Friends of the Earth – France


Friends of the Earth – France is an association for the protection of people and the environment. It is one of 76 national groups around the world which make up the Friends of the Earth network of environmental organizations. The group is listed as an association under the French law of 1901 :fr:Association loi 1901| and authorised to act for the protection of the environment in France by order of the Environment Minister. Friends of the Earth – France is independent of any economic, political and religious influences.
The association is a network of thirty local groups which are largely autonomous and work according to their local priorities. They are also involved in national and international campaigns owing to a shared commitment to social and environment justice.

History

The Friends of the Earth was founded by David Brower in San Francisco in 1969 after he stepped down as chairman of the Sierra Club. He wished to form an association to investigate causes of damage to the environment and then to combat them. He founded a new organisation, Friends of the Earth, and the association gathered support from many famous names.
In France, Friends of the Earth registered as an association in Paris on the 11th of July 1970. The main founders were Edwin Matthews, an American lawyer living in Paris, and Alain Hervé, a poet and reporter whose initial idea was to see Friends of the Earth become a movement that aimed to improve public knowledge of nature. Members of the sponsorship committee included: Jean Dorst, Pierre Fournier, anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss, biologist Konrad Lorenz, anthropologist Théodore Monod and biologist Jean Rostand.
Friends of the Earth were among the first organisations to push for environmental candidates in political elections, such as René Dumont who ran for president in 1974 as the first ecologist candidate and who later became honorary president of the association. Afterwards, the group also attracted activists such as Pierre Radanne and Dominique Voynet.
In 1983, Friends of the Earth decided to focus on their associational activities. Many of the activists then left the association to participate in the creation of the Greens, such as Yves Cochet. Later on more activists left to form the Génération Écologie, such as Brice Lalonde who went on to become Environment Minister in 1988.
The departure of several activists weakened the campaign resources, including the financial resources. Several teams, including those of Pierre Samuel and, have since succeeded in maintaining and developing the national association for Friends of the Earth – France. The structure of the association has remained decentralised. Local groups have considerable autonomy, while keeping the desire to unite their strength in the national and global campaigns.

Structure

Three entities shape the structure of the organisation Friends of the Earth:
The Federal Council includes 12 elected members, mainly from local groups. Its role is to ensure the correct application of guidelines adopted by the Federal Assembly, and to decide on major courses of action for the association.
New Federal Council elected in June 2012:
The Local groups; Friends of the Earth is a national federation of activists and volunteer members composed of 30 local active member groups across the country. Autonomous local groups act according to their local priorities and work towards an environmentally sustainable and socially equitable future at the local, national and international level. Each group is self-managing in terms of its campaigns, decision making structures and fundraising.
The Federal Secretariat is organised by a team of employees, volunteers and interns. The secretariat is responsible for implementing the guidelines adopted by the Federal Assembly and the Federal Council.

Objectives

The principal aim of the Friends of the Earth is to act for the protection of people and the environment. This objective is specified through a Federal Charter titled « La Charte des principes fondamentaux des Amis de la Terre France » which aims to create a world where:
The group's main sphere of activity are in ecological transition; agriculture, biodiversity and the city; economic justice; energy and mining, and risks and technologies. Themes of campaigns are:

Ecological transition

This campaign was launched in 2011 around the program “One Planet Only” with the Research and Information Centre for Development to raise awareness on the stakes of a sustainable management of natural resources incorporating the limits defined by the ecological space. Friends of the Earth has actively participated in this program.
As part of this thematic, the report “Overconsumption, a threat to water” was done in 2011 : it highlights the water footprint of consumption, that is to say the volume of water needed for the production of goods that people consume.
Another report “Europe, dependent on the lands of others” focuses on the use of lands. The report shows, for the first time, that 60% of the land used to supply the European demand for agricultural and forestry products are located outside the continent. These lands are not only used for food, meat production or fibres needed for the textile sector, but also for the growing demand for biofuels.
With the report “Planned Obsolescence” issued in 2010, Friends of the Earth have focused on the reduction of the amount of waste generated by electrical and electronic equipment. With regard to producers, the association argues the need to sell products which are more robust, repairable, and durable, and fights for an extension of the warranty period from 2 to 10 years. With regard to consumers, the association wants to give people a sense of responsibility by showing a behind the scenes view of the 21st century consumer society. Friends of the Earth have also taken part in the working group of French Environment and Energy Management Agency on the lifetime of products.

Energy and climate

The association asserts that since 1957 the nuclear power industry has benefitted from a quasi-exemption of civil responsibility by the manufacturers and the operators, with no insurance company being willing to accept the risks. Demands concerning nuclear power are the immediate closure of nuclear power plants, the withdrawal of nuclear power in France within one or two quinquennats, stopping any use of depleted uranium in weapons and consumer goods or equipment and a real logic in public service and not financial speculation on electricity.
Friends of the Earth campaigns for financial actors take into account their impacts on the environment and people.
Friends of the Earth have also continued their campaign against the European Investment Bank, the public bank of the European Union, which is a stakeholder in several mining projects in Africa. Following this, financing was halted of the Mopani Copper Mine project, where the EIB announced that it would no longer fund the projects of the company Glencore AG until such time as the results of an internal inquiry invalidate serious charges brought against the Swiss multinational. The French TV channel France 5 broadcast a documentary on the case “Zambia: who benefits from the copper?”.
CRAD40: Friends of the Earth led a campaign “Let's drop the masks of Crad 40” to demand a law to make corporate parent companies legally responsible for the activities of their subsidiaries abroad. This campaign aims to get a petition signed and to call on French deputies to strengthen the legal framework of multinational companies.
Pinocchio prizes: since 2008, the Pinocchio prizes for sustainable development aim to illustrate and denounce the negative impact of some French companies, in total contradiction with the concept of sustainable development they extensively use.

“La Baleine” (The Whale)

“La Baleine” is the newspaper of the association. It delivers analyses of the association about environmental and social issues, and aims to inform about the activities of the association and their allies at local, national and international levels.

Allies

Various campaigns are carried out in partnership with several organisations including: CRID, Climate Action Network, Réseau Semences paysannes, Réseau Sortir du Nucléaire, Combat Monsanto and Nature & Progrès.