Study uncovers global playbook for repressing climate protests

A recent study highlights a worldwide rise in efforts to suppress climate and environmental activism through laws, violence, and vilification. Indigenous land defenders face the highest risks, with over 2,100 such activists killed globally between 2012 and 2023. The report warns that repression will likely intensify under authoritarian policies, including those in the United States.

A study published in December 2025 in the journal Environmental Politics details how governments and non-state actors are increasingly repressing climate protests across 14 countries. Researchers from the University of Bristol describe a 'repertoire of repression' that includes new anti-protest legislation, misuse of legal systems, police crackdowns, public vilification, and even lethal violence. This approach, they argue, is not a side effect of climate policy but a deliberate strategy to undermine environmental movements.

The study notes that climate protests have grown steadily since 2018, prompting varied responses. In the United States and United Kingdom, laws now impose criminal penalties for actions targeting 'critical infrastructure' such as pipelines. In the Philippines, authorities use 'red-tagging' to label Indigenous activists as communists or terrorists, shifting focus from climate issues. In Georgia, USA, protesters opposing the 'Cop City' police training facility—built on deforested land—face domestic terrorism charges with sentences up to 35 years. Tragically, activist Manuel Esteban Paez Terán was shot at least 57 times and killed, in what experts call the first such killing of an environmental activist by US security forces.

Indigenous defenders bear the brunt, comprising 43 percent of over 2,100 land and environmental defenders murdered worldwide from 2012 to 2023, mostly in Latin America, according to Global Witness. Co-author Oscar Berglund explained, 'Since colonization, Indigenous people have defended and put their bodies in the way of environmental destruction... you often find that Indigenous peoples are leading struggles against mining or fossil fuel extraction.'

Under President Donald Trump, who re-entered office this year and exited the Paris Agreement again, repression has escalated. Companies are dropping climate commitments amid backlash against environmental, social, and governance (ESG) initiatives. In October, Trump directed federal agencies to review reports from conservative think tanks linking groups like the Sierra Club and Center for Biological Diversity to 'antifa' networks. Berglund noted, 'It’s delegitimizing these actors and making them invisible... That enables the violence against them.'

The authors outline three impacts: deterrence through legal and violent threats, public delegitimization of activists as 'eco-terrorists,' and diversion of discourse from climate urgency to 'extremism.' As authoritarian regimes rollback policies, such tactics are poised to worsen, creating a 'permissive environment' for impunity.

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Anti-ICE activists picketing a hotel in Minnesota's Twin Cities, holding signs like 'Bring the Heat! Melt the ICE!' amid snowy winter conditions.
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Activists plan weeklong anti-ICE protests in Twin Cities, including hotel pickets and school-focused trainings

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Organizers in Minnesota’s Twin Cities region planned a series of demonstrations and trainings from Feb. 25 through March 1 under the banner “Bring the Heat! Melt the ICE!”, including actions at the Minnesota State Capitol and at hotels they say are housing federal immigration agents, according to organizing materials obtained by the advocacy group Defending Education and reported by The Daily Wire.

Indigenous leaders and advocates gathered at the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues this week to address how to enforce international court rulings on climate action. They highlighted gaps between legal decisions and government compliance, particularly affecting vulnerable communities. Speakers urged using these rulings as tools to protect Indigenous lands and rights.

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On February 12, 2026, the Trump administration repealed the Environmental Protection Agency's 2009 Endangerment Finding, which had established greenhouse gases as threats to public health and welfare. President Trump and EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin announced the move at the White House, describing it as the largest deregulatory action in U.S. history. The repeal undermines the legal foundation for numerous federal climate regulations.

Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg has become a political tool in the Danish election campaign. The party Danmarksdemokraterne proposes an entry ban for foreign activists participating in illegal demonstrations, citing Thunberg as an example. Party leader Inger Støjberg has publicly criticized her on Instagram.

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An update on the ongoing detention of Daria Egereva and Natalya Leongardt: the two Russian Indigenous rights advocates, arrested in December on terrorism charges, had their pretrial detention extended last month until at least June. Egereva, a Selkup climate activist, was scheduled to attend the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues in New York next week but now faces up to 20 years in prison. The case underscores escalating repression against environmental and human rights defenders.

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