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16.04.2026 à 19:18

Dutch court hears Greenpeace International’s arguments against Energy Transfer’s latest attempt to evade accountability 

Greenpeace International

Texte intégral (804 mots)

Amsterdam, The Netherlands – Greenpeace International’s landmark anti-SLAPP lawsuit against Energy Transfer took another step forward in the Amsterdam District Court, today. The hearing reviewed the pipeline company’s latest attempt to avoid accountability under Dutch law and the European Union’s anti-SLAPP directive for back-to-back abusive lawsuits filed in the US.[1] Netherlands-based Greenpeace International is seeking legal recognition that Energy Transfer has acted unlawfully as well as relief from the harm that has resulted. The Court said it would make a decision by 3 June 2026 on Energy Transfer’s plea for dismissal or pause of the anti-SLAPP lawsuit.[2]  

Mads Christensen, Greenpeace International, Executive Director said: “Energy Transfer cannot hide from justice — no matter how hard they try. Greenpeace International is holding this Big Oil bully accountable under Dutch and EU law for repeated attempts at silencing our free speech. We will continue to resist all forms of intimidation and believe Energy Transfer will have to answer for its actions here in the Netherlands.”

“With the world’s continued dependence on fossil fuels wreaking havoc around the globe, Greenpeace International’s anti-SLAPP landmark case against Energy Transfer is bigger than us: This is about stopping corporations from weaponising the courts against anyone who dares to speak out for the public good.” 

Energy Transfer’s back-to-back lawsuits against Greenpeace International and the Greenpeace organisations in the US (Greenpeace Inc. and Greenpeace Fund) remain blatant attempts to silence free speech, erase Indigenous leadership of the Standing Rock movement, and punish solidarity with the ongoing, peaceful resistance to the Dakota Access Pipeline.[3] These are clear-cut examples of SLAPPs — lawsuits attempting to bury nonprofits and activists in legal fees and ultimately silence dissent. 

Daniel Simons, Senior Legal Counsel Strategic Defense, Greenpeace International said: “Energy Transfer continues attempting to evade accountability because it knows it cannot justify its repeated abusive lawsuits. We feel confident the court will allow Greenpeace International’s anti-SLAPP case to proceed on the merits and that Energy Transfer will face justice. We carry on this legal fight to remedy the harms suffered as a result of Energy Transfer’s intimidation tactics and to ensure corporate bullies know there is now a price to pay if you bring SLAPP suits.”

In parallel to the anti-SLAPP case in the Netherlands, Greenpeace International and Greenpeace organisations in the US continue the legal fight against Energy Transfer’s most recent SLAPP in North Dakota. Following a District Court judgment awarding US$345 million to Energy Transfer in February 2026, the Greenpeace defendants are seeking a new trial and, if necessary, will appeal the decision with the North Dakota Supreme Court.[4] 

The 16 April hearing in Greenpeace International’s landmark anti-SLAPP case against Big Oil bully Energy Transfer marks the beginning of a series of organising, marches, and activities around the world collectively called Facing Down Bullies.

ENDS

Photo and video can be found in the Greenpeace Media Library.

Notes 

  1. Energy Transfer requested an anti-suit injunction from the North Dakota District Court in July 2025 looking for protection from Greenpeace International’s anti-SLAPP lawsuit in the Netherlands. In September 2025, the North Dakota District Court denied the request. Energy Transfer subsequently appealed that decision to the North Dakota Supreme Court, which has not yet issued a decision. 
  2. Energy Transfer has appeared in the anti-SLAPP case, represented by Dutch counsel, and has lodged a preliminary plea, seeking the dismissal of the case arguing that the Amsterdam District Court lacks jurisdiction, and in the alternative, asking for a stay (suspension) of the proceedings until the final outcome of the case in North Dakota. Greenpeace International has lodged its reply. 
  3. Energy Transfer’s first lawsuit was filed in federal court in 2017 under the RICO Act – the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, a US federal statute designed to prosecute mob activity. The case was dismissed in 2019, with the judge stating the evidence fell “far short” of what was needed to establish a RICO enterprise. The federal court did not decide on Energy Transfer’s claims based on state law, so Energy Transfer promptly filed a new case in a North Dakota state court with these and other state law claims.
  4. Greenpeace defendants file motion for new trial in North Dakota court.

Contact: 

Greenpeace International Press Desk, +31 (0)20 718 2470 (available 24 hours), pressdesk.int@greenpeace.org

Join the Greenpeace SLAPP Trial WhatsApp Group for our latest updates

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16.04.2026 à 12:21

We’re taking a Big Oil bully to court

Mads Christensen

Texte intégral (1307 mots)

It’s time for facing down bullies. 

When we look at the state of the world, we see a pattern that cannot be ignored: Rights and freedoms are under threat from corporations and from autocrats. People and organisations are targeted for telling the truth, for solidarity, and for defending their communities from corporate extractivism.

People around the world are tired of billionaires and corporate polluters behaving like the law does not apply to them.

Energy Transfer, Next Stop: Amsterdam Court - Banner in Amsterdam (Drone Image). © Greenpeace
People in Rembrandtpark, Amsterdam display a banner reading ‘Hello there, Energy Transfer, next stop: Amsterdam Court’, ahead of a hearing on 16 April for the Greenpeace International anti-SLAPP (Strategic lawsuits against public participation) case in the Dutch capital against oil pipeline Energy Transfer.
© Greenpeace

Facing down a Big Oil bully in court

Greenpeace International faces Big Oil bully Energy Transfer at the Amsterdam  court on 16 April as part of our landmark anti-SLAPP case to pursue justice in our home territory under Dutch and EU law. 

Energy Transfer has been waging abusive lawsuits against Greenpeace International and Greenpeace in the US for nearly a decade. In February, a North Dakota District Court awarded the US-based pipeline company US$345 million in damages. These SLAPPs are blatant attempts to silence free speech, erase Indigenous leadership of the Standing Rock movement, and punish solidarity with peaceful resistance to the Dakota Access Pipeline. 

They want us — and all climate activists — to be scared by their corporate intimidation tactics. But their tactics won’t succeed. We have already filed a motion for a new trial in the US and will, if necessary, appeal. 

Energy Transfer is desperate to avoid this case. Of course they are. Bullies always think they can get away with anything.

Photo Opp ET Anti-Slapp Lawsuit outside Courthouse in Amsterdam. © Tengbeh Kamara / Greenpeace
July 2025: People gather outside the New Amsterdam Courthouse holding a banner reading “Energy Transfer, Welcome To The EU Where Free Speech Is Still A Thing” to mark the beginning of Greenpeace International’s anti-SLAPP lawsuit against fossil fuel pipeline company Energy Transfer filed in Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
© Tengbeh Kamara / Greenpeace

Why this anti-SLAPP case matters for activists everywhere

This landmark anti-SLAPP lawsuit – invoking the European Union’s new directive for the first time – sends a clear message to every bully, billionaire, and corporate polluter: your era of intimidation is over, and your tactics of fear will no longer work.

And it also sends a message to our allies: that it is time to resist. We know we are strongest together, and we know we can win this legal fight.

At the end of the day, this case is about a simple, undeniable truth: that power belongs to the people. It cannot be hijacked by bullies — and it certainly cannot be bought by oligarchs.

We are shining a light on the global threat of SLAPPs.

We will make sure this bully understands that its intimidation attempts are failing.

And we want any corporations thinking of using a lawsuit as a weapon to know these tactics will  backfire.

We stand firm. We stand together. And we will not be silenced.

May Day Demonstration against Far-Right Party in Paris, France. © Hélène Boissel-Arrieta / Greenpeace
Resist Corporate Intimidation

Send a message to all corporate bullies that you’re part of a growing movement resisting corporate intimidation.

Make a Time to Resist Banner

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15.04.2026 à 16:43

Does clean energy make China immune to fossil fuel price shocks?

Yuan Ying

Texte intégral (1879 mots)

Shockwaves have reverberated around the world in the month since the US and Israel launched attacks on Iran and then Lebanon. People in the Middle East are again paying with their lives for wars fuelled by fossil interests and geopolitical power plays. 

And around the world, we feel the secondary shocks, as the fallout impacts the normal movement of people, and trade of commerce, energy, and resources. Today, we share in uncertainty, anxious about the end of the violence and the depth of the crisis, as we continue to watch horrors unfold in short-form video, and endless scroll through our days, and in nervous texts and calls from colleagues and friends.

Greenpeace Projects "Oil is War and Green is Peace" onto Eye Filmmuseum against Fossil Fuel War Profits in Amsterdam, Netherlands. © Gosse Bouma / Greenpeace
Greenpeace Netherlands projection action onto the Eye Filmmuseum in Amsterdam.
© Gosse Bouma / Greenpeace

Greenpeace is calling for an immediate end to military violence, a return to international law, and diplomatic solutions. 

Concern around the secondary impact in China of the US and Israel’s strikes on Iran is rising, as the imported inflation is causing some anxiety. The shockwaves on energy systems have felt buffered, in part by the prevalence of renewable energy in China and the widespread use of electric vehicles, which are not dependent on oil.

But overall, China’s energy mix remains fossil fuel-dependent. And this crisis has shown how dependence on fossil fuels is a risk. As illegal wars continue to devastate innocent lives, degrading the global geopolitical mandate for peace that emerged from the ashes of World War II, the fossil fuel interests that have instigated so much of the violence become increasingly volatile in any country.

How wind, solar and electric vehicles help shield China from oil price shocks

You can’t blow up the sun,” my colleague Julien Jreissati, Programme Director at Greenpeace Middle East and North Africa, wrote in the days after the US and Israel’s first strikes.

Lighting The Future: People's Hope and Power in China's Green Energy Future. © Weimin Chu
A photovoltaic and solar thermal power generation base in Dunhuang, China.
© Weimin Chu

And in China, the widespread electrification of transportation – there are more than 30 million electric vehicles (EVs) on the road in China , offsetting an approximate 430,000 barrels of gasoline every day – and expansive development of wind and solar has been clearly stabilizing. China has built more wind and solar than any other country. And recently, new planning documents have put committed focus into the advancements of a new power system that will enable them to displace reliance on fossil fuels, such as grid‑scale energy storage and smart grids.

At the pace of renewable energy growth and grid updates, China could generate 33% of electricity from renewables by 2028, and 40% of total electricity by 2030.

But this geopolitical crisis now puts China at a crossroads, putting more pressure on a decision that Beijing has delayed for some time: when to systematically leave coal behind and make renewable energy the backbone of China’s energy system.

EV boom and falling oil demand in China

The expanding electrification of transportation has decreased China’s reliance on fossil fuels.

Greenpeace East Asia has an office in Beijing, where almost one in every six vehicles on the street is a new energy vehicle. The booming of EVs has reduced fossil fuel consumption in China’s transportation sector. Since 2018, oil consumption (including gasoline and diesel) in China’s transportation sector has begun to decline, and EVs are the major driver of that trend. And it is set to accelerate. The 430,000 barrels of gasoline per day now offset by EV adoption could quadruple by 2040.

Lighting The Future: People's Hope and Power in China's Green Energy Future. © Weimin Chu
Solar power plant in Dunhuang, Gansu Province, China.
© Weimin Chu

The true cost of internal combustion engine (ICE) vehicles is staggering, and oil price shocks underscore the continued risk of these vehicles. This is just one of a number of trends shifting consumer preference toward EVs. The skyrocketing oil prices should be a wake-up call to the automakers, too, both in China and globally.

How effective can this “clean energy shield” be in protecting China from future fossil fuel price shocks?

My answer is: yes, but China’s renewable energy transition is just kicking off, and coal presents a systemic barrier to stronger adoption of wind and solar.. 

Since 2022, increased calls for “energy security” have been paired with increased build-out of coal power plants. And today, coal still accounts for more than half of China’s energy consumption, relegating wind and solar to only 10% of consumption, even as these renewable energy sources account for 22% of total electricity generation available.

However, I see huge potential from renewable energy to replace coal. China achieved its coal power emission peak in 2025. In the same year, the total power generation from wind and solar was able to meet 100% of China’s total increase in power demand. This means that China already does not need to build more coal power to meet growing power demand. 

Coal Mines at the Source of the Yellow River. © Wu  Haitao / Greenpeace
An opencast coal mine near the headwaters of the Yellow River.
© Wu Haitao / Greenpeace

Dependence on coal is a critical risk. And it is clear to see that concern around this risk is shared by policymakers in the Chinese government, who have tried to decrease China’s reliance on imported coal.

One clear lesson we should see clearly in the oil price shocks that have emerged from this crisis is that dependence on limited, contested, combustible, and corrupting fossil fuels puts us at risk no matter how much we stockpile. 

Together, more renewable energy and the expanding electrification of key sectors like transportation create a shield that protects China’s economy from the fossil fuel price shocks that many other countries are living through right now. But we can also see how a cautious reliance on coal and outdated ICE automotive manufacturing can actually undermine this shield’s effectiveness.

From Iran to Europe and China, the message is the same: fossil fuel dependence is a permanent risk, and building renewable, decentralised energy systems is the only way to protect people from the next war‑driven energy shock.

Yuan Ying is the Programme Director and Chief China Representative at Greenpeace East Asia, based in Beijing.

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14.04.2026 à 04:27

Climate emergencies photos of 2026 so far

Sudhanshu Malhotra

Texte intégral (5450 mots)

2026 has been quite an eventful year… and it’s only been three months! By March, we have seen a huge range of climate disasters in almost every part of the Earth. People around the world feel the effects, especially in areas vulnerable to the climate crisis. From forest fires in Chile to snowstorms in Japan, from cyclone in Sri Lanka to flooding in Brazil, France, and Kenya.

Scientists have warned us for years about the link between erratic weather, extreme heat, and heavy rainfall. These are clear signs of a climate emergency. Severe climate change shows in the polar vortex, flash flooding, and extreme weather. This isn’t a coincidence; it’s a choice made by politicians and a focus for the economy.

Since February 2026, we have seen billions of dollars being poured into the war against Iran. If only we had this kind of commitment and budgets promised at UNFCCC meetings or in securing the future of the communities living under the threat of climate change. Fighting climate change means pushing for strong public policies. It also involves stopping fossil fuel expansion and investing in cities that can protect lives. Governments and companies should look beyond profits. They need to think about the millions of people impacted. We need to start rethinking our priorities and focus on what’s really urgent. NOW

This is a short visual reminder of a few climate emergencies this year.

🇨🇱 Chile: In the 2025-2026 wildfire season alone, more than three thousand wildfires have already been recorded. Nationwide, the burned area is 193% higher than that of the previous season (2024-2025). The Ñuble, Biobío, and La Araucanía regions, among the hardest hit in southern Chile.

🇮🇩 Indonesia – A portrait of Mariasi Aritonang in front of her home that was affected by the flash floods in Tukka Subdistrict, Central Tapanuli, North Sumatra.

Portrait of Mariasi Aritonang after the Flash Flood in Tukka Subdistrict, Central Tapanuli. © Alif R Nouddy Korua / Greenpeace
© Alif R Nouddy Korua / Greenpeace

🇦🇷 Argentina: Greenpeace Andino documented forest fires in Chubut province (Patagonia, Argentina), which have already burned 30,000 hectares of forests. Greenpeace denounces the government’s negligence regarding the effects of the climate crisis.

🇯🇵 Japan: Japan faced a deadly winter after weeks of unusually heavy snowfall across its northern regions. At least 35 people died, mostly in prefectures along the Sea of Japan coast such as Niigata, Aomori, Akita, Yamagata, and parts of Hokkaido. Many of the deaths happened during everyday activities like clearing snow from rooftops and entrances, especially among elderly residents. In Aomori, snow on the ground crossed 175 centimetres, more than double the seasonal average, breaking records set four decades ago.

🇦🇺 Australia: Parts of Victoria, Australia, suffered some of its worst bushfires since the Black Summer fires of 2019–20. Over 400,000 hectares are estimated to have been burnt, an area more than five times larger than Singapore. This makes it more difficult for animals to find suitable habitat outside of burnt areas in a fragmented landscape as they recover. 

🇫🇷 France: Several French regions experienced exceptional flooding in February 2026. Following Storm Nils, the entire western half of France was under a severe rain and flood warning. Concrete streets, uprooted hedges, straightened rivers… Human activity has depleted the soil, leading to a loss of its absorption and storage capacity and further exacerbating the flooding in western France.

🇺🇸 United States of America: A powerful winter storm in the northeastern United States forced school closures and pushed offices and transit systems to emergency schedules, with officials across the region warning of heavy snow, strong winds, and dangerous travel conditions.

🇰🇪 Kenya: Nairobi woke up on Saturday to streets turned to rivers, homes submerged, and families torn apart. At least 42 people have lost their lives, fathers, mothers, children, swept away in a single night of rain. Greenpeace Africa grieves with every family carrying that loss today. 

People salvage damaged vehicles from receding flood waters in downtown Nairobi following a night of heavy rainfall that resulting in heavy flooding around Nairobi on March 07, 2026.
© Tony KARUMBA / AFP via Getty Images

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