Area served Global | ||
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Members 31 national member groups |
Friends of the Earth Europe (FoEE) is the European branch of the world's largest grassroots environmental network, Friends of the Earth International (FOEI). It includes 31 national organisations and thousands of local groups.
Contents
- Campaigns
- Climate justice and energy
- Food Agriculture and biodiversity
- Economic Justice
- Extractive Industries
- Corporate Accountability
- Lobbying Transparency
- Resource Use and Consumption
- Sustainable EU Funds
- Coalitions
- Youth Network Young Friends of the Earth Europe
- Ways of working
- Revenue
- References
The Friends of the Earth Europe office in Brussels fulfils a number of functions. It represents the network’s member groups towards the European institutions aiming to influence EU-policymaking; raises public awareness of environmental issues; campaigns for sustainable solutions for the most pressing environmental and social challenges threatening people and planet; runs capacity building projects for its membership, and is a secretariat for its 31 national members. The FoEE office is located in Mundo-B – a sustainable building housing Belgian and European NGOs near the European Parliament in Brussels.
Campaigns
The current campaign priorities of Friends of the Earth Europe are:
Climate justice and energy
FoEE’s European Big Ask climate change campaign was launched in February 2008 following a successful campaign of the same name by Friends of the Earth in the UK which is widely credited with getting the UK government to introduce the Climate Change Bill. The Big Ask brings together FoEE member groups across Europe to campaign for national climate change legislation. The launch of the European Big Ask was supported by Radiohead frontman Thom Yorke and the European Environment Commissioner at the time, Stavros Dimas. The campaign has different names in different countries.
FoEE also campaigns for the EU to introduce emission reduction targets of at least 40% by 2020. The organisation calls for radical improvements in energy efficiency, an accelerated phase-out of fossil fuels, a dramatic shift towards community-owned renewable energies, and reduced overall resource consumption and lifestyle changes.
Food Agriculture and biodiversity
As part of its campaign for sustainable food and agriculture, the organisation has been a key participant in the European debate on GMOs since 2000, founding the GMO-Free Europe movement in 2006 to prevent new GMOs from being planted in each region of Europe. Today, the organisation is campaigning to prevent the European Union from authorising new GMO crop varieties for commercial growing, and to prevent GMO seeds from contaminating non-GMO fields and supply chains in Europe.
Friends of the Earth Europe has also since 2007 campaigned to resist targets and subsidies for biofuels in Europe under the Renewable Energy Directive, by bringing public attention to problems of soy, palm oil and other biofuels in causing indirect land use change (ILUC), land grabbing in Africa and rising food prices.
The organisation advocates for more environmentally friendly farming under the European Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) campaigning for reforms that can mitigate climate change emissions (especially through reducing reliance on soy imports for livestock ), protect biodiversity, and stop the collapse of family farming in Europe’s agriculture sector.
FoEE’s biodiversity campaign, was launched in 2011, and brings together field projects at national and local levels across Europe to protect and conserve biodiversity, with advocacy to halt the worldwide decline of species via, e.g., the EU’s biodiversity strategy.
Economic Justice
Friends of the Earth Europe’s economic justice programme is looking into the influence of companies over EU decision-making and the economic, social and environmental consequences of their practices. The three streams of work are complementary, respectively looking at different aspects of the same issue. Together they are exposing cases of corporate capture of EU regulation and examples of the impact of the lack of regulation that often results from the influence of corporate interests over EU policy process. Friends of the Earth Europe campaigns for balanced policy-making putting people’s and nature’s interest first, at the expense of all-out companies’ profits. FoEE strategy combines direct advocacy among Brussels-based decision makers together with campaigning through reports, online petitions and media actions.
The economic justice programme addresses three areas of concern.
Extractive Industries
The extractive industries campaign is looking into the destructive impacts of the activities of the European oil, gas and mining industry in developing countries. Most of the natural resources are located in Southern countries but their exploitation often handled by powerful companies based in Western countries, which fail to redistribute the wealth and benefits to local communities. Rather resource exploitation often leads to worrying environmental damage and corruption circles in developing countries. FoEE’s work aims at exposing how irresponsible company practices are affecting local communities and their environment. The programme is based on extensive exchange and cooperation between FoEE Office in Brussels and local Friends of the Earth groups in Southern countries. Facts and evidence collected on the ground are used to lobby the European institutions towards tighter EU regulation for European extractive companies.
Recent examples of campaign topics and activities include:
Corporate Accountability
The corporate accountability campaign looks into the effects of the activities of European companies having subsidiaries outside of Europe. As multinational companies often fail to respect EU laws and workers’ rights when operating abroad, FoEE campaigns for the introduction of proper rules for business. These should guarantee that:
On this campaign, FoEE operates in the framework of the European Coalition for Corporate Justice, of which it is a founding member.
Lobbying Transparency
The lobby transparency campaign looks how companies exert their influence over and sometimes directly shape decision-making in the EU. It campaigns in favour of transparency in business influence and more balanced representation of stakeholders in EU policy making. These include:
FoEE has been active in exposing cases of revolving door scandals, misleading lobby registrations. or deceptive lobby practices. It has been lobbying EU Commission and Parliament in favour of stricter EU legislation in order to close the current loopholes and prevent such scandals. Examples of advocacy and campaign activities include:
Resource Use and Consumption
Friends of the Earth Europe calls for the accurate measurement, and then reduction of Europe's use of land, water, materials and carbon use. They recognise and promote the environmental, economic and social benefits of reducing Europe’s resource consumption. Following research by Sustainable Europe Research Institute, this work has focussed on promoting carbon footprint, water footprint, land footprint & material footprint as tools for measuring & reducing resource use.
FoEE also works alongside its network to promote more sustainable production of goods, and expose dirty practices by large multinational companies. The organisation promotes the reuse and recycling of materials, opposes incineration, and focuses on reducing Europe’s land footprint.
Sustainable EU Funds
Friends of the Earth Europe monitors EU Structural and Cohesion funds and campaigns for the reform of these investments– and aims to ensure that they are spent in truly sustainable ways. The organisation want to see the funds used in ways that aid Europe's transformation to a resource-efficient society – with a lower energy consumption drawn from renewable sources, and where biodiversity is protected.
The organisation wishes to ensure no harmful social or environmental impacts should result from these investments.
Coalitions
FoEE is an active member of many coalitions working on environmental issues in Europe including:
Youth Network (Young Friends of the Earth Europe)
In 2007 a youth network called Young Friends of the Earth Europe (YFoEE), was established by national Young Friends of the Earth groups affiliated to FoE member groups. YFoEE is an autonomous and self organised youth-led network, with structures and ways of working set and led by young people, yet retains strong links to Friends of the Earth Europe and the Friends of the Earth International Federation and their mission, vision and values
The YFoEE network unites youth organisations and youth groups working on social and environmental justice in Europe, and runs campaigning and educational activities for young people on a European level. It consists of youth member groups in 15 countries from both EU and Non EU countries, including Natur og Ungdom (Norway), BUNDjugend (Germany) or YFoE Ukraine.
The key campaigning topic of the network since 2007 has been advocating for climate justice, in particular opposing what it considers to be false solutions to climate change, such as nuclear energy, and educating young people to create a youth movement for climate justice. In 2010, YFoEE hosted a parallel convergence to the COP16 UN Climate Talks in Cancún, Mexico, in Brussels, Belgium as an alternative forum to the International political negotiations and to build the regional European Youth Climate Movement.
YFoEE has been active as part of the Youth Climate Movement and youth delegation at the UNFCCC international climate negotiations, and is one of the founding members of European Youth Climate Movement.
Ways of working
The YFoEE network is supported by a secretariat in the office of FoEE in Brussels, and coordinated by a Steering Group of 8 volunteers, elected from the YFoEE network annually at the Annual General Meeting. Campaigns and events are led and developed by individual volunteers and representatives of member groups who make up working groups.
Revenue
Friends of the Earth Europe receives funding from a variety of government and non-government sources. These include the European Commission under the ‘LIFE+ regulation’, the European Climate Foundation, Oak Foundation, and Isvara Foundation, amongst others. It also gets membership fees from national Friends of the Earth groups.