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Outside Telstra’s Annual General Meeting in October, Greenpeace activists staged a bold and creative protest – complete with a Telstra-coded phone booth – to urge both shareholders and the public to call Telstra to disconnect from Big Gas and walk away from the Business Council of Australia (BCA).

Inside the AGM, Greenpeace campaigners,climate scientists, and sustainable investment experts dominated the question time portion of the event, challenging Telstra’s leadership over its ties to the BCA – a powerful lobby group stacked with Australia’s biggest polluters, which has been pushing for new dirty gas projects and weaker climate action.

It was a perfect warning shot: Telstra can no longer claim to be a climate leader, if it stays on the board of a group like the BCA that lobbies to undermine and delay climate action.

Telstra’s climate credibility is on the line

The telecommunications giant claims that “climate change is everybody’s business” and talks up its environmental record. At the same time, Telstra is on the board of the BCA, who on behalf of its members – including Telstra – has doubled down on its support for dirty gas projects like Woodside’s North West Shelf extension and lobbied for for a dangerously weak 2035 climate target.

This isn’t leadership — it’s hypocrisy and greenwashing.

Telstra talks a big game on climate, but remaining on the board, while the BCA lobbies for new gas projects in its name, means Telstra is part of the problem.

Solaye Snider, Climate Campaigner at Greenpeace Australia Pacific.

That’s why Greenpeace launched the Climate Credibility Scorecard, ranking a list of influential BCA members on whether their lobbying truly aligns with their climate commitments, with Telstra ranking at the bottom.

Greenpeace Activists Stage Protest at Telstra AGM in Melbourne, Australia © Greenpeace

Why focus on Telstra?

Plenty of major Australian brands are members of the BCA, however, Telstra’s position is unique. As both a board member and part of the BCA’s Climate and Energy Working Group, Telstra has the power to influence the BCA’s direction when it comes to climate action and advocacy.

If Telstra truly supports the goals of the Paris Agreement and limiting warming to 1.5°C, it must ensure its advocacy efforts match its promises. Remaining silent while the BCA lobbies for more dirty fossil fuels directly undermines that climate credibility, and therefore, their brand.

What is even more surprising is that Telstra previously threatened to quit the BCA back in 2019 over climate concerns. Since then, the climate crisis has only worsened in Australia – but it seems like Telstra has gone backwards.

Greenpeace crashes Telstra’s AGM

Yesterday’s AGM was a turning point. Greenpeace campaigners joined forces with renowned climate scientist David Karoly and investment analysts from SIX, to expose how Telstra’s membership with the BCA undermines its public climate commitments.

As our questions dominated the AGM agenda, Telstra’s leadership became visibly frustrated, but still wouldn’t give us a straight answer. We kept pushing, because a company can’t claim to be a climate leader to the public while giving cover to the Gas Lobby in private.

Outside of the AGM, our activists spoke with shareholders about how Telstra’s membership with the BCA undermines its public climate commitments, inviting them to take action and call on Telstra’s leadership to disconnect from Big Gas.

It was loud, bold and an impossible to ignore moment – which is exactly what’s needed to hold these big corporations accountable.

Telstra’s climate credibility has been challenged at its AGM today, as Greenpeace Australia Pacific, alongside climate and investment experts, called out the company for its silence while serving on the board of the board of the Business Council of Australia (BCA) — a vested interest group that has doubled-down on its support for new gas and lobbied against climate action © Greenpeace

What comes next

Telstra has an influential role in the BCA – and what they do next has the potential to genuinely shift the BCA’s position on gas. This is an opportunity for Telstra to be part of the solution by aligning its lobbying activity with its values, which could encourage other companies to step up too.

But so far the company is remaining silent, implicitly endorsing the BCA’s fossil fuel lobbying. So it’s up to all of us to keep the pressure up!

Together, we can make it impossible for corporations to hide behind lobby groups like the BCA – and prove that their customers aren’t falling for the greenwash.

Telstra’s Climate Disconnect: It’s time for Telstra to walk away from the Gas Lobby.

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Climate Change

Why Beaches Are Swamped With Sargassum, the Stinky Seaweed Menace

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It smells like rotten eggs, releases toxic gases, endangers sea life and scuttles vacations. Scientists, startups and communities are trying to figure out what to do with it all.

From our collaborating partner Living on Earth, public radio’s environmental news magazine, an interview by Aynsley O’Neill with Inside Climate News’ Teresa Tomassoni.

Why Beaches Are Swamped With Sargassum, the Stinky Seaweed Menace

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Why women’s leadership is central to unlocking the global phaseout of fossil fuels

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Osprey Orielle Lake is founder and executive director of The Women’s Earth and Climate Action Network (WECAN) and a steering committee member of the Fossil Fuel Treaty.

Around the world, women are leading some of the most powerful efforts to stop fossil fuel expansion and implement the just transition the climate crisis demands.

In the Ecuadorian Amazon, Nemonte Nenquimo, an Indigenous Waorani woman, led a successful lawsuit for the Waorani against the Ecuadorian government to protect their territory and the Amazonian rainforest from oil extraction. Ecuador’s courts ruled in favor of the Waorani, setting a legal precedent for Indigenous rights and prompting similar legal fights worldwide.

In the heart of Cancer Alley in the Gulf South of the United States, Sharon Lavigne, founder of Rise St. James, took on fossil fuel polluters and won. After stopping a Formosa petrochemical facility in her parish, she continues to organize communities to stop fossil fuels, bringing awareness to the severe health impacts caused by the industry.

An initial cornerstone for an upcoming government convening on fossil fuel phaseout is the Fossil Fuel Treaty, which was founded by Tzeporah Burman. She won the 2019 Climate Breakthrough Award for her bold Treaty vision, which has now taken center stage in international climate action.

These women are not anomalies, they are part of a broader movement. Women the world over are stopping harmful projects and building regenerative futures. They are defending land, water, climate, and health. They are redefining what leadership looks like in a time of crisis.

    Research has found that countries with higher representation of women in parliament are more likely to ratify environmental treaties. One prominent cross-national study found that CO2 emissions decrease by approximately 11.51 percent in response to a one-unit increase in each countries’ scoring on the Women’s Political Empowerment Index. When women are incorporated into disaster planning or forest management, projects are more resilient and effective.

    Yet because of persistent gender inequality, women – particularly Indigenous, Black and Brown women and women in low-income and frontline communities – are often disproportionately harmed by fossil fuel extraction and pollution. At the same time, they are also indispensable leaders of equitable solutions.

    Bold, transformative solutions needed

    Although the climate crisis may not be in the headlines recently, the crisis is increasing at lightening speed. From 2023 to 2025, the world crossed a dangerous threshold, marking the first three-year global average that exceeded the crucial 1.5°C guardrail, the very limit scientists identified as critical to avoid the worst catastrophic tipping points.

    This is not a eulogy for 1.5°C, but an alarm about a narrowing window. The data makes clear that we still have an opportunity to hold long-term warming below that life-affirming threshold. What is required now is not incrementalism and business as usual but bold and transformative solutions from grassroots movements to the halls of government.

    A woman looks at a solar panel, at a factory called Ener-G-Africa, where high-quality solar panels made by an all-women team are produced, in Cape Town, South Africa, February 9, 2023. (Photo: REUTERS/Esa Alexander)

    A woman looks at a solar panel, at a factory called Ener-G-Africa, where high-quality solar panels made by an all-women team are produced, in Cape Town, South Africa, February 9, 2023. (Photo: REUTERS/Esa Alexander)

    At the top of the list in tackling the climate crisis is the urgent need for a global phaseout of fossil fuel extraction and production. Coal, oil, and gas remain the primary driver of the climate crisis, and fossil fuel pollution is responsible for one in five deaths worldwide. The simple but challenging fact is, there is no way forward without a phaseout.

    In 2023, at the U.N. Climate Summit in Dubai (COP28), governments agreed for the first time to “transition away from fossil fuels.” The language was historic but nonbinding, and implementation has been severely hindered. Most governments are doubling down and increasing production across coal, gas, and oil. At COP30 in Brazil, while 80 countries called for fossil fuel language in the final outcome text, governments ultimately left without any commitments to a phaseout.

    Women’s assembly for fossil fuel phaseout

    In response to this stalled progress, Colombia and the Netherlands are convening the First Conference on Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels, bringing together governments committed to advancing cooperation toward a managed, equitable phaseout. Occurring outside the formal UN climate negotiations, the gathering reflects a growing recognition that progress often requires voluntary alliances of ambitious nations.

    The urgency of this moment demands more than policy tweaks. It calls for a restructuring of the systems that fueled the crisis such as economic models that externalize harm, energy systems that prioritize profit over people, and governance structures that marginalize frontline communities. How we navigate this transition will shape the world our children inherit, and evidence shows that women’s leadership is vital to ensure a healthy and equitable outcome.

    Colombia aims to launch fossil fuel transition platform at first global conference

    As governments, civil society and global advocates prepare for the conference in Colombia, women’s leadership must not be an afterthought. It needs to be central to the agenda, inspired by equity, justice and care.

    That is why the Women’s Earth and Climate Action Network is convening global women leaders to advance strategies, proposals, and projects at the public Women’s Assembly for a Just Fossil Fuel Phaseout to be held virtually on March 31 to call for transformative action in Colombia. All are welcome.

    A livable future depends on bold action now, and on women leading the way at this critical moment.

    The post Why women’s leadership is central to unlocking the global phaseout of fossil fuels appeared first on Climate Home News.

    Why women’s leadership is central to unlocking the global phaseout of fossil fuels

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    On the Farm, the Hidden Climate Cost of America’s Broken Health Care System

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    American farmers are drowning in health insurance costs, while their German counterparts never worry about medical bills. The difference may help determine which country’s small farms are better prepared for a changing climate.

    Samantha Kemnah looked out the foggy window of her home in New Berlin, New York, at the 150-acre dairy farm she and her husband, Chris, bought last year. This winter, an unprecedented cold front brought snowstorms and ice to the region.

    On the Farm, the Hidden Climate Cost of the Broken U.S. Health Care System

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