Citizens win the second round of an air pollution lawsuit in Jakarta, French president supports a ban on deep sea mining and Greece runs entirely on clean, renewal energy for the first time. These plus more good news for the planet in November!

Norway/Arctic – Plans to build world’s northernmost oil field halted

Activists from Greenpeace Nordic stage a protest at the Equinor Garden Party in Norway, to call for a stop to Wisting, planned to be the world’s most northerly oilfield.

In November, Equinor announced they are postponing going forward with the Wisting oil field – the world’s northernmost oil field in the pristine Arctic. According to oil analysts, that means the oil field will never be built. This keeps million tonnes of CO2 in the ground, and saves the vulnerable Arctic from a potential oil catastrophe.

Now, we celebrate this win, and we continue to fight to keep fossil fuels in the ground!

Indonesia – District Court rules government guilty of failing to uphold the citizens’ right to clean air

Activists from Greenpeace Indonesia and Ibukota coalition hold a theatrical action in front of Jakarta City Hall, Jakarta, a year on after the court ruled that the Indonesian government was guilty of failing to uphold the citizens’ right to clean air.

We have a second win for a citizens’ air pollution lawsuit in Indonesia!

In 2019, a group of Jakarta residents filed an air pollution lawsuit against President Joko Widodo, the Jakarta governor, and other senior government officials to improve the air quality of Jakarta. In 2021, the Central Jakarta District Court ruled that the Indonesian government was guilty of failing to uphold the citizens’ right to clean air. The historic decision obliges the government to establish ambient air quality standards that can protect vulnerable groups and develop air pollution control strategies that involve the public.

The President and the other defendants had submitted an appeal but in October this year, the high judicial council upheld the initial decision

This is a second win of the air pollution lawsuit, a legal way for citizens and their right to breathe healthy air. 

France – Head of State calls for ban on deep sea mining

Greenpeace France activists stuck «Don’t Look Down» spoof movie posters around Brest during the One Ocean Summit, to highlight the French President’s refusal to commit to concrete action to protect the oceans.

French President Emmanuel Macron announced at COP27 that he supports a ban on deep sea mining. This means France joins the growing number of countries opposed to deep sea mining and calling to stop this destructive activity before it starts. As the first Head of State to call for an outright ban on deep sea mining in international waters, Macron leads the way for more ambitious positions from governments to put the deep ocean permanently off-limits to mining. 

Greenpeace France has spent months working on this issue with the Stop Deep Sea Mining campaign and other NGOs in France, and welcomes this announcement that strengthens France’s position against deep sea mining. Greenpeace continues to call on the French government to oppose the adoption of mining regulations and the approval of any permit to mine at the International Seabed Authority, and will hold the government to account on working together with other countries who are actively looking for ways to ensure that deep sea mining is not allowed to ever start.

Greece – Electricity demands being met by renewable energy

Greenpeace Greece activists project a message reading: "Clean Energy Not Dirty Politics - EU 2030' onto the old castle and lighthouse in Rhodes Island, Greece.  Greenpeace is campaigning for ambitious climate and energy policies amongst countries in the European Union ahead of the region's upcoming decision on climate and energy targets for 2030.

For the first time in its history, Greece ran entirely on renewables. The country has been loosening its reliance on fossil fuels over the last decade while boosting the capacity of renewables. On 5 October, for about five hours, the country’s electricity demands were completely covered by renewable energy – a significant milestone in the journey away from fossil fuels!

United States – New York state requires all new vehicles sold to be zero emissions by 2035

Traffic at a standstill on 4th Avenue in Brooklyn as New Yorkers attempt to commute to work without the subway.  The subway is out of commission due to flooding from Hurricane Sandy.

New York expedites efforts to ban the sale of new gas cars by 2035, following California’s vote to ban the sale of new gasoline-powered vehicles starting in 2035. New York Gov. Kathy Hochul is ordering regulators to require all new vehicles sold in the state to be zero emissions by 2035. The regulation would require 35% of sales in model year 2026 to be zero-emission vehicles, 68% of sales by 2030 and 100% of sales by 2035.