Download - Climate Justice in Aotearoa
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ContentsClimate Change and Climate Jusce. 3
Climate Injusce; Same problem, unequal eects. 4Some core Climate jusce demands and principles............. 4
Indigenous Rights and Climate Jusce.................... 5
Creang Climate Chaos: Fossil Fuels in NZ:.................. 6
The (False) soluons?....... 8
Real Soluons... 12
Resistance and Acon!... 14
Things to consider.. 15
Links and resources 16
This handbook was wrien by Climate Jusce Aotearoa with the help of
many resources and people. Our special thanks goes to Radical Acon
Grants for funding the inial print run of this booklet. Links to many of the
resources used, and to websites with more in-depth informaon on the
issues discussed can be found at the end of the handbook.
If you have feedback on this handbook, would like some help linking up
with people working on climate jusce in your area, wand to hold a cli-
mate jusce workshop for your group, or just want to say hi, email Jessie
Dennis [email protected] [email protected].
This booklet was wrien in Aotearoa. We wish to acknowledge Tangata
Whenua as kaiaki of these lands.
mailto:[email protected]:[email protected]:[email protected]:[email protected]:[email protected]:[email protected] -
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In New Zealand climate change will bring a
large increase in extreme weather events
like ooding, droughts and hurricanes, along
with sea level rises and higher temperatures.
These eects in turn will bring health
problems such as the onset of tropical
diseases.
Poorer communies will be hit the hardest
by the rising cost of food, petrol and even
water. New Zealand will, however, be
comparavely beer o compared to other
countries when it comes to climate change.
We will feel the harshest eects of climate
change last, well aer poorer parts of the
globe have been devastated by them.
Consequently, climate change will also eect
New Zealand through immigraon and the
ow of climate refugees, many of whom
may choose to come to New Zealand. These
eects are linked with many quesons of
jusce, such as:
How will the poorer areas and groups in New
Zealand gain access to disaster relief, or to
adequate heang and medical treatment?
Will rich countries such as New Zealand face up
to their ecological debt and appropriately
accommodate for climate refugees?
Will the Government be an ally for wars
resulng from lack of natural resources, or will
it choose to become more self-sucient, and
what are the consequences?
How can we organise and campaign in a waythat not only limits climate change, but will
prevent the further inequalies that will result
from it?
Prevent catastrophic climac
destabilisaon.
Confront the structural/root
causes of emissions.
Reject false market-orientated
soluons.
Promote socially just andecologically sound alternaves
dened by those who will be
aected.
Democrac ownership and
control of economy.
Resource sovereignty
(energy, food, water, land etc.)
Leave fossil fuels in the
ground.
Reparaons of ecological debt
to those who have suered
from resource exploitaon.
Protect and defend untouched
eco-
systems from commercialoperaons.
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First up let's explain no rangaratanga and kanga Maori. The rst can be translated asself-determinaon or sovereignty, the right to live the way you know is best in your own
territory. Tikanga Maori is the way you live that life, what guiding principles you follow such
as being a good host, respecng the life essence of everything around you, a deep
understanding of being connected/responsible to those who have passed on and those
who follow aer you. When we look at the eects of colonisaon and globalisaon on
tangata whenua, that's the taking away of that no rangaratanga and kanga Maori, the
introducon of drugs and polluon, the of resources and (in general) denigraon to the
lowest, poorest class in society.
As with other indigenous peoples, climate change will unfairly aect Maori more than
many others in Aotearoa because many Maori live close to the environment e.g. shing,
gathering kai and are oen in debt and poor so lack the means of protecon from
economic crises, natural disasters or new disease outbreaks. Climate jusce for this
country's indigenous therefore means not just seeing the vulnerability of Maori but
acknowledging that Maori have a lot of knowledge about how to live sustainably on this
land and for how our communies can re-organise and support each other. Maori need
help to regain strength and resilience. If you are Maori nd your whanau, go home, help. If
you are Tauiwi/Pakeha listen to and act on what Maori need help with and stand insolidarity with them by rebuilding your own sustainable communies so we can resist
climate polluters and capitalism together.
-Tuhi-Ao, Climate Jusce Acvist
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FrackingFracking, the 'unconvenonal' drilling
method where a toxic mix of chemicals and
water are pumped underground at high
pressure to break up the earth in order to
draw out pockets of natural gas, is set for
huge expansion. Up unl recently fracking
only occurred in Taranaki, but permits are
now set to be consented in other parts of
the country by the end of the year. Asevidence from overseas mounts up, the
eects of fracking are becoming clear: water
contaminaon, seismic acvity, air polluon
and serious health eects.
Companies are fracking on the culturally
important lands of Iwi in Taranaki already,
and consultaon around the permits in
other parts of the country for Maori and
communies has been poor or non-existent.
And don't let em fool you when they say its
a clean energy: a recent study suggested CO2
emissions from fracking are on a par with
coal.
LigniteIt is esmated that there are sucient coalresources in the world to quadruple the
amount of carbon dioxide in the
atmosphere from pre-industrial levels.
5.3 million tonnes of coal were mined in
New Zealand in 2010, but State Owned coal
miner Solid Energy and private company
L&M Lignite plan to mine billions (yes,
billions) of tonnes of Southland lignite, a
dirty, brown coal. This proposal alone could
be responsible for increasing New Zealands
carbon emissions by 20%.
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The Southland lignite proposal is for rolling
opencast mines, on a scale unseen in New
Zealand. The impacts on health, farm
animals, water quality, community
structure, noise levels and landscape would
all be huge, and thats before we even
consider the climate impacts. If the 6 billion
tonnes of economically recoverable lignite in
Southland are burnt, it will lead to between7 and 8 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide
emissions.
Dairy farmingAgriculture is New Zealand's biggest
contributor to greenhouse gas emissions.
This is due in large part to the on-going
corporasaon and industrialisaon of the
diary sector. As small family-owned farms
are bought out by large industrial dairy
businesses, more trees are cut down for
pasture and more emissions are created,
and more prot is derived from every
square metre of land.
TransportThe Government is making more
motorways and roads and stripping backsustainable and publicly-owned transport
opons. Not only that, but as transport is
privased, it becomes more expensive, less
reliable, less eecve and a less viable
opon for people on lower incomes. We
need our transport opons to reect the fact
that we are heading towards peak oil and a
necessary transion to less fossil fuel
dependent lifestyles. Unfortunately, the
Government's transport plan will lock us into
high fuel consumpon transport and leavefewer opons for alternaves.
Deep Sea Oil DrillingWith permits up for grabs around the coasts
of Aotearoa and the Government markeng
NZ as the new froner of unconvenonal oil
(that means harder to get and more
dangerous), deep sea oil drilling is a big
climate threat in Aotearoa. Deep sea oil
contributes to climate change and ignores
the fact that we are facing peak oil. The
world is running out of oil and we need to
transion away from oil dependence rather
than remaining reliant on it. Deep Seal Oil
drilling threatens communies, parcularly
Maori, who live on the coast and rely on itfor their food and livelihoods, ignoring Maori
customary rights to the Taonga of the
oceans.
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Carbon TradingCarbon trading is the main way in which
industrialised Governments are choosing to
show that they are acng to stop climate
change. Unfortunately it amounts to a
juscaon for business to connue asusual, and in fact expand; its furthering
inequalies and its distracng from real
soluons.
In Emissions trading (a.k.a. carbon trading
or the carbon market), carbon becomes a
commodity with a market value that can go
up and down like any other commodity. This
was sold to the public as providing anincenve for industry to emit less as they
have to buy the right to emit.
Unfortunately, not all proposed solu-
ons to climate change were created
equal. Many of the soluons which
are being proposed by big business and internaonal forums as the answers to climatechange are not all they are cracked up to be; in fact many are expanding market reach,
creang new opportunies for the powerful to prot and in the process damaging com-
munies and furthering inequality. They even commodify the air we breathe and the
ecosystems we rely on.
The tricky thing about the current economic system is that when its in a pickle, it nds
new markets to create in order to keep itself growing. Remembering that the current
economic system and the ideology behind it, where prot is the goal and markets rule,
helped get us into this mess in the rst place, lets take a minute to gure out if some of
the soluons which are being created by it, and by those prong from it, are really
what we want.
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Carbon trading doesnt work: where it has
been trialled (for instance, in the European
Union, New South Wales and here in
Aotearoa) it has failed to stop the expansion
of coal-red power staons and other
heavily pollung industries. In fact, it has
provided huge tax payer subsidies from
governments to major polluters.
Carbon oseng means that fossil fuel
eming companies can oset the carbon
they emit by buying credits from projects
that supposedly save emissions, or create
fewer emissions that what would have been
created otherwise. This means that
Governments and companies in industrialisedcountries are delaying real domesc acon
by buying up credits from the south.
Another problem with oseng is that it
rests on 'addionality', or whether the
oseng project would have happened
anyway. This means that oen quesonable
projects (like coal power staons in India
which use more 'sustainable' pracces andtechnology, or monoculture plantaons) are
creang credits, bought by rst world
companies so they can connue pollung
elsewhere! The net result: even more
emissions.
Here in Aotearoa, our biggest eming
industry, industrial dairy farming, is exempt
from the emissions trading scheme. Otherpollung industries such as the coal mining
sector are so heavily subsidised that
Carbon Trade Watch called the ETS a
taxpayer subsidy for plantaons and energy
companies.
Carbon trading creates new markets,
opportunies for polluters to make more prot
and encourages privasaon of land, air and
water. It has major implicaons for equality
and peoples ability to make decisions about
their lives with dignity. And further sll,
important decisions, discussions and
demands about climate change are being
swept aside in favour of leaving it to the
market'.
UN mechanismsThe United Naons Framework Convenon on
Climate Change has long been the
mechanism relied upon by both state and
some civil society groups to oer soluons
to the climate crisis. The current treaty of
the UNFCCC, the Kyoto Protocol, has not
achieved what it set out to, which was to
get countries to commit to reducing
emissions according to the concept ofcommon but dierenated responsibility
the idea that industrialised countries must
reduce their emissions to compensate for
their carbon emissions during
industrialisaon and developing countries
can accordingly increase their emissions to a
certain point. This is good in theory,
however the Kyoto Protocol is not legally
binding, nor is it enforceable, resulng in no
countries keeping to their agreed emissions
reducons targets, and it also creates
dangerous market mechanisms.
Furthermore, a number of big eming
countries such as Canada and the United
States are not party to the protocol (as it is
voluntary) meaning that it only accounts for
15% of overall emissions.
Finally, the Kyoto Protocols emissions cuts
are set to a two degree temperature rise
target, which will sll be detrimental to
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many around the world. Climate jusce
organizaons advocate for a one degree rise
which will ensure a climate safe future.
The 2011 Negoaons also saw a renewed
commitment to the Green Climate Fund,
allowing the World Bank to be an interimtrustee. The Green Climate Fund runs the
risk of becoming the Greedy Climate Fund
as many NGOs have labelled with the
potenal to be high jacked by corporates
and Wall Street.
Overall, the United Naons Negoaons on
climate change oer very lile hope for a
climate safe future. The negoaons are
founded on neoliberal, technocrac
soluons to climate change
that are woefully
inadequate and allow
developed countries to
evade their historical
responsibilies. For
example, the United
Naons Reducing Emissionsfrom Deforestaon and
Forest Degradaon (REDD)
scheme has led to carbon
trading companies ooding into the forests
of indigenous peoples such as in Papua New
Guinea. The Durban Group for Climate
Jusce says this of REDD: In the South,
REDD would transform the carbon in living
trees into private property so that it can be
awarded or transferred to private
corporaons in the North. In the worst case,
it could inaugurate a massive land grab. In
the North, meanwhile, REDD credits would
enable fossil fuel-related corporaons to
maintain business as usual, to the detriment
of communies aected by fossil fuel
extracon and polluon.
The United Naons is supposed to run
according to consensus decision making,
however in many cases countries are
manipulated into agreeing or ignored
completely as was the case of Bolivia
during negoaons in 2010. Countries oen
act in the interests of giant
corporaons and the fossil fuel industry,
which hold enormous power within these
negoaons. And nally, negoaons are
simply too slow to address the urgency of
the climate change in many countries and
ensure a safe climate for current and
future generaons.
TechnoxesThere is no doubt that technology is a partof the soluon to climate change. However,
technological soluons can be a
huge distracon to geng to the
boom of things.
From giant space mirrors to
dumping iron parcles in the
Pacic Ocean, from genecally
engineered plants and animals to
unleashing new synthec life
forms upon the planet, we are
promised a mind boggling array
of miraculous soluons to the climate crisis;
somemes by the very companies who are
causing it.
Jatropha, for example, is a plant once
championed by Air New Zealand as a
climate friendly aviaon biofuel which isnow being grown in Kenya in massive
quanes. People who are already living low
carbon lifestyles, such as small scale
farmers, are being driven o their lands and
the Jatropha, a noxious weed, is causing all
sorts of environmental problems and leading
to talk of war over land. Contrary to Air New
Zealands inial claims, it turns out thatJatropha causes up to six mes more
emissions than ordinary jet fuel.
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There are plenty of other forms of green
technology being researched, promoted
and trialled here in Aotearoa: Biochar, GE
trees and animals, nano-technology and
synthec biology to name a few. Many of
these technologies carry signicant risks,
impact on poor or marginalised people here oroverseas when carried out at an industrial
scale and are not sustainable.
Climate jusce is not an-technology. Some
'green technologies' or 'cleantech' will be an
important part of our path out of the
climate crisis. But it's important that in our
search for soluons we ensure that these
technologies actually do reduce emissions, thatthey do not further inequalies; that they do
not pose further risk to the environment,
eco-systems and people; and that they are
not used as a distracon to the real change
that needs to occur to address the root
causes of climate change.
Individual changeIn an era where were told everyone
operates in their own self-interest, that we
alone are responsible for our success or
failure in this world, and that the rich are
rich through their own hard work, its no
surprise that the climate change discussion
at the community level has quickly become
about individual change. We are encouraged
by Government and business to turn o ourlights, insulate our houses, and take
recyclable bags to the supermarket. While
all of these changes do make a dierence
and its important to live our lives in
accordance with the change we want to see
in the world these all shi the blame from
companies to people. While we work hard
to change the ways we do things, companies
sll run their adversing all night, drive milk
from Southland to Canterbury and
Canterbury to Southland because they can
make more prot o it that way, and push
to expand mining into areas that were
previously o limits (e.g. Naonal Parks) and
into riskier and riskier territories (e.g. Pike
River). Its important to see individual
change for what it is: a part of the soluonbut never as powerful as our collecve work.
*PICTURE+
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Buildingsustainable and
resilient communiesA large proporon of CO2 emissions globally
come from transportaon; from all the stu
we use and the food we eat. Creang
localised food and trade networks is an
empowering step towards creang the
alternaves we need for sustainable lives. It
feels great to be more self-sucient, and a
bit more 'o the grid'.
There are plenty of examples of great local
iniaves around how we produce and
trade food in NZ, like Kaibosh (which
redistributes unused food) and community
gardens. There are also great local trade
iniaves such as Time Banking, where
people can trade their me and skillswithout the use of money. If these dont
exist in your community, you could start
one. There are plenty of ways to make our
own communies more sustainable.
Strong and connected communies are
important to support eorts to become
more sustainable, and communies are
also the base upon which we can resistfossil fuels and economic and social
inequalies. Community gives us a
network of people we can rely on.
Connect the dotsSupporng allies who are working against
inequality and injusce helps us address
the roots causes of climate change. The
unequal social and economic
system which is at
the root of climate change aects everyone
except the very rich in our daily lives. Part of
our struggle for climate jusce is also that
struggle for a fairer economic system. That
might mean standing in solidarity with
workers when the bosses try to slash our
condions (e.g. the recent lockout of Port ofAuckland and AFFCO workers) or when
union sites strike to win gains or protect our
current condions. Our wins and our losses
have a ow on aect to others across
society. It might mean ghng for educaon
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(e.g. no increase in class sizes) and health,
and drawing the links between these issues
and that of climate change. The more
empowered our communies are, the
greater our chances of liming climate
change and building our own alternaves.
Tradional knowledgeClimate jusce sees people as agents in our
own lives and doesnt see front line
communies (especially in the global south)
as passive vicms. Peoples, communies
and cultures around the world already hold
powerful tradional knowledge about howto live and work together sustainably. In
parcular, indigenous peoples and women
are key holders of tradional knowledge
that should be respected and integrated into
soluons which will see us out of the
climate crisis. In Aotearoa, Maori are key
holders of this knowledge.
For urban acvists its important to ask andthink how we can stand with local Maori to
defend this knowledge, and about how
proposed soluons could aect Maori and
Maori communies ability to live sustainably
as communies.
Keep the fossil fuels in the groundTo avoid catastrophic climate change, it iscrucial that we keep the fossil fuels in the
ground. Rather than elaborate schemes like
carbon trading where the carbon in the
atmosphere is moved around an
accountants ledger while more and more
carbon is released into the atmosphere from
the earth, we need to Keep the Coal in the
Hole! No drill, no spill! Ban fracking! Part of
our climate jusce work is being involved in
or supporng these campaigns.
SolidarityAcng in solidarity with eected and
marginalised communies strengthens
networks, builds alliances and is a vital part
of campaigning for climate jusce. Find out
what maers to Tangata Whenua workingon climate change and making their
communies more sustainable and
support their campaigns. Get in contact with
eected communies who are on the front
lines of climate change, both here in
Aotearoa and overseas, especially our
neighbours in the Pacic and communies
that rely on fossil fuel extracon for
employment, and begin the conversaon,
build relaonships and nd out where you
have common ground. Research what big
polluters/oseers/nanciers are in your
own community, and especially company
headquarters if you live in a big city. Find out
what they are doing around the countryand overseas, and what communies are
doing to resist their fossil fuel projects.
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Direct AconNonviolent direct acon is not only a cricalpart of many successful social movements,
it's also a powerful way to express your
democrac freedoms and challenge the
injusces which create the problems we face
in our society, including climate change.
When the polical process is not up to the
task of addressing the injusces of climate
change, direct acon can be a powerful
change-making tool.
Some reasons to take direct acon To bypass our 'leaders' and resist
oppression, ecological destrucon andinjusce.
To foster freedom, jusce and ecologicalsustainability.
To stay sane in a world driven byinequalies of power.
Because you dont need a PhD to getinvolved.
Because it is everyday reality for people fromthe poorer developing naons and we have tostand strong together.
Because me is running out.
Because the future of this planet is tooimportant to sign away to the powerful.
OutreachReaching out to our communies and talking
about climate change and jusce are vital to
create the shi in consciousness needed to
understand and act on the problem. Take a
look at the resources listed at the end of this
handbook and get in touch with those that
can help, then get out there and talk to
groups in your community about climatejusce.
There is so much we can do when we are
empowered by knowledge of what really
drives climate change and how real climate
jusce and community resistance can change
those drivers!
Start a group, join one that suits you or
educate one you're already in about climate
jusce. Get amongst it! Try not to be
discouraged by those who dismiss your ideas
as radical or 'out there.' Keep speaking truth
to power. All social movements were at oneme considered radical and unrealisc, even
the ones we now take for granted as
posive steps for humanity, such as the
women's rights movement, the civil rights
movement, the abolishment of slavery, and
even democracy itself.
Distribute informaon, run a workshop or
organise a lm night. For real change to occurin the minds of people its oen best to
provide informaon and suggest some
quesons, rather than tell people what to
think. Don't be disheartened if people aren't
compelled to act straight away. Oen
providing food for thought is the seed of
change that sets people on the direcon to
climate jusce acon. Its not always an
immediate change, at least it wasn't for most
of us!
Creave communicaon: Don't be afraid to
add some humour to your acons for climate
jusce and events. Climate jusce cheer
leaders, fossil fool clowns and carbon trading
circus acts have all featured in powerful
climate jusce acons and events in NZ and
overseas. Oen a bit of fun can get peopleasking quesons and help communicate your
message in an inving way.
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How will people in dierent social
posions experience this proposed
soluon? Will it raise the price of basic goods?
How will this impact on people with lowincomes? Does it take away peoples right to make decisions about their land? Does it create dumping grounds where toxic polluon is concentrated? If so, who
will be most impacted? Which instuons, governments, companies or communies stand to benet from it? Does it allocate cost according to responsibility? That is, will the companies and
governments that caused most of the problem have to pay for it? How will it deal with the loss of jobs in pollung industries? What will happen to those
workers and their communies? Are a bunch of green jobs being promised? Are they jobs where workers have a voice
in their industry and workplace? Does it increase the amount of infrastructure in rural/isolated areas, so that people
living there can more easily adapt to a changing climate? How will it deal with climate refugees? Does it account for a growing populaon? Does it give more power to police and military units?
Do many people understand it, or is it highly technocrac? Does it require special
training to comprehend the detail? Do many people own the proposed soluon do they feel that they and their
communies or workplaces will be part of designing it and implemenng it?
How do you make decisions in your campaign?
Who is part of your decision-making? Who isnt?
Do people from lots of dierent social backgrounds feel comfortable and empowered
in the campaign? In either case, how might this aect the work that youre doing?
Do you talk regularly about how the campaign relates to jusce concerns?
What kind of imagery are you using to talk about climate change? Does it rely on an
image of powerless vicms in the global South?
Does your group do any solidarity or ally work with other struggles for social jusce?
Is this considered an important part of what you do together?
Does it increase peoples quality of life?
Will it avoid dangerous climate change and the unequal impacts that follow?
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Aotearoa basedClimate Jusce Aotearoa www.climatejusceaotearoa.org
Climate Jusce Taranaki www.climatejuscetaranaki.info
Coal Acon Network coalaconnetworkaotearoa.wordpress.com
Say No to Fracking in NZ www.facebook.com/groups/saynotofrackingnz
Auckland Coal Acon www.facebook.com/groups/aklcoal
Stop the Drilling on our East Coast www.facebook.com/groups/130406690316831
Internaonal resourcesCarbon Trade Watch www.carbontradewatch.org
Friends of the Earth Australia www.foe.org.au
Global Jusce Ecology Project www.globaljusceecology.org
Organising Cools the Planet organizingcoolstheplanet.wordpress.com
Carbon Trading-A Crical Conversaon on Climate Change, Privasaon and Power
www.thecornerhouse.org.uk/summary.shtml?x=544225
The Change Agency www.thechangeagency.org
The Ruckus Society www.ruckus.org
Indigenous Environmental Network www.ienearth.org
Rising Tide www.risingdenorthamerica.org
La Via Campesina viacampesina.org/en
Durban group for Climate Jusce www.durbanclimatejusce.org
http://www.climatejusticeaotearoa.org/http://www.climatejusticetaranaki.wordpress.com/http://www.climatejusticetaranaki.wordpress.com/http://c/Users/dennisj/AppData/Local/Temp/coalactionnetworkaotearoa.wordpress.com/http://www.facebook.com/groups/saynotofrackingnz/http://www.facebook.com/groups/aklcoal/http://www.facebook.com/groups/aklcoal/http://www.facebook.com/groups/130406690316831/http://www.facebook.com/groups/130406690316831/http://www.carbontradewatch.org/http://www.carbontradewatch.org/http://c/Users/dennisj/AppData/Local/Temp/www.foe.org.au/http://c/Users/dennisj/AppData/Local/Temp/www.foe.org.au/http://c/Users/dennisj/AppData/Local/Temp/www.globaljusticeecology.org/http://organizingcoolstheplanet.wordpress.com/http://organizingcoolstheplanet.wordpress.com/http://www.thecornerhouse.org.uk/summary.shtml?x=544225http://www.thecornerhouse.org.uk/summary.shtml?x=544225http://c/Users/dennisj/AppData/Local/Temp/www.thechangeagency.org/http://c/Users/dennisj/AppData/Local/Temp/www.ruckus.org/http://www.ienearth.org/http://www.risingtidenorthamerica.org/http://www.risingtidenorthamerica.org/http://c/Users/dennisj/AppData/Local/Temp/viacampesina.org/en/http://www.durbanclimatejustice.org/http://www.durbanclimatejustice.org/http://www.durbanclimatejustice.org/http://c/Users/dennisj/AppData/Local/Temp/viacampesina.org/en/http://www.risingtidenorthamerica.org/http://www.ienearth.org/http://c/Users/dennisj/AppData/Local/Temp/www.ruckus.org/http://c/Users/dennisj/AppData/Local/Temp/www.thechangeagency.org/http://www.thecornerhouse.org.uk/summary.shtml?x=544225http://organizingcoolstheplanet.wordpress.com/http://c/Users/dennisj/AppData/Local/Temp/www.globaljusticeecology.org/http://c/Users/dennisj/AppData/Local/Temp/www.foe.org.au/http://www.carbontradewatch.org/http://www.facebook.com/groups/130406690316831/http://www.facebook.com/groups/aklcoal/http://www.facebook.com/groups/saynotofrackingnz/http://c/Users/dennisj/AppData/Local/Temp/coalactionnetworkaotearoa.wordpress.com/http://www.climatejusticetaranaki.wordpress.com/http://www.climatejusticeaotearoa.org/