We Need Your Ideas: A Call for Direct Action in the Climate Movement

So enough is enough.

Our friends, comrades, loved ones and heroes from the UK to Bolivia to Nigeria to Australia to Canada are fighting against the fossil fuel empire in bold creative ways every day.  Appalachian activists have taken a stand against King Coal, but now we need ideas and action from the rest of U.S. climate movement

We’ve been built and trained the climate movement for years.  But it’s time to be as creative as our friends that camped out on the Royal Bank of Scotland’s front lawn last month and as courageous as the women shutting down oil operations in the Niger Delta.

It’s time we stepped into the fray.

Next week, I’m headed off to the Ruckus Advanced Action Boot Camp for Eco-Justice in the Twin Cities and then Appalachia Rising in Washington D.C. from there.  Out of these events, I hope to see a dozen U.S. based climate camps (ending with actions), ongoing direct action campaigns and mass actions in the next year.  We can’t continue to meet and train and send emails, we need to take action and organize action campaigns.

Check out this thought piece and call for action from McKibben, Radford and Tarbotton.

Cross posted from Grist.

We Need Your Ideas: A Call for Direct Action in the Climate Movement
We’re going to have to build a movement much bigger than anything we’ve built before. That movement is our only real hope, and we need your help to plot its future.

Dear Friends,

God, what a summer. Federal scientists have concluded that we’ve just come through the warmest six months, the warmest year, and the warmest decade in human history. Nineteen nations have set new all-time temperature records; the mercury in Pakistan reached 129 degrees, the hottest temperature ever seen in Asia. And there’s nothing abstract about those numbers, not with Moscow choking on smoke from its epic heat wave and fires, not with Pakistan half washed away from its unprecedented flooding.

But that’s just the half of it. It’s also the summer when the U.S. Senate decided to keep intact its 20-year bipartisan record of doing nothing about global warming. Global warming is no act of God. We’re up against the most profitable and powerful industries on earth: the companies racking up record profits from fossil fuels. And we’re not going to beat them by asking nicely. We’re going to have to build a movement, a movement much bigger than anything we’ve built before, a movement that can push back against the financial power of Big Oil and Big Coal. That movement is our only real hope, and we need your help to plot its future.

We’ve got some immediate and crucial priorities. For instance, groups around the world are joining together on 10/10/10 for a Global Work Party, demonstrating that we already know many of the solutions to the climate crisis. That will be a good day not just to put up solar panels, but also to shame our political leaders, to say to them, “We’re getting to work. What about you?” Meanwhile, around the country, lawyers and community groups are doing yeoman’s work fighting off new coal plants, activists are persuading banks to stop loaning to corporate villains, city councils are figuring out how to make their towns more efficient and resilient. This is the basic work of any movement, the foundation on which hope for long-term progress rests.

But necessary as such efforts are, they’re not sufficient. We’re making progress, but not as fast as the physical situation is deteriorating. Time is not on our side, so we’ve concluded that going forward mass direct action must play a bigger role in this movement, as it eventually did in the suffrage movement, the civil-rights movement, and the fight against corporate globalization. Even now, environmentalists in places like the coalfields of Appalachia have been putting these tactics to good use, albeit in small ways. (In the spring of 2009, our three groups worked with others to pull off a large-scale action outside the congressional power plant in D.C. that resulted in a promise that it would cease to burn coal.) History suggests, in other words, that one way to effectively communicate both to the general public and to our leaders the urgency of the crisis is to put our bodies on the line.

Nobody can predict which one event will trigger social change. Paul Revere was not the only rider to warn of the British advance, and many people refused to move to the back of the bus before Rosa Parks. But we do know two things. First, that we must act with unity, and second, many minds working together are likely to be smarter. So we’re asking for your help. As you go about your other work on behalf of the planet and its diverse communities, think about the possibilities for direct action, and write them down and send them to us. Here are a few thoughts to guide you.

  • *Our actions must be infused with the spirit of Gandhi, Martin Luther King Jr., and other peaceful protesters before us. No violence, no property damage.
  • *We need large actions, with many members of the general public. Think hundreds and thousands. So don’t concentrate on the kind of tactics that only a few hardy specialists can carry out; we’re not going to have hundreds of people rappelling or scuba diving.
  • *We don’t think for a minute that we can actually physically shut down the fossil-fuel economy for any meaningful period; it’s too big. We need to aim for effective symbolic targets—say, dirty, old coal-fired power plants—and use them to make clear the need and opportunity to cut carbon fast.
  • Our actions must be rooted in the communities where they are held and be organized hand in hand with local groups and activists.
  • Our tactics need to engage onlookers, not alienate them. We have to have effective ways of keeping provocateurs and incendiaries at a distance, and attracting the kind of people who actually influence the rest of the public. Discipline will matter.
  • We need to be transparent and open in our planning, not reliant on secrecy. We’ll need to do our work certain that law enforcement is looking over our shoulders; our method can’t be surprise.
  • Beauty counts. We’re fighting for the beauty in the world that’s being stolen by our adversaries, and at the same time we’re aiming for hearts and minds.
  • We don’t have unlimited resources. The cost and complexity of these kinds of actions can mount quickly. As with all things environmental, frugality and simplicity are virtues.

Note that though all of our groups have international operations, we’re only thinking about America right now. That’s for three reasons. One, in some parts of the world activists have already done great work that can teach us a lot. Two, America really has to show some leadership, since we’re historically the biggest cause of climate change. And three, though we Americans face real and sobering risks when we engage in direct action, people doing the same things in many other nations can be locked up for decades or worse; in those places, other tactics will have to suffice.

Note too that though this letter comes from just three environmental groups, we want this fight open to everyone. We’ll happily work with any organization that shares our goals and tactics as plans go forward; in fact, we think that breaking down boundaries between groups is key to any chance at success. We’ll do our best to reach out, but please make sure you let us know you want to be involved.

We’ve set up a special email address for ideas: climate.ideas@gmail.com. By late autumn, we hope we’ll have been able to mine those ideas and start coming up with coherent plans for actions starting next spring.

We know this strategy won’t appeal to all of you. That’s fine; there are a thousand other useful ways to help, and we don’t want to distract anyone from other work they’re doing. But if you have ideas, send them in. It’s clear to us that this is going to be a battle for the long haul, and we’re going to need to be creative and committed. Thanks much for being a big part of it.


Environmentalist and author Bill McKibben is the founder of 350.org, an international climate campaign. Phil Radford is executive director of Greenpeace USA. Rebecca Tarbotton is executive director of Rainforest Action Network.

4 Responses to “We Need Your Ideas: A Call for Direct Action in the Climate Movement”


  1. 1 Ned Hamson Sep 12th, 2010 at 8:27 pm

    Boycotts – real – and changing daily behavior in ways that benefit climate, ourselves and reduce income to planet-killers is all that will change things for real.

    Don’t drive to the protest or work – walk, take a bus, ride a bike = consume less energy and reduce income of planet-killers. Use the money you save to buy something locally produced. Simple – but not if you don’t do it and don’t tell your friends about what you have done!

  2. 2 free transit Sep 12th, 2010 at 9:18 pm

    Keep attacking the supply side and you will fail.

  3. 3 Marty Sep 16th, 2010 at 1:59 pm

    ethanol association http://www.ethanol.org has petition that should be signed by everyone who wants cleaner air now by the EPA increasing the amount of ethanol from 10% to 15% blend in gas. 20% blends the base level needed to start sustained cleaner burning fuel. Help!!!!

  4. 4 Bill Irving Oct 12th, 2010 at 11:39 am

    Use the ideas in the book, Addicted to Energy: A Venture Capitalist’s Perspective on Protecting Our Economy and Our Climate, by Elton Sherwin, Jr. (Energy House Publishing: 2010). He argues persuasively that the fight on climate change is one to significantly reduce our country’s waste of energy. Where there are high levels of CO2 there is gross energy inefficiencies in the form of wast heat. Plugging our leaking energy ship will employ thousands, if not millions of us as energy auditors, HVAC contractors, solar energy designers and installers, etc., save money for strapped state and local governments who import much of their energy, and reduce our dependence on foreign oil which increases our country’s security. One idea from his book I am pursuing here in North Idaho: grade the energy efficiency of commercial buildings (energy cost divided by square footage) and post the grades (A, B, C and D) on the outside of the buildings and online, to give building owners an incentive to upgrade their heating, cooling and lighting systems. Quick payback items will be emphasized. Building owners will then be able to get more money for their buildings when they sell or lease, the building’s tenants will live in a more comfortable, less expensive to heat, cool and light environment and the community contributes less CO2 and heat to the planet. A win-win-win. Ideas like Sherwin’s expand the size of the choir: people don’t have to believe in human-driven climate change to want to get more people to work and save money, both individually and collectively.

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About


Scott Parkin is a Senior Campaigner with Rainforest Action Network and organizes with Rising Tide North America. He has worked on a variety of campaigns around climate change, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, mountaintop removal, labor issues and anti-corporate globalization. Originally from Texas, he now lives in San Francisco.

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