BELEM, Brazil (AP) — As United Nations climate talks rolled on Wednesday at the elaborate new venues built for the summit, many of the activists eager to shape the talks took to the water. Carried by scores of boats large and small, a vast group whooped and laughed, smiled and wept. Some splashed canoe paddles […]
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A flotilla kicks off the People’s Summit for activists at UN climate talks
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BELEM, Brazil (AP) — As United Nations climate talks rolled on Wednesday at the elaborate new venues built for the summit, many of the activists eager to shape the talks took to the water.
Carried by scores of boats large and small, a vast group whooped and laughed, smiled and wept. Some splashed canoe paddles through the bay where a northern section of the Amazon rainforest meets the Atlantic Ocean. Others hugged old friends. They pressed their foreheads together or held hands or stood solemnly in moments of prayer and reflection.
They were there to celebrate a community from around the world at a gathering of activists, organizers, environmentalists and Indigenous groups, outside the halls where world leaders are discussing climate change for the next two weeks. Their joy came after a brief but tense moment the night before when protesters broke through security barricades at the main conference venue, slightly injuring two security guards, according to the U.N.
Many emphasized the importance of making the voice of the people heard after years of these talks being held in countries where civil society is not free to demonstrate.
“The Amazon for us is the space of life,” said Jhajayra Machoa, an A’l Kofan First Nation of Ecuador member of A Wisdom Keepers Delegation, who helped paddle one of the canoes. “We carry the feeling and emotions of everything lived in this place, and what we want is to remember. Remember where we are from and where we’re going and what we want.”
The people who are attending the Conference of the Parties, or COP30, have a wide range of hopes for the outcome. This year is different than in past years, because leaders aren’t expected to sign one big agreement at the end of it; instead, organizers and analysts have said it’s about getting specifics to execute on past promises to act on climate change.
But many of the activists have some goals in common. They want nations to center the needs of historically marginalized communities who bear the brunt of the climate crisis with the least resources to adapt. That means including those communities in leadership and decision-making. And they want to see political will toward stopping the greenhouse gas emissions, resource extraction and other practices driving the problem.
“When we’re bridging what’s happening in the mind, when we talk about policy, we need to bridge to the heart, and touch our spirit when we do the work,” said Whaia, another member of A Wisdom Keepers Delegation, a Ngāti Kahungunu woman from New Zealand. “It takes both arms, both branches of the tree to really be strong, to be able to find our resilience in this space.”
The ability to express thoughts and feelings freely is a welcome respite for many arriving in Brazil after several years of these talks being held in countries where governments imposed limitations on free speech and demonstrations.
On Tuesday night, that freedom ran up against security personnel as a group of activists briefly tried to force their way into the main COP venue before they were pushed back.
The evolution that needs to happen for the world to take action is “not in the halls of the U.N. COP, but it’s in the streets and it is with our people,” said Jacob Johns, an Akimel O’Otham and Hopi member of A Wisdom Keepers Delegation who witnessed the security breach.
Now is the time to come together, respect each other and reevaluate the systems that govern the planet, said Pooven Moodley of the Earthrise Collective, which brings together activists from different traditions.
For him, the canoes seen in Wednesday’s gathering are a metaphor for the situation the world is in with climate change.
“The current canoe we’re in is falling apart, it’s leaking, people are being pushed over, and ultimately we’re heading for a massive waterfall. So the question is, what do we do, because we’re in that reality,” Moodley said. “We have to continue to defend the territories and the ecosystems that we can, but while we do that, we launch a new canoe.”
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Follow Melina Walling on X @MelinaWalling and Bluesky @melinawalling.bsky.social. Follow Joshua A. Bickel on Instagram, Bluesky and X @joshuabickel.
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