Green ngos cannot take big business cash and save planet

Theconversation

Green ngos cannot take big business cash and save planet"


Play all audios:

Loading...

When she wrote recently that “big green groups” are doing more harm than good when it comes to saving the planet, Naomi Klein was was right to be concerned. In recent years the environmental


agenda has become heavily corporatised. Unimaginable a few decades back, partnerships between environmental NGOs and big-brand companies have become common. The Environmental Defense Fund


led the way in 1990, partnering with McDonald’s to introduce more sustainable packaging. Today, the WWF receives funding from and works with Coca-Cola to “save” polar bears, and acts as


“conservation partner” to IKEA. Conservation International has partnerships with Starbucks and Walmart. The Nature Conservatory has partnered with Boeing, British Petroleum, Shell, Monsanto,


and Walmart, among many others. Even Greenpeace, one of the more traditionally anti-corporate NGOs, is now cooperating with Unilever and Coca-Cola to promote “Greenfreeze” refrigeration


technology (though unlike others, Greenpeace does not accept corporate funding). Ties between environmental NGOs and the world’s largest oil and gas companies have also deepened. To name


just a few examples, Time magazine reported in 2012 that “between 2007 and 2010 the Sierra Club, a US grassroots conservation network founded in the 19th century, accepted over US$25m in


donations from the gas industry”. The majority of these funds came from Chesapeake Energy, one of the world’s biggest gas drillers. The Nature Conservancy has accepted millions of dollars


from British Petroleum (BP) and is currently working with BP to “ensure their oil exploration efforts in the West are done sustainably”. And Antony Burgmans, a non-executive board member of


BP, sits on the board of WWF International. While not completely new, such links between environmental NGOs and the biggest retail and energy corporations in the world are now commonplace,


and growing in number. As Peter Dauvergne and I argue in our forthcoming book Protest Inc., corporate-NGO partnerships do not represent a simple business takeover of activism. But they do


demonstrate a significant shift in the strategy and ethos of many NGOs. They reflect the acceptance of corporations as allies rather than adversaries, and of the market as an efficient and


acceptable tool through which to pursue environmental objectives. As many of the big environmental NGOs morph into global business-style institutions, they have come to value win-win


moderate calls for “concrete and measurable progress” and impact over more radical disruptive demands to transform the system. A consequence of environmental NGOs opting to co-operate with


corporations has been that more effort has gone into market-friendly and consumer-driven activism - eco-certification and eco-labeling, for example, which helps legitimise rather than


challenge business as usual. For instance, the WWF/Coca-Cola campaign to “save” polar bears has driven sales of over one billion cans of Coke adorned with a white polar bear. The Sierra


Club’s partnership with Clorox rents out the club’s century-old logo to help market a line of “green” cleaning products, in exchange for a percentage of sales. One can only imagine that John


Muir, the Sierra Club’s first president and staunch advocate of ecological preservation, would hardly be impressed at the extent of his group’s compromises. Efforts such as these may


improve the ecological footprint of individual products and bring revenue to cash-strapped environmental organisations - but they are not fundamentally helping the planet, in fact they


reinforce unsustainable patterns of production and consumption worldwide. The great danger of corporatisation is that while environmental NGOs tinker at the edges with efforts to improve


recycling and packaging (such as Greenpeace’s campaign to remove the illegal Indonesian paper fibre in Mattel’s Barbie boxes), overall consumption is rising exponentially. So too is the


power and profit of the oil and retail corporations whose unsustainable business models drive climate change. Grassroots environmental movements and groups continue to resist and challenge


corporatisation. But this does not mean they are unaffected by it. Our research has found that at as global leaders praise corporate-NGO partnerships, politicians, police forces and court


rooms in nations such as the UK, US and Canada treat street-level activists — particularly those involved in direct action — increasingly harshly. When credible alternatives are smeared by


association, such actions only enhance the power that corporations have to weaken environmental activism.


Trending News

Perth photography event a must for shutterbugs

CALLING ALL PERTH PHOTOGRAPHERS; THE PHOTO LIVE EXPO IS COMING TO PERTH WITH SOMETHING FOR ALL SKILL LEVELS, AND THIS YE...

University of london: appointments

ABSTRACT The following appointments in the University of. London have been announced: Dr. William Burns, officer-in-char...

Ingredients for a homestyle thanksgiving, 200 miles above the earth

For Thanksgiving, NASA's space food experts always try to make sure astronauts get to enjoy traditional holiday far...

Media invited to cover pair of juneteenth events at milwaukee va | va milwaukee health care | veterans affairs

PRESS RELEASE June 3, 2024 Milwaukee , WI — The Milwaukee VA is inviting media to cover a pair of events celebrating the...

Connecting media organizations and the community

Connecting media organizations and the communityLeah DePieroFollow2 min read·Oct 12, 2017 --ListenShareFrom the early da...

Latests News

Green ngos cannot take big business cash and save planet

When she wrote recently that “big green groups” are doing more harm than good when it comes to saving the planet, Naomi ...

Madhya pradesh villages flooded after tonga talab bursts; cops blame deeply-dug rat burrows rats ; 20 villages on alert

MORENA (MADHYA PRADESH): Four villages were flooded after a pond burst in Madhya Pradesh's Morena district on Tuesd...

Why trump decided nielsen wasn't tough enough on immigration

WABE’s mission is simple: “Inform, inspire, reflect and empower our greater Atlanta community. ” We do that through the ...

Tata trusts appoint vijay singh, venu srinivasan as vice chairmen

Mumbai, Dec 13 (IANS) Tata Trusts on Wednesday announced the appointment of former Defence Secretary Vijay Singh, and Ch...

Autologous hematopoietic cell transplantation for the treatment of relapsed/refractory pediatric, adolescent, and young adult hodgkin lymphoma: a sing

ABSTRACT Pediatric, adolescent, and young adult patients with relapsed or refractory Hodgkin lymphoma receive multimodal...

Top