Essay
            
            
            Javier Milei and the Long Shadow of the IMF
            Lola Allen
            
        
        
        In Argentina, economic chaos and political upheaval expose how the IMF's promise of stability has become an instrument of managed decline.
•15 min read
            
            
            Between an Ice Road and a Ring of Fire
            Gemma Boothroyd
            
        
        
        The Ring of Fire development is a social and environmental calamity dressed up as economic necessity—and a continuation of Canada's long colonial history.
•9 min read
            
            
            Introducing Issue #2: Frontiers
            Adrienne Buller, John Merrick
            
        
        
        In the trade-offs between decarbonization and human and ecological impact, how do we determine which costs are bearable, or inescapable, even necessary—and who gets to make these decisions?
•5 min read
            
            
            Lula’s Dilemma
            Sabrina Fernandes
            
        
        
        In Brazil, big agribusiness holds the reins of political power. Without confronting this head-on, Lula’s ecological promises will remain just that—promises.
•13 min read
            
            
            After the Thaw
            Jacob Bolton
            
        
        
        As temperatures rise and the Arctic thaws, capital is eyeing new opportunities: for extraction, for shipping and for extending a lifeline to business as usual.
•13 min read
            
            
            Then Where Will We Live
            Garry Lotulung
            
        
        
        In Indonesia, nickel mining is booming as global demand for batteries surges. Its impacts—on workers, on communities and on nature—are deeply felt.
•12 min read
            
            
            An Invisible Frontier
            Ben Lennon
            
        
        
        The greatest obstacle for the energy transition is not production or hard physical constraints—it is the skilled labour needed to transform our infrastructure and economy.
•15 min read
            
            
            Against the Fortress
            Nathan Akehurst
            
        
        
        “Climate migration” defies clear definition, but as the impacts of climate change mount and politicians stoke anti-migrant hostility, the climate movement must meet this challenge head-on.
•13 min read
            
            
            Merging to Survive
            Ashok Kumar
            
        
        
        As the fossil fuel industry consolidates into an ever smaller number of vast firms, new strategic openings for disruption emerge.
•15 min read
            
            
            DISPATCH: The Desert and the Mine
            Sam Meadows
            
        
        
        The Lithium Triangle, spanning Argentina, Bolivia and Chile, contains over half the world’s lithium reserves, essential for the energy transition. But mining here is fraught with human, cultural, political and ecological questions.
•13 min read
            
            
            The Sunlight Managers
            Sofia Menemenlis
            
        
        
        By deploying the language of objectivity while evading questions about the social relations that underlie the climate crisis, the science profession grants legitimacy to a dangerous idea: solar geoengineering.
•18 min read
            
            
            DISPATCH: Resistance on the Attawapiskat
            Omar Ferwati, Nessie Nankivell
            
        
        
        In northern Ontario, a region rich in mineral deposits has become a frontline in the fight for Indigenous sovereignty and against extraction.
•15 min read
            
            
            Bog Communism
            Roisin Agnew
            
        
        
        Ireland’s bogs were degraded by industrial exploitation. Today, they play host to a growing network of data centres. Can we reclaim them as commons, and restore their value—cultural, social and ecological—outside of capital’s logic?
•14 min read
            
            
            Fascism and the British Countryside
            Richard Smyth
            
        
        
        The far right has long portrayed itself as the defender of a pristine nature against urban corruption, but its history in the British countryside tells a far more complex story about nationalism and rural life.
•11 min read
            
            
            The Heat of the Moment
            Adrienne Buller, Geoff Mann
            
        
        
        In place of paralysis or bland positivity, this is the moment for an honest reckoning with where we stand, what we are up against, and where, already, resistance is underway.
•13 min read
            
            
            Delete, Delete, Delete
            John Merrick
            
        
        
        How should we understand the contradictions of Elon Musk?
•12 min read
            
            
            Morbid Symptoms
            The Zetkin Collective
            
        
        
        Climate denial is entering a new phase. What comes next is not yet determined.
•12 min read
            
            
            Exiled in Austin, TX
            Kahron Spearman
            
        
        
        To live in temporal exile is to exist outside of time, confined by deliberate social and infrastructural policies that erase history and foreclose the future.
•13 min read
            
            
            Petrol For the People
            Lukas Slothuus
            
        
        
        Sweden’s far right defines its vision of climate action.
•13 min read
            
            
            Real Constraints
            Lara Merling
            
        
        
        Finance for climate action is limited by orthodoxy, not reality
•11 min read
            
            
            Trying to Reason with Hurricane Season
            Beki McElvain
            
        
        
        In Florida, risk is a feature of life. In a deepening climate crisis, financial capitalism gives this risk new meaning.
•11 min read
            
            
            What is Climate Science for?
            Véronique Carignan
            
        
        
        The relationship between science and the US government has been, from the start, deliberate and strategic
•12 min read
            
            
            Organizing Against Abandonment
            Youssef Bouchi
            
        
        
        On the history and future of USAID
•11 min read
            
            
            A Green Cold War
            Ilias Alami
            
        
        
        In our era of global economic interdependence, the face of geopolitics has changed.
•13 min read
            
            
            Failure as Success
            Brett Christophers
            
        
        
        What is Biden’s climate legacy?
•13 min read
            
            
            Socialising Nature
            Jacob Blumenfeld
            
        
        
        How we can live together without exploiting each other? This is the work of socialising nature.
•16 min read
            
            
            On Disaster Nationalism and the Climate Crisis
            Richard Seymour
            
        
        
        In the wake of Donald Trump's stunning election victory, the continued march of "disaster nationalism" and the far right will increasingly define global climate politics.
•11 min read
            
            
            Beyond Human Security
            Astra Taylor
            
        
        
        Attempts to achieve security by trying to dominate nature are now backfiring on an unprecedented scale.
•12 min read
            
            
            Uniting The Climate and Housing Crises
            Martha Dillon
            
        
        
        Not only do insecure housing systems and growing environmental pressures concern the same buildings and the same people — they cannot be separated at all.
•11 min read
            
            
            James Watt in Shenzhen
            Ewan Gibbs
            
        
        
        Past and present energy transitions have been motivated by the political and economic ends of industry and government, including disempowering workers, but they also create new opportunities for labour mobilisation.
•13 min read
            
            
            Against a Military Transition
            Nico Edwards, Khem Rogaly
            
        
        
        The "transition plans" of Western militaries are only viable responses to climate and ecological crisis when the causes of those crises are ignored. What is needed now is the drawdown, not the expansion, of military power.
•18 min read
            
            
            Market Failure
            Gareth Bryant, Sophie Webber
            
        
        
        Market-based climate policy — which strives to replace politics with “precision" — has failed. We need transformative, democratic solutions to address the climate crisis.
•13 min read
            
            
            Is The Future Worth It?
            Liliana Doganova
            
        
        
        We urgently need to transform our relationship to the future, freeing it from the logics of capitalisation and its unequal treatment of time.
•9 min read
            
            
            What is a Just Transition?
            Mijin Cha
            
        
        
        As the idea of the "just transition" has become mainstream, it has increasingly been co-opted. We need a transition away from both fossil fuels and from the extractive systems harming both people and planet.
•15 min read
            
            
            Downward Mobilisation
            Advait Arun
            
        
        
        Private investment cannot and should not drive decarbonisation. It's obvious: we need the state.