Thank you.
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