Advertisement

Climate scientist and activist Peter Kalmus was one of the several people chained to the front of a Chase Bank. It’s one of the many financial institutions that has contributed huge sums to funding fossil fuel projects despite announcing plans to reach net-zero emissions by 2050. The organizers shut the main entrance and stood there for several hours until police officers with bolt cutters came and arrested them.

“We are in this genuine emergency, and we’re not acting like that. So we have to fix that,” he said.

Advertisement

Kalmus argues that declaring an emergency and deploying resources to address how the climate crisis is already affecting frontline communities is necessary to avoid more human suffering. He worried that the same governments ignoring and even worsening the crisis would probably bar climate refugees from immigrating closer to the poles. Many Central Americans at the U.S.- Mexico border are leaving their homes after natural disasters. But the current immigration system and systems in many conservative governments around the world do not address the present and future of climate displacement. “These are the kinds of issues that we have to start addressing now,” Kalmus said.

Advertisement

There are more protests planned in the near future. This week, activists glued their hands to the UK Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy building and called for the department to stop all new fossil fuel projects. Another group of scientists and activists managed to glue themselves to the reception desk inside Shell’s London headquarters.