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The case centers around the regulation of glyphosate, the world’s most commonly used herbicide, which researchers have linked to health problems in both animals and people.

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Climate Change

Landmark Santa Marta climate talks can use energy crisis as turning point to end fossil fuels

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Santa Marta, Colombia, 28 April 2026 — Greenpeace is urging governments, including Australia, attending the first global effort to phase out fossil fuels to seize the current energy supply crisis to accelerate a just transition to renewable energy that protects people and builds long-term climate and energy stability.

On the eve of the conference and in response to the US-Israel war on Iran, Greenpeace activists displayed a message on the beach in Santa Marta saying: ’Renewables Power Peace’ and called on the attending countries to ‘End Fossil Fuels’. In Australia, Greenpeace activists displayed a banner in front of Sydney’s iconic Opera House, carrying the message, “Oil and gas fuel war, renewables power peace” while in Vanuatu, one of the world’s most climate-vulnerable countries, community members painted a message, ‘Renewables power peace! End fossil fuels’.

Representatives from over 50 governments, alongside Indigenous peoples, scientists and academics, farmers and hundreds of civil society groups are attending the landmark talks.

Speaking from Santa Marta, Shiva Gounden, Head of Pacific at Greenpeace Australia Pacific, said: “The impacts on lives and livelihoods from the illegal war on Iran by the United States of America and Israel and the spiralling energy costs hitting Pacific communities are symptoms of the same broken system: a global dependence on volatile fossil fuels. The machinery of conflict is fueled by the same industry choking our planet.

We come together in Santa Marta at an historic turning point. We recognize that true energy security cannot be built on the back of illegal wars or political power plays. To honour those caught in the crossfire of resource conflicts, we must accelerate a just transition to clean, sovereign renewables. This is our moment to choose a path of peace over a legacy of extraction, ensuring a safe and stable future for communities everywhere.”

To coincide with the First International Conference on Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels in Santa Marta, Greenpeace International has produced a policy briefing outlining the core elements of a just transition and the urgent, priority actions needed from national governments and through global co-operation to make it a reality. Greenpeace will also have a delegation of climate and energy policy experts on site in Santa Marta.

Laura Caicedo, Campaigns Coordinator at Greenpeace Colombia, said: “Colombia has everything it needs to lead an energy transition based on solar and wind power. This potential is a real opportunity to move toward a more just model, with community participation and tangible benefits for people. But for this to happen, we need global finance to be unlocked so that a national roadmap can be implemented. In a context of global crisis and instability, diversifying our energy mix is not only a climate necessity, it is key to strengthening the country’s economic resilience and reducing dependence on fossil fuels.”

-ENDS-

Photos in the Greenpeace Media Library

Notes:
[1] A Just Transition Away from Fossil Fuels: Policy Briefing

Media contact

Kate O’Callaghan on +61 406 231 892 or kate.ocallaghan@greenpeace.org

Landmark Santa Marta climate talks can use energy crisis as turning point to end fossil fuels

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Climate Change

Duke Energy Received Tax Breaks on Its Three N.C. Data Centers

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Meanwhile, the utility is proposing rate hikes to pay for natural gas plants that would power data centers statewide.

Duke Energy has received tax breaks for three data centers that it owns, state Commerce Department records show, while the utility is proposing an 18 percent rate hike on its North Carolina customers and reported $4.9 billion in gross profits last year.

Duke Energy Received Tax Breaks on Its Three N.C. Data Centers

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Santa Marta marks a new chapter in climate diplomacy

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Professor Elisa Morgera is the UN Special Rapporteur on Climate Change and Human Rights.

In the global fight against catastrophic, human-induced climate change, diplomacy plays a vital role.

Historic initiatives like the Paris Agreement and the Fund for Responding to Loss and Damage were the consequence of tireless, coordinated international efforts of states, civil society and scientists. The role of COP, and other summits like it, remains key. However, they are coming under increasing pressure.

Last year the climate COP30 was unable to take a decision on fossil fuels, despite calls from over 80 states, as well as children and youth, medical professionals, Indigenous peoples and climate justice movements. A landmark deal to cut global shipping emissions was put on ice and global talks to develop a much-needed treaty to end plastic pollution were stalled by a few states who wish to avoid even mentioning fossil fuels in international negotiations.

    In these instances, the process of building consensus was hijacked by actors whose priorities lie in the continued exploration and production of fossil fuels, magnifying the views of a handful of powerful states at the expense of all others.

    In recent months, illegal aggressions in Venezuela and Iran, armed conflicts, political turbulence and economic instability have conspired to make international cooperation harder. At the same time, the impact our reliance on fossil fuels and petrochemical fertilisers has on the cost of living, energy and food insecurity has been laid bare.

    Against this backdrop, a new idea was born at COP30: the First Conference on Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels, which the Colombian government is co-hosting with the Netherlands in Santa Marta this week.

    Inclusion and implementation

    It represents the possibility of a new kind of multilateral forum: one that foregrounds the voices of those most impacted by the climate crisis and is relentlessly focused on implementation. It is only open to states that wish to make progress and discuss how – not if – to move away from fossil fuel dependency. And it is set to draw on the insights of Indigenous peoples, Afro-descendants and peasants, civil society, cities and academics, women and youth, who are often left out of international negotiating rooms.

    The talks centre on how to ensure that the transition away from fossil fuels is also a just one: a transition that protects workers, communities and the environment, respects human rights and builds public legitimacy, rather than imposing new costs on those least responsible for the crisis.

    To phase out fossil fuels, developing countries need exit route from “debt trap”

    The conference is also unpacking how international cooperation must work for countries and communities facing fiscal dependence, debt burdens and limited implementation capacity. It aims to identify the financial and technological support required from the Global North to allow other countries to leapfrog into sustainable renewables-based economies.

    In addition, it will seek to address the harmful international legal barriers – such as the thousands of international investment agreements which include investor–state dispute settlement (ISDS) provisions – that allow foreign corporations to sue states for measures adopted in the public interest.

    Solutions that tackle injustice

    These are complex, but necessary conversations to be had for all governments. Most international fora are being used to “avoid the conversation”. We have many of the solutions, but we need to ensure they’re implemented in ways that benefit all countries and sectors of society, not just a few.

    Santa Marta aims to strengthen a “coalition” of ambitious states, who are responsive to the voices of those most affected by climate change. It also aims to mobilise scientists, lawyers, economists, policy and energy experts, and the medical community to support states, as well as cities and citizen initiatives to pilot promising approaches around the world. Through a deeply inclusive and participatory approach, at every level, Santa Marta can pave the way towards solutions that are co-developed and respond directly to what’s needed on the ground.

    New panel of climate scientists calls for fossil fuel transition roadmaps

    This will be key for achieving a just transition. Many countries, especially in the Global South, are not held back by a lack of ambition, but by structural barriers: debt, high borrowing costs and international rules that still reward continued fossil fuel extraction over managed decline at the expense of people’s health and economic well-being.

    Santa Marta comes at a critical moment: environmentally, morally, economically but also legally.

    Legal accountability on fossil fuels

    The landmark advisory opinion on climate change, issued last July by the International Court of Justice, made clear that states have a legal obligation to act effectively and ambitiously on climate change, and that fossil fuel expansion, production, consumption and subsidies are not in line with these international obligations. It followed similar rulings, by the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea in 2024 and the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, also in 2025.

    The transition away from fossil fuels is not simply an environmental necessity, but an urgent matter of security, resilience and health. It is a human rights imperative. And an inherently exclusionary approach focused on major powers will not deliver all the benefits of a fossil fuel-free global economy.

    Vanuatu pursues new UN resolution to turn ICJ climate opinion into action

    The Santa Marta conference is set to address this and look at how fossil-fuel-dependent countries can diversify on fair terms, how communities can access and produce affordable and reliable renewable energy, and how the transition can deliver visible social and economic gains instead of reproducing new forms of exclusion, dependency, and insecurity.

    At Santa Marta we can make meaningful, lasting progress through a diplomacy of implementation, inclusion and legal accountability that can provide a new yardstick for all the other multilateral processes on climate change and other fossil fuel-related issues, such as plastics, food, health, taxation and the protection of peace.

    A full statement by the UN Special Rapporteur on the Santa Marta Conference can be found here.

    The post Santa Marta marks a new chapter in climate diplomacy appeared first on Climate Home News.

    https://www.climatechangenews.com/2026/04/28/santa-marta-marks-a-new-chapter-in-climate-diplomacy/

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