Joint forces against Suape expansion activities
Last week Both ENDS’ Wiert Wiertsema attended the launch of Forum SUAPE in Brazil. During this second fact finding mission Wiert talked to Forum SUAPE and local residents about the social and ecological effects of the dredging activities in Suape carried out by a Dutch company.
Together we are strong
Together with a Brazilian expert Both ENDS was invited to the launch and first public meeting of Forum SUAPE at the town hall of Cabo de Santo Agostinho. Forum SUAPE is a partnership set up by various local organizations for better collaboration and to provide a permanent discussion platform for the Suape project. “The process is now well under way,” says Wiert. “It is great to see how local organizations have joined forces in Forum SUAPE. For Both ENDS this second fact finding mission is an opportunity to strengthen our ties with the various organizations to further enhance collaboration in order to create a program to strengthen the social en ecological sustainability agenda.”
Port expansion with serious social and environmental impact
What it is all about in Suape is the social and environmental impact of the expansion and deepening of the Suape port, one of the major international ports of Northeast Brazil, some 40 kilometers from Recife. Dredging activities carried about by the Dutch company Van Oord are an important part of the project. A lot was invested in the Suape port since the nineties and Van Oord was contracted to realize an open channel between the port and the ocean. Van Oord was granted a export credit insurance by Atradius DSB, a credit insurance company from the Dutch government. This means that both Atradius and Van Oord have to comply with the rules drawn up by the OECD. Atradius itself has also set criteria for the granting of export credit insurances, but it seems that these criteria are not followed. The expansion of the Suape port has profound effects on the local environment and living circumstances, but this seems not to be taken into account.
Voice of the people
“The creation of Forum SUAPE is therefore very important. Local people have to be heard. They are the ones who experience the effects of the dredging in daily life,” says Wiert. Environmental organizations, geographers, labor unions, fishermen, women’s movements and movements for landless and homeless people have joined Forum SUAPE. In the time coming up, Forum SUAPE will focus on social and ecological justice and think about alternatives for sustainable development in the Suape region.
For footage of and interviews with local s from the area around the harbour, take a look at the video which was commissioned by Both ENDS. (Available on 'Forum Suape': Portuguese spoken, subtitles in English)
Forum SUAPE (Portuguese):
Both ENDS Suape report
http://www.bothends.org/en/Publications/document/90/Report-Suape-Harbor
Read more about this subject
-
Instalink / 21 November 2024
-
Blog / 19 November 2024
Building Monitoring, Evaluation and Learning systems based on mutual accountability and trust
Just before summer, on June 27th we participated in a panel discussion on inclusive conservation in a learning event organized by WWF Netherlands. Several organizations joined in a discussion on inclusive, decolonial, rights-based, and community-led approaches in conservation. We discussed the barriers, gaps and opportunities in how power is shared, inclusion promoted, and accountability practiced in our work. The question raised was: as Dutch-based organizations, are we doing enough to really work inclusive? In 2023 Both ENDS started an Examination of Power process to research how power is experienced in our partnerships. I share a couple of practical tips and insights that I feel might benefit the greater conversation around Monitoring, Evaluation and Learning (MEL) in our sector.
-
Instalink / 18 November 2024
-
Blog / 18 November 2024
The global rise of authoritarian regimes demands global strategies
The global funding landscape for civil society movements is changing, and is increasingly faced with policies that restrict funding streams, limit philanthropic work, and silence critical voices. These are not incidental shifts but part of a broader pattern that erodes the support for those international networks and movements under the guise ‘necessary financial cuts’, ‘aid reform’ or ‘efficiency’.
-
Publication / 18 November 2024
-
Instalink / 16 November 2024
-
Instalink / 15 November 2024
-
Event / 15 November 2024, 12:50 - 16:45
#BothENDSatCOP29 Side Events
Both ENDS’ participation at COP29 includes three critical side events that will highlight gender-just climate finance, locally-led adaptation, and multilateral approaches to a just energy transition and industrialisation in the Global South.
-
Instalink / 14 November 2024
-
Instalink / 13 November 2024
-
Instalink / 12 November 2024
-
Press release / 12 November 2024
Ruling climate case Shell: "Shell has an obligation to protect human rights."
The Hague, 12 November 2024 - The court has ruled in Shell's appeal in the Climate Case that Milieudefensie won against Shell in 2021. The Court of Appeal has ruled that the oil and gas giant has a responsibility to reduce its emissions, but has not imposed a reduction obligation.
-
Instalink / 12 November 2024
-
Instalink / 11 November 2024
-
Press release / 11 November 2024
Both ENDS's response to government letter on future cooperation with civil society organisations
DEN HAAG, 11 November 2024 - Today, the Dutch government published its policy on future cooperation with development organisations, both in the Netherlands and abroad. PVV minister Reinette Klever is putting the axe to this funding: she has decided to cut the budget for aid to international civil society by more than two-thirds: from roughly €1.4 billion to €0.4 billion in the period 2026 to 2030. This has major implications for critical voices at home and abroad, at a time when civic space for organisations around the world is already shrinking. Karin van Boxtel, director of environmental and human rights organisation Both ENDS: ‘This is an unprecedented step in exactly the wrong direction. Civil society organisations are essential for sustainable and social change worldwide. International movements fulfil multiple, indispensable roles: as a watchdog of the rule of law, as a driver of change, and as a counterforce against authoritarian tendencies. The weakening of support for these roles is a telling signal.’
-
News / 11 November 2024
Kenya Terminates Bilateral Investment Treaty with the Netherlands
The government of Kenya has officially terminated its bilateral investment treaty (BIT) with the Netherlands, marking a significant win for economic justice and environmental protection. Kenya’s decision reflects a growing global trend of rethinking outdated treaties that often prioritize corporate interests over public welfare. The Dutch Minister for Foreign Trade and Development recently confirmed that Kenya unilaterally ended the treaty in December 2023, rendering it inoperative from 11 June 2024. Kenya now joins South Africa, Tanzania, and Burkina Faso as the fourth African country to terminate its BIT with the Netherlands.
-
News / 9 November 2024
Why is the Dutch climate case against Shell important to our partners in the Global South?
On November 12th, a new ruling will be issued by the Court of Appeal in The Hague in the climate case against Shell, in which Both ENDS is a co-plaintiff. Ahead of this ruling, we asked our partners why this Dutch lawsuit is important for the Global South.
-
Instalink / 3 November 2024
-
News / 1 November 2024
Both ENDS at COP29: advocating for gender just climate finance
On November 11th, the 29th UN Climate Conference will start in Baku, Azerbaijan. Just like previous years, Both ENDS will be there to advocate for local access to climate finance, and to support our partner organisations in their advocacy work. How do we do that, and what are our hopes (and worries) about this 29th edition of the UNFCCC COP? We asked Marius Troost, who will be joining COP29 together with Daan Robben.
-
Instalink / 31 October 2024