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Africa: Climate Activists to Target Gas Ahead of Cop26 Summit

Climate activists will try to shut down gas terminals and protest fracking plans in several countries this weekend, as a post-lockdown push to influence the agenda ahead of November’s COP26 climate summit in Scotland kicks off in earnest.

The school strikes and city-stopping actions that pushed global warming to the top of the political priority list before the COVID-19 pandemic are also set to resume in coming weeks.

The grassroots Extinction Rebellion group has said it will launch two weeks of actions against new fossil fuel investments in London next month.

The Fridays For Future student movement, meanwhile, has called a global school strike for Sept. 24, which falls during the U.N. General Assembly where leaders will discuss their responses to climate change.

“Global citizens are at the beginning of an escalation of actions and activities that will be culminating at the COP (climate summit),” said Asad Rehman, a spokesman for the COP26 Coalition, an umbrella for unions, aid agencies, faith and green groups working on climate justice.

Read also: Intense rainfall increases lakes levels in East Africa

A global day of protest for climate equity will take place on Nov. 6 in the middle of the COP26 summit, added Rehman, who is also director of anti-poverty charity War on Want.

However, coronavirus, cost and climate change concerns will prevent some activists from travelling to the main demonstration in Glasgow, where the conference will take place.

This weekend, up to 3,000 activists from Germany’s Ende Gelaende, a green civil disobedience movement, plan to blockade the Brunsbuttel liquefied natural gas terminal in a bid to stop operations.

“It’s going to be the biggest mass action since the lockdown began,” said spokeswoman Ronja Weil.

Campaigners will also take to the streets in a dozen countries including Argentina, Ireland, Bolivia and Canada.

In a strategic shift, they are targeting gas rather than coal plants, and linking actions in the Global North and South.

Their target, according to Esteban Servat, who co-initiated the Shale Must Fall group which called this weekend’s protests, is European multinationals “that are doing abroad what they cannot do at home – namely fracking”.

Servat, an Argentinian scientist, says he fled his country for Germany because of “intense persecution and death threats” after leaking a government report that linked contaminated water tables to fracking.

Another protest at Scotland’s Mossmorran gas plant complex on Sunday aims to “amplify the struggle of local communities”, which have to contend with pollution, noise and gas flaring, said Benji Brown, a spokesman for Climate Camp Scotland.

“Even where I live in Edinburgh, which is 20 miles away, you can see (the plant) light up the sky at night,” he said.

The action also intends “to create space for the climate movement in Scotland to regroup and rebuild momentum in the run-up to COP26”, he added.

COP26 host Britain is putting pressure on other countries to commit to ending the use of, and funding for, coal power.

But natural gas – a less carbon-intensive fossil fuel – is being supported by some governments as a “bridge” to a cleaner energy mix.

Source: AllAfrica

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