PARIS— After last month’s terror attacks in Paris, French authorities banned public political gatherings, citing security concerns. But as the United Nation’s climate talks came to a dramatic close here—with the world ratifying the first universal pact to slow global warming—activists rushed to defy that ban.
They filled the streets Saturday, rallying beneath the Eiffel Tower and along an artery of the Arc de Triomphe. For years they’ve been trying to push the world off fossil fuels, and their work helped secure this politically-fragile, all-voluntary deal in Paris. But aside from a few yips of excitement, this wasn’t a day of backslapping and celebration.
“This deal doesn’t change anything for us,” said Bill Mckibben, founder of 350.org, a group that’s organized thousands of climate marches in hundreds of cities over the last decade. As he spoke, people dressed as clowns performed for the riot police blockading the avenue and lining the sidewalks.
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To explain why the climate movement isn’t satisfied, Mckibben compares the world’s pledge to cut back on dirty energy to a fat man’s pledge to start a diet. “Our job, the job of the climate movement, is the same,” he told MSNBC. “We’re the fat man’s personal trainer.”
But they’re actually much more. They’re the fossil fuel equivalent of the health food craze in America, a vast and growing community of fitness fanatics, pushing the whole world toward a life of leotards and sliced tomatoes — or, in this case, solar panels and wind farms.
Bill Mckibben is the proud forefather of this movement. In 1989 he wrote “The End of Nature,” a surprise bestseller that sounded the alarm about global warming. And he actually thought people would listen: He was 20-something, the son of a journalist, and optimistic enough to believe that a reasonable argument would crush all.
“What I didn’t figure out for, oh, 15 years or so, is that reason alone is insufficient,” he told NBC News last year. “In fact, it’s not even the most important thing. These kind of decisions—decisions about what kind of world we’re going to live in—get made because of power, and power alone.”
McKibben decided to build what he calls “people power.” He started in the late 1990s, launching “Step it Up,” an organization aimed at national days of action. Then, in 2007, he founded 350.org, a self-proclaimed “global movement to solve the climate crisis.” It’s named for the parts-per-million carbon threshold that scientists say is safe. (We’re now at about 400 ppm, according to NASA.)
Dozens of other groups emerged in the same time frame. The big, blue-chip international environmental organizations—Greenpeace, the World Wildlife Fund, Avaaz, Friends of the Earth, and many more—developed teams to take on climate change. And all these groups got a boost from social justice organizations, which linked poverty and environmental destruction.
The movement grew from there, expanding as the science of climate change improved. Last September in New York, the movement crested with a 300,000-strong People’s Climate March, perhaps the largest single-city environmental rally of all-time. It was so mainstream that United Nation’s Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon participated.
By contrast, Saturday’s march in Paris was smaller and grittier, with no more than 10,000 people across multiple locations. But it marks a new stage of the fight and it overcame unusual obstacles.
The climate movement is now trying to make sure that the world’s voluntary emission cuts are fulfilled, and then improved upon. They launched this effort despite France’s special state of emergency, which defines every public political gathering a breach of the law.
Hundreds of protestors struggled in the days before just to find a floor to sleep on.
“Under the state of emergency a lot of squats that have housed activists have been raided or evicted,” said Ahmed Gaya, an American organizer who himself was staying in a reclaimed building with dozens of other activists.








