Thursday, 24 December 2015

Indigenous activism, Adani's Carmichael mine, and the High Court of Australia









Please note: 
The Galilee Basin Alliance does not have a website. 
From time to time, emails from the GBA are 
published on this site.



23 Dec (1 day ago)Galilee Basin Alliance


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Indigenous activist holds out against Carmichael mine

  • THE AUSTRALIAN
  • DECEMBER 23, 2015 12:00AM
Aboriginal activist Adrian Burragubba, who lost the support of his indigenous clan to fight Adani’s $16 billion Carmichael mine, is now single-handedly delaying the final approval for the project.

Just weeks after Mr Burragubba faced a revolt by fellow native title claimants of the Wangan and Jagalingou people over his federal court challenge, the Queensland government yesterday declared it was unable to issue mining leases or environmental authority until the case was finalised.

The appeal by Mr Burragubba, who has been financially backed by green groups, was this month described by the presiding Federal Court judge as “shambolic’’ and is being pursued while his own clan neg
otiates a land use agreement with Adani.

India’s energy giant, which is entering its sixth year in the approval process, was yesterday given the go-ahead by the federal government — with 29 strict conditions — for the planned expansion of the Abbot Point port to export up to 60,000 million tonnes of coal a year.

The approval follows last week’s decision in the Land Court of Queensland to dismiss green groups’ objection to the project.

The Land Court decision cleared the way for final state environmental authority to be given within 30 days, and for the Queensland government to issue the mining leases on the project, which has faced a co-ordinated strategy by various legal groups to frustrate Adani in legal fights and force it to abandon the mine.

A spokeswoman for the state Minister for State Development, Natural Resources and Mines, Anthony Lynham, last night said he could not issue the mining lease for Australia’s largest proposed coal mine until Mr Burragubba’s case was resolved.

The case, which has been adjourned for further hearing in February, challenges a decision of the National Native Title Tribunal to allow the granting of a mining lease on the claimed traditional land of the clan, who this month voted to support Adani.

Mr Burragubba, who yesterday did not returns calls, this month told he was willing to take his fight to the High Court.

Dr Lynham’s office said it was forced to wait for the case to be resolved.

“Native title issues must be resolved and an environmental authority issued before the minister can consider the grant of any mining lease,’’ the spokeswoman said.

Within hours of federal Environment Minister Greg Hunt approving the port expansion, with strict conditions, green groups began fund-raising for a new court challenge.

Mr Hunt said the approved dredging had been reduced by 97 per cent from the original dredging proposal. All dredge material would be placed onshore on existing industrial land.

“The port area is at least 20km from any coral reef and no coral reef will be impacted,’’ Mr Hunt said.

Adani welcomed the approval and said it had willingly supported the move to an onshore disposal of dredged material last year when a site not previously available became a viable option for proximate, well managed disposal of dredged material.

“This is the third time a wellmanaged, strictly regulated, science and evidence-based expansion approval has been the subject of a state and federal government approval process since 2010,’’ a company spokesman said.

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COURIER MAIL 2/12/2015

Miner prepares for Abbot Point legal challengesADANI has received Federal Government approval for its $1 billion Abbot Point coal port expansion but is already preparing for legal challenges.

A week after winning a key legal challenge to its Carmichael coal mine in the Land Court, the approval granted by Federal Environment Minister Greg Hunt forAbbot Point was the final hurdle under the EPBC Act for the $US7.5 billion ($10.4 billion) first stage of the rail, port and mine project.

But activist group GetUp! has started a fundraising campaign to finance court action while a host of green groups voiced outrage over effects on the Great Barrier Reef.

The latest approval is also being challenged by the Australian Conservation Foundation in the Federal Court.

The State Government has also put its own demands on the project saying no dredging would be allowed until Adani reached “financial closure” on the project. It also said dredging would not start until its wholly owned North Queensland Bulk Ports had money in the bank. But credit rating agency Moody’s has warned investors that Adani Ports, which holds the 99-year lease on Abbot Point, was facing financial questions, with existing customers hit by the mining downturn.

While Adani faces a tough battle to fund the project, Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk ruled out any financial aid, saying it was a private company and must obtain finance independently.

“There will be no taxpayers’ money going towards this project,” she said.

She also said there would be jobs for regional Queensland and safeguards to protect the Reef, with the Federal Government approval containing 30 conditions.

State Development Minister Anthony Lynham said the approval by Mr Hunt found there would be no significant residual effects on the Reef.

“All dredge material will be placed onshore on existing industrial land. No dredge material will be placed in the World Heritage Area or the Caley Valley Wetlands,” the Federal Government said.

Adani welcomed the approval and said it was key to its plans to deliver 10,000 direct and indirect jobs and $22 billion in taxes and royalties to Queensland, claims disputed by activists.

Deputy Opposition Leader John-Paul Langbroek accused Ms Palaszczuk of “walking both sides of the street” by welcoming the approval but ruling out government support. He urged her to resurrect LNP government plans to help shore up the mine, including ensuring vital infrastructure would be built.

Greenpeace said dredging 61ha of marine habitat was irresponsible enough, “but doing it for a dirty big coal mine that would only worsen greenhouse pollution that is already endangering the Reef is simply negligent”.

Galilee Basin Alliance

08:36 (6 hours ago)
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Adrian Burragubba right of reply to The Australian 'Indigenous activist holds out against Carmichael mine'



The Australian newspaper has run another one of its distorted stories today - but they are right about this... Adrian Burragubba is standing in the Federal court fighting to stop Adani's Carmichael mine. And it is good that they report Minister Lynham saying he cannot issue the mining lease 'for Australia’s largest proposed coal mine until Mr Burragubba’s case was resolved'.
But as usual, The Australian is wilfully ignorant of the facts - Adrian Burragubba hasn't lost the support of his clan; no, there isn't a revolt of the native title claimants, just a handful of pro-Adani insiders; no, there is no decision by Wangan and Jagalingou claimants to overturn their opposition to Adani's mine; and no, green groups are not funding Adrian's legal challenge - and it is not 'shambolic', it is ground breaking. 


Fenya --- A Christmas Truce from the Veterans for Peace UK


FENYA - CHRISTMAS TRUCE 
Anti-War Christmas single by Veterans For Peace UK and Firebrand Records

Wednesday, 23 December 2015

A POST OF RECORD : A BIG THANK YOU : THE BLESSINGS OF CHRISTMAS

Picture above from here

This week The Network has exceeded 550,000 page views.  

I find this amazing.

Some of it is due to Andrew Bolt.  Thanks Andrew.
Back when Andrew was facing a trial 
when he accused some Aboriginal people of 
only using their Aboriginality for personal profit and advancement,
he sent his readership to this blog
when it would have been a dicey matter
for him to keep conversing with his readership.

The inference was that I was of the Left.
For Andrew's benefit, I am usually too Left for the Right
and too Right for the Left -
which should place be pretty much in the middle, I reckon.
Perhaps Andrew thought it would teach me a lesson.
The surprise, from my point of view, came for his fan base.
I treated them courteously.
I rejected only one comment - and that was because of bad language.
I advised the writer that English was a flexible language.
I suggested he re-write his comment without the bad language
and there was every likelihood I would print his work.
I didn't hear from him again.

One of Andrew's fans even complimented me.
He said that, even though he did not agree with my politics,
he liked my style - or words to that effect.

Over the years - and in particular in recent months -
the statistics of many blog posts has reached three
and sometimes four figure statistics.
That's quite a lot for me.
So I express my sincere gratitude to those who
have notched up the numbers for The Network.

Many of you don't live in the Great South Land of Oz.
You live in Europe, Asia, and the Americas -
to mention three of the five continents.
Many of you come by other social media.
The wonders of 21st C widespread communication!

The Network emerged from a previous blog, The Eagle's Nest.
So one could say that there was a dry run - 
even though it was not planned as such.
The format of The Network has changed 
as Blogger has permitted and I have tried different things.

There is one Networker I would like to mention by name.
My friend and comrade-in-arms, Denis Wilson.
Until recent times, Denis maintained a blog -
This year, Denis has followed a journey 
which has been spelt out on his Facebook site rather than his blog.
Denis and I met on-line with our blogging ventures -
his were environmental and mine was community and political comment.
The friendship has long since been cemented off-line
even though we live in different states of Australia. 

Denis is not the only friend I have made through blogging,
and I am most grateful for those friendships.
I hope there are many more regular readers
that I may be able to meet.

I am at an age and stage where blogging and social media
has become more vital for me.
As of this year, I am having to admit that my days as a
person with a direct role in community organising may be numbered.
I have been involved in community organisations since I was twelve.
I held my first office-bearing position at fifteen.
I have organised with a toddler on my hip
as well as the time decades later when my husband was dying.

I think I am coming to a stage when the only way 
I will be able to express fully my concerns
is via social media - particularly via The Network.
The touch-typing fingertips have not given up their task just yet.

One has to be curmudgeonly to find that this season we call Christmas
is just like any other day of the week.
To those who - like me - follow The Christ, I wish you a blessed time.
To my friends in the other Abrahamic faiths, Judaism and Islam,
I wish you blessed times as you celebrate, respectively,
Hannukah and The Prophet's birth day.  
I know my friends of other faiths  -
 I think of Sister Nivedita and Sundrum and his family and Neel and his family - 
will also recognise this time as very special.
And I must give a special mention to my beautiful Sikh friends
with whom I have shared many beautiful and constructive times -
including worship at the Gurdwara at Blackburn.


BLESSINGS OF THE SEASON TO ALL -
EVEN YOU ANDREW BOLT


Aussie Jingle Bells
Dashing through the house
In an old shirt and one shoe
Running late again
And you need the loo
Front door starts to ring
As the guests arrive
Bringing lots of gifts and pressies
Up the front drive
Oh jingle bells, jingle bells
Jingle all the way
Your family’s gathered round you
On a warm Christmas day (hey!)
Jingle bells, jingle bells
Santa says g’day
Oh what fun it is to spend
Christmas the Aussie way
Now the pressies are unwrapped
We’re sitting by the tree
Lights are all turned on
Looks pretty as can be
We talk about old friends
And have a glass of wine
While the kids play with their toys
Out in the sunshine
Oh jingle bells, jingle bells
Jingle all the way
Your family’s gathered round you
On a warm Christmas day (hey!)
Jingle bells, jingle bells
Santa says g’day
Oh what fun it is to spend
Christmas the Aussie way
Soon it’s two o’clock
We’re by the barbeque
Eating snags and prawns
And drinking beer too
Grandma’s made the cake
It’s a little dry
We try to eat it with one hand
While we’re busy swatting flies
Oh jingle bells, jingle bells
Jingle all the way
Your family’s gathered round you
On a warm Christmas day (hey!)
Jingle bells, jingle bells
Santa says g’day
Oh what fun it is to spend
Christmas the Aussie way
The light is getting dim
It’s almost time to go
We take a family snap
Under the mistletoe
The kids are fast asleep go cut
We’re singing Christmas songs
Don’t you wish Christmas day
Could last all summer long!
Oh jingle bells, jingle bells
Jingle all the way
Your family’s gathered round you
On a warm Christmas day (hey!)
Jingle bells, jingle bells
Santa says g’day
Oh what fun it is to spend
Christmas the Aussie way
Oh what fun it is to spend
Christmas the Aussie way!
Picture and Jingle Bells from here.

Tuesday, 22 December 2015

No Business in Abuse Campaign brings City of Sydney on side - the Council will refuse to do business with companies, institutions, and organisations which profit from abusive practices towards people seeking asylum

Cross-posted with Advocacy and Beside The Creek

Campaign for Councils to refrain from doing business 
with companies that abuse human rights

Companies Involved In Offshore Detention

 Frozen Out By City Of Sydney

https://newmatilda.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/12/City-of-Sydney.jpg
(IMAGE: Jason James, Flickr)

By Max Chalmers on December 15, 2015 Featured


A growing campaign to stop institutions from doing business with companies that abuse human rights has claimed a major scalp. Max Chalmers reports.

Companies profiting from the offshore detention of asylum seekers could be prevented from doing business with the City of Sydney after the Council resolved to review its investment and procurement policy and bring them into line with the No Business in Abuse campaign.

In a meeting last night, the Council voted to adopt a pledge not to support companies, institutions, or organisations that profit from abusive practices towards people seeking asylum.
Councillor-Irene-Doutney
Moved by Greens Councillor Irene Doutney (pictured), the successful motion will not impact current contracts, but could cause headaches for companies working in the offshore detention industry when new tenders are released.

Of particular interest will be the implications for Wilson Security, subcontracted by detention centre operator Broadspectrum (formerly known as Transfield) to provide security services in offshore centres. Wilson also provides substantial carparking and security services in Australia and the company has had a number of contracts with the City of Sydney, including an estimated $2.4 million deal to manage the Kings Cross Car Parking Station which is due to be reviewed in 2017.

Doutney told New Matilda that most members of the Council – dominated by Clover Moore’s progressive independents – were appalled by the abuses occurring in detention, and that she expected the motion would make it difficult for the Council to renew contracts with companies like Wilson in the future.

“I just think it’s really important for institutions, particularly councils, to take a stand on these sorts of things,” Doutney said. “People will say ‘it’s not Council business’, but I think anything to do with human rights is Council business. It’s really important to take a stand and, being City of Sydney, maybe other councils will now look favourably on the pledge.”

Doutney said the motion would not have an immediate impact but would put pressure on the Council not to sign contracts with or invest in companies linked to detention in the future. She said the Council already avoids investments in fossil fuels, tobacco, and nuclear.

The City of Sydney’s move comes at the end of a year that has seen Broadspectrum in particular come under pressure for its role in offshore detention, with the No Business in Abuse campaign occurring in tangent to a divestment movement. In August, super fund HESTA announced it was divesting, withdrawing $18 million from the company formerly known as Transfield.

The No Business in Abuse campaign said Leichhardt Council and Yarra City Council had also signed on.

“The City of Sydney is one of Australia’s largest councils, and their decision last night provides unstoppable momentum to the NBIA campaign which has expanded to target the clients of Broadspectrum and Wilson, including councils, schools, hospitals and big resources companies,” Shen Narayanasamy, Executive Director of No Business in Abuse and Human Rights Campaign Director at Getup, said in a press release.

Narayanasamy said the Wilson Group currently had over $3 million worth of contracts with the City of Sydney. If the Council holds its resolve, that number is likely to head towards zero in the coming years.

The Wilson Group could not be reached for comment.

How does Woolworths affect your family, your community? Getting Fresh with pokies ....


Here it is -the Woolworth's other 'Happy Christmas' advert courtesy of Getup. Please blare and share and dare your...
Posted by Gypsy Jack on Monday, 21 December 2015

Thursday, 3 December 2015

Celebrating Humanity on Eureka Day, 2015 t Bakery Hill - St Paul's, 305 Humffray Street - 5.30 to 7pm - an afterwork venue


We are celebrating at Saint Paul's, Bakery Hill in #Ballarat this evening. To-day, December 3, is the day we celebrate...
Posted by Brigid O'Carroll Walsh on Wednesday, 2 December 2015
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Tuesday, 1 December 2015

Galilee Basin Alliance demand the right to say 'NO' to mining


Galilee Basin Alliance

23:17 (8 hours ago)
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Media Release:  
Monday, 30 November 2015

GALILEE BASIN DEMANDS THE RIGHT TO SAY ‘NO’ TO MINING

Farmers and landholders in Central Western Queensland are calling on Federal Energy Minister Josh Frydenberg and state ministers to give them the right to say ‘no’ to mining at the next meeting of the COAG Energy Council on Friday 4th December.

Minister Frydenberg said he'd put mining and land access on the agenda at the meeting.

Denice Campbell from the Galilee Basin Alliance said it was vital this meeting delivers tangible action and gives farmers, landholders and Traditional Owners the power to refuse mining companies access.




“While mining companies ultimately have the right to access someone else’s land and do to it what they will, usually without any consideration for the agricultural industry that is already in place, there will never be justice for ordinary people going about their businesses in this country. This applies equally to Traditional Owners.  It is wrong, ordinary people know it is wrong, politicians know it is wrong; they have said so in public forums.  Yet nothing continues to be done because the mining companies have powerful allies in all political arenas.  This corrupted process needs to end now or there will be huge costs to be faced in the future not unlike the stories and consequences of the “stolen generation”. 


“It is time for the buck-passing and bullying to end, and for our governments to legislate to give all landholders and communities a veto over mining that threatens our land, our water and way of life.

“Individuals and communities across Australia have experienced severe distress due to the laws being weighted so heavily in favor of multi-national mining corporations that they can legally force access to land without consent.



“All governments across Australia need to act now to end this special treatment for mining giants and to give us the basic right to a fair go and a real say over whether miners are allowed access”



“The bullying and harassment of landholders and Traditional Owners by mining corporations needs to end now. Governments need to prevent any further harm to rural and regional families“   Ms Campbell said.


We are asking that all governments:


  • Reach an agreement at COAG to legislate the legal right for landholders and Traditional Owners to say ‘no’ to access by coal and unconventional gas mining companies.
  • Provide state and territory governments six months to deliver legislative changes to that effect, and if they are not forthcoming, create national legislation using relevant powers.
  • Immediately commission an inquiry by the ACCC, using powers it already has, to investigate whether the unconventional gas industry have engaged in unconscionable conduct in their dealings with landholders.


Inquiry on Landholders' Right to Refuse gas and coal Bill

The private senator’s bill proposed to make gas or coal mining activities undertaken without prior written authorisation from landholders unlawful and would ban constitutional corporations from engaging in hydraulic fracturing operations (fracking) for coal seam gas, shale gas and tight gas.


In addition to the 95 submissions listed below


the committee received by email approximately 350 short statements and form letters in support of the bill or that discussed matters beyond the scope of this inquiry. The committee decided not to publish on its website every email and form letter it received. An example of each type of form letter has been published.

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Scorecard: Planning bills not up to scratch

November 13, 2015
A new scorecard for Queensland reveals proposed new planning laws would be worse for the Queensland community and the environment than the planning laws in place under the Bligh government in 2012.
The scorecard, prepared by Environmental Defenders Office Qld (EDO Qld) and Queensland Conservation Council (QCC), comes after Deputy Premier and Minister for Planning Jackie Trad tabled the Government’s Planning Bill 2015and two related bills in Queensland Parliament late Thursday.
The LNP Opposition also has draft planning laws that will be up for consideration by parliament at the same time as the Government’s planning bills[1].
EDO Qld solicitor Revel Pointon said the scorecard was designed to help the community make sense of complex planning laws and revealed Queenslanders were not getting the first-class planning framework they deserved.
“We compared both the Government and the Opposition bills to see how they compared to planning laws in place under the Bligh and Newman governments.
“The QCC/EDO Qld scorecard assessed all the planning laws against four key indicators: protection of nature; support for community participation in planning; promotion of accountability and transparency; and whether they provide certainty to the community.
“The scorecard findings reveal the Opposition planning bills would be the worst outcome for Queensland, but disappointingly the current Government’s proposed laws are not much better.
“There are serious accountability and transparency shortfalls in both the Government’s and the Opposition’s proposed new planning and development assessment laws, mainly due to too much flexibility surrounding decision-making that tends to favour developers interests over the community.
“The current Government is clearly better on community involvement in planning and development assessment, in particular proposing to restore rules in the Planning and Environment Court that will protect the community from the threat of massive costs.
“However, the Government’s bills are only marginally ahead of the Opposition Bills on the other three measures.
“We are particularly concerned the government has decided to continue with its single assessment system – SARA – which weakens the role of specialist departments such Department of Environment and Heritage Protection.
“If the Deputy Premier wants planning based on the best science, we need our specialist departments to have a strong decision making role in planning and assessment decisions.
“We need strong, clear planning legislation to protect the environment for the future and to protect the community’s right to have their say on development that affects the places that matter to them,” said QCC planning spokesperson Karen Robinson.
“However both sets of planning laws will further entrench the presumption of development approval by weakening controls on code assessable applications.
“They also reduce the community’s rights to oppose development that does not comply with local plans and planning schemes,” Ms Robinson said.
“We are already seeing rising discontent in the community, particularly in south-east Queensland, as people wake up to find 15 and 20 storey apartment buildings approved where plans allowed just 6 and 12 storey.
“At the same time, scarce parkland and important koala habitat is being removed from protected zones and made available for development.
“People tell us they believe the planning system is broken, yet if the community is hoping any of the proposed new planning laws will fix this they are going to be seriously disappointed.”
[1] The Planning and Development (Planning for Prosperity) Bill 2015 (and two associated bills) were tabled in June as Private Members Bills by Shadow Treasurer Tim Nichols.



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The 35th Anniversary of Dorothy Day, Servant of God


This weekend marked 35 years since Dorothy Day left us, but her generous spirit and her legacy of fighting for justice live on.
Posted by Interfaith Worker Justice on Monday, 30 November 2015
The anniversary of the death of Dorothy Day occurred on 29 November.
 Dorothy Day - Wikipedia
What's new toward Dorothy Day's canonization 
The Dorothy Day Guild

Monday, 30 November 2015

I've had an elegant sufficiency and any more would be a superfluous .... Sam Alexander of The SImplicity Institute speaks at Castlemaine on Degrowth

What is Degrowth? Envisioning a Prosperous Descent

What is Degrowth? Envisioning a Prosperous Descent
This is a transcript of my keynote address presented at the ‘Local Lives, Global Matters’ conference in Castlemaine, Victoria, 16-18 October 2015.Other keynote speakers included Rob Hopkins, David Holmgren, and Helena Norberg-Hodge.
Introduction
Thank you for that introduction, Jacinta, good morning everyone. I would like to begin by acknowledging the traditional owners of this land and to recognise that these have always been spaces of teaching, learning, sharing, and conversation. It is a real honour to be part of this conversation today.
When I was a boy, if ever I were amongst a group of people congregating at 9am on a Sunday morning it was because I was at Church. For better or for worse, I am now a lapsed, or rather, I should say, a collapsed Catholic, although I remain a seeker. But as I look around the world today, especially from my Western perspective, it seems clear enough that God, if he is not yet dead, as Friedrich Nietzsche declared, is, at least, increasingly absent. There seems to be a tension between our spiritual sensibilities and the cultures and systems within which we live. As the poet-musician, Tom Waits, would shout in the voice of a husky wolf: ‘God’s away on business.’
But the absence of God should not imply an absence of religious thinking in our culture or cultures. In fact, I would argue quite the opposite; that our Western religiosity has become ever more intense in recent decades, and what has happened is that we simply switched idols, no longer worshipping the God of Christianity, and instead worshipping at the alter of growth, singing praises to the God of GDP, our saviour, for only in growth will we find redemption. Our high priests now take the peculiar form of neoclassical economists, bankers, and national treasurers. Daniel Bell once wrote in his landmark text, The Cultural Contradictions of Capitalism: ‘Economic growth is the secular religion of advancing industrial nations.’
Since the industrial revolution this faith in growth has been unshakable. Today, however, we find ourselves at a moment in history where this faith is beginning to crumble, where the ideological ground beneath us is beginning to move – and opening up before our very eyes is a space, at last, for something new, a space where we are being called to think and live differently. What I would like to talk about this morning is something that has been emerging in recent years within the ever-widening cracks of capitalism, a new story, of sorts, or a new book of many different stories.
But I am not here to try to replace the god of growth with a new God. I will not pretend to be the next iteration of the high priest, nor am I about to pontificate about a new Doctrine or Dogma to which everyone must subscribe. As the anti-capitalist slogan goes, there may be one No, but there are many Yeses. So today I am going to talk about one of the yeses, which I hope can enrich the multitude of overlapping yeses we have all been exposed to this weekend, just as they have enriched me. To all those who have been part of the collective ‘yes’ this weekend, I thank you and I salute you.
The vocabulary I am going to focus on today revolves around the emerging ‘degrowth’ movement, which calls for planned economic contraction of developed or overdeveloped nations. I will get into details soon enough, but the basic case for degrowth is surprisingly simple:
1. The existing global economy is already in ecological overshoot, driven by the expansion of high-impact, Western-style consumer lifestyles and the structures of growth that often lock people into those lifestyles.
2. Great multitudes around the world do not have enough to live with dignity.
3. And, we have a population of 7.3 billion that is still growing.
Based on those three simple but extremely challenging premises – ecological overshoot, global poverty, and population – it follows that the richest nations must give up the pursuit of ‘more’ and find ways to flourish on less – much less. Less energy, less resources, less waste. And that means less consumerism, less globalisation, and ultimately, less capitalism.
But degrowth is not just a movement in opposition. Perhaps more than anything else degrowth is about embracing the abundance of sufficiency, it is about knowing how much is enough, and creating the necessary cultures, structures, and systems within which the entire community of life can flourish.

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