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Disrupting Russia’s Gazprom ‘could end war tomorrow’, Extinction Rebellion Ukraine founder says

The war in Ukraine could be stopped “tomorrow” by causing disruption to Gazprom, the founder of the Ukrainian branch of Extinction Rebellion (XR) has said, calling on climate protesters worldwide to demonstrate at the Russian energy giant’s offices.

The climate activist, who wanted to go only by his first name Grisha, told The Independent it was a “problem” to be expressing solidarity with Ukraine while still funnelling money into the invading country through oil and gas imports, and said Russian fossil fuels should be “blocked”.

He is one of millions who have been displaced by the Russian invasion which started just over three weeks ago. The war has decimated several cities and is reported to have killed thousands of civilians.

Speaking to The Independent from Ukraine, Grisha said his whole country was mobilising to resist the attack. His contribution is not joining the fight on the front line, but rather stepping up the battle against fossil fuels.

“I am not an army man. I don’t know how to fight or shoot with (a) gun,” he said. “We try to focus on different things other people can do.”

The climate activist said he wanted to see more civil disobedience across Europe targeting Russian fossil fuels, which could include XR groups and other protesters rallying outside Gazprom offices and preventing people from going to work.

“We believe that if Gazprom stops today, tomorrow the war ends,” the 38-year-old said.

Gazprom, the world’s largest natural gas company by production, wields considerable influence both in Russia and beyond as it supplies around 40 per cent of Europe’s gas. Its subsidiaries have offices across the continent, including several in the UK.

Other companies have moved to distance themselves from the Russian state-owned energy firm since the war in Ukraine started, including Shell, which cut ties with Gazprom earlier this month.

In the UK, the health secretary has reportedly told hospitals to stop using gas from the energy giant. Germany blocked a new Gazprom pipeline in response to Russian aggression days before the war started.

Europe has so far stopped short of banning Russian gas imports. But the war in Ukraine has sparked even more alarm over the world’s reliance on fossil fuels.

As well as its impact on the climate crisis, world leaders have been expressing concern over how this money ends up being spent in the Russian context.

Earlier this week, a European Union environment chief said the bloc’s dependence on Russian fossil fuels was financing a “war chest”.

US president Joe Biden banned Russian oil and gas imports last week over the war in Ukraine, saying it would help to serve a blow to Vladimir Putin’s “war machine”.

Concerns have also been raised in the UK – where Russian oil is being phased out – that the public could inadvertently be funding the war by filling up cars or paying energy bills.

Grisha says he wants to see more civil disobedience against fossil fuels in Europe

Grisha – as translated by a fellow Ukrainian XR activist, Nastya – said his group wanted to encourage the global community to protest against fossil fuels as the war wages on and had created slogans and posters for this, although it was difficult to work on activism with air raid sirens frequently going off and attacks happening in the background.

The 38-year-old XR Ukraine founder said it was important to see groups around the world helping Ukrainian refugees, but that this was only a sticking plaster.

“A lot of people in Ukraine want to stay and they don’t want to leave and they want to come back to their countries. So it’s also very important to stop the source of the issue, not the outcome,” he was translated as saying.

Svitlana Krakovska, a Ukrainian scientist involved in the most recent Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report, told The Guardian fossil fuels were driving both the climate crisis and the war in Ukraine.

Gazprom is the world’s largest natural gas company and supplies 40 per cent of Europe’s requirements

This map shows the extent of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine

Xural.com

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