Several hundred activists from the environmental action group Extinction Rebellion march through Belliardstraat in Brussels on Saturday afternoon, blocking traffic in the street.
The demonstrators are demanding an end to fossil fuel subsidies and the implementation of a national emergency plan for the transition to a thriving, fossil-free economy that protects the most vulnerable and the ecosystem, they say.
“National and European governments spend a total of at least 405 billion euros every year on subsidies for large fossil fuel companies,” said Bertina Maes, spokesperson for the activists. “That is ten times more than is spent on climate policy. The Belgian government alone spent between 12.9 and 20 billion euros on fossil fuel subsidies in 2020. The direct subsidies amounted to 2.4 percent of Belgian GDP.”
“A recent scientific paper predicts one billion deaths from the climate crisis if nothing is done to prevent global warming from exceeding 2 degrees Celsius,” the spokesperson continued. “At a time when humans are the greatest cause of environmental destruction, threatening the habitability of the Earth, the obstinacy of European institutions and national governments in subsidizing fossil fuels amounts to a crime against humanity.”
In the run-up to the elections, the activists, who have united under the banner of Stop EU Fossil Subsidies, warn about the vicious circle of the climate crisis, growing inequality and the rise of extremism.
Tip of the iceberg
“The accelerated deterioration of the climate crisis and human well-being will continue to exacerbate the political disillusionment fueled by the far right,” says spokesperson Xavier De Wannemaeker. “In turn, far-right anti-environmental policies will worsen the climate crisis. Thus, we are continually accelerating our race toward ecological collapse and brutal dictatorship.”
Extinction Rebellion points out that the climate crisis is just the tip of the iceberg of ecological collapse, citing the work of the Stockholm Resilience Centre, led by environmental scientist Johan Rockstrom. “The SRC warns that radical action is urgently needed as humanity has already crossed six of the nine planetary boundaries. Four of these, such as biodiversity loss and the nitrogen crisis, now pose a greater threat to our survival than climate change.”