Connect with us

Subscribe

Subscribe

A Look At Society

Corporate Lobbying is Killing Climate Action; Here’s the Real Fix

“Natural disasters can be managed. CO₂ emissions can be controlled. That would require business and government to finally work together, and they won’t.”

As asteroid 24 YR4 barrels toward earth, we’re distracted from another looming disaster, one entirely of our own making. Climate breakdown isn’t theoretical anymore. It’s here, and it’s being fueled by our collective failure to act.

The Paris Accords once held promise. Countries committed to keeping global warming below 1.5°C. That meant cutting greenhouse gases fast and decisively, but economic interests took priority, and emissions? They climbed anyway. North America, Asia, and the EU kept growing their economies, and their carbon footprints.

Electric vehicles (EVs) could have been part of the solution, but leaders shelved bold ideas, citing high costs. Now, EV battery plants are everywhere, and thousands of cars sit idle in parking lots. Meanwhile, working families can’t afford them, and utility bills? Up. Way up.

There was a plan, but it collapsed fast. Why won’t our leaders take bold action? Here’s what they could do but won’t:

    • Mandate a shift to EVs by forcing businesses to electrify their fleets.
    • Cap energy prices to stop runaway hikes from private electric, gas, and oil companies.
    • End energy subsidies that prop up billion-dollar corporations. In 2024 alone, governments handed over more than $1.3 trillion to energy giants. Did they clean up their act? Not at all. They just padded their profits.
    • Protect forests. The Amazon, and forests across Russia and North America, once filtered the air we breathe. Now they’re burning or being bulldozed thanks to greed.

Let’s be real. Elected officials only seem to care about the public once every four years during campaign season. The rest of the time? They serve political parties and corporate donors. Many are already planning their exits lining up cushy gigs in the very industries they once regulated.

Why do politicians trust the private sector so blindly? Well, they are the private sector. First, last, and always, any concern they show for everyday people is strategic, not sincere.

Here’s the hard truth; natural disasters can be managed. Greenhouse gases can be cut, but none of that happens without real cooperation between business and government. Right now? That relationship is rigged.

Until we remove the private sector’s grip on government, nothing will change. Lobbying by corporate giants must end, legally and permanently. Full stop.

Politicians must release public financial statements before running for office, and again six months before retirement. Why? To expose hidden wealth and offshore accounts. Ever met a city councilor, member of Congress, or Parliament who isn’t secretly stashing cash somewhere? Me neither.

What’s worse: privacy laws are used to protect the very people and companies putting us in a climate crisis. We don’t lack solutions. We lack political will. Until we strip away the power of the corporations controlling our laws, climate justice remains out of reach.

Newsletter Signup

Stay in the loop with exclusive news, stories, and insights—delivered straight to your inbox. No fluff, just real content that matters. Sign up today!

Written By

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Trending

Who protects journalists when truth becomes a death sentence?

News & Views

Rising Stronger: The Resilient Heartbeat of an Island Home

JamaicaNews

Black Excellence isn’t waiting for permission anymore; It’s redefining Canada

Likes & Shares

Over 100 global affairs workers expose systemic racism scandal

News & Views

Newsletter Signup

Stay in the loop with exclusive news, stories, and insights—delivered straight to your inbox. No fluff, just real content that matters. Sign up today!

Legal Disclaimer: The Toronto Caribbean Newspaper, its officers, and employees will not be held responsible for any loss, damages, or expenses resulting from advertisements, including, without limitation, claims or suits regarding liability, violation of privacy rights, copyright infringement, or plagiarism. Content Disclaimer: The statements, opinions, and viewpoints expressed by the writers are their own and do not necessarily reflect the opinions or views of Toronto Caribbean News Inc. Toronto Caribbean News Inc. assumes no responsibility or liability for claims, statements, opinions, or views, written or reported by its contributing writers, including product or service information that is advertised. Copyright © 2025 Toronto Caribbean News Inc.

Connect
Newsletter Signup

Stay in the loop with exclusive news, stories, and insights—delivered straight to your inbox. No fluff, just real content that matters. Sign up today!