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PoliticsEurope

G7 in Germany: More than a show?

Sabine Kinkartz Elmau, Germany
June 26, 2022

The G7 leaders want to fight the climate crisis, hunger and war. But is that even within their power? Some deny it, while others say more action is necessary.

The G7 leaders, along with the leaders of the EU, gather for a portrait
World leaders have gathered in Elmau for the G7 summitImage: Ludovic Marin/REUTERS

"Everyone against the G7" is written in yellow letters on a purple banner showing a big, clenched fist facing five smaller fists. "Their system brings war and crisis" can be read elsewhere, and "We meet imperialism here." Around 900 staunch opponents of the G7 summit have gathered in Garmisch-Partenkirchen for a demonstration.

The alliance Stop G7 Elmau is here to protest the power of the seven heads of state and government, whose decisions wield massive influence. Only 10% of the world's population lives in the seven rich industrialized nations that informally formed the G7 in the mid-1970s. But their decisions, even though they are not legally binding, affect the other 90%.

Protesters have been confined to Garmisch-Partenkirchen, several miles away from the site of the summitImage: Alexandra Beier/AP/picture alliance

Protesters reject summit's exclusivity

"The Global South has no voice here," criticizes activist Christopher Olk. The leaders of India, Indonesia, Argentina, Senegal and South Africa, who have been invited to the second day of the summit, are only there because they have raw materials to offer and energy is scarce in the rich north, he said.

"Africa must not become plan B for the energy-hungry G7," shouts an activist from Uganda from a large stage set up on the station square.

Other speakers warn of an escalation both of the war in Ukraine and the climate crisis. "We will not let them destroy our planet and our future," shouts one climate activist. Later, the demonstrators form a procession and, guarded by hundreds of police in riot gear, march through the city center, chanting loudly.

Meanwhile, 20 kilometers (about 12 miles) away in Elmau, located above Garmisch-Partenkirchen in a valley that is difficult to access, the heads of state and government of the seven major industrialized nations have begun their talks. To start, they addressed the world economy and a global infrastructure initiative. Some $600 billion (€570 billion) is to be raised to enable investments for climate protection, including in the energy and health sectors.

Christopher Olk and Tatjana Söding have come to Garmisch-Partenkirchen to oppose the G7 summitImage: Sabine Kinkartz/DW

"This shows the unity of the G7," said German Chancellor Olaf Scholz at the joint presentation of the initiative, which took place outside the Schloss Elmau resort against the picturesque mountain backdrop. Amid the ongoing war in Ukraine, summit attendees want to send the signal of unity.

On the first day of the summit came the news that Russia has once again fired missiles at Kyiv. The contrast between war-torn Ukraine and idyllic Elmau could not be greater. Still, the images from the castle summit are meant to convey solidarity to Ukraine, while also sending a signal of solidarity to President Vladimir Putin in Moscow. "We have to stay together," emphasized US President Joe Biden.

Decadent and out of touch?

But does such a message justify a summit as elaborate as the one in Elmau? For 48 hours, top politicians have flown in, each with a huge entourage, first with their government planes to Munich, then in a helicopter to the five-star hotel Schloss Elmau, where they live and work sealed off from the outside world. Some 18,000 police officers are providing security for the summit, at a cost of more than €180 million.

Everything is precisely planned — the summit runs like a well-oiled machine. Garmisch-Partenkirchen is a high-security zone and, and with its closed-off streets, large parts of it resemble a ghost town. Many residents have fled, while those who stayed behind are just annoyed by the "show" that is being put on here. Some say such a spectacle is no longer in keeping with the times and an example of how out of touch, even decadent, politics has become. 

More problems than ever before

Next to the police officers, approximately 3,000 journalists are also housed in Garmisch, along with the representatives of numerous nongovernmental organizations. With its many white tents and temporary structures, the media center resembles a fenced-in city. This is the starting point for the shuttle buses that bring journalists to Elmau to report on the summit against the backdrop of the castle.

Other reporters experience the summit mainly on a screen, accompanied by the drone of the helicopters circling incessantly overhead. The catering is almost exclusively vegetarian and vegan.

Protest group ONE has sent representatives to Garmisch-PartenkirchenImage: Sabine Kinkartz/DW

In the afternoon of the summit's first day, four organizations primarily concerned with poverty reduction, health and climate protection, invited the public to a press conference in the media center. Global Citizen, Oxfam, World Vision and ONE are among the critics of the G7, but unlike the demonstrators, they haven't questioned whether or not it should exist at all.

"It is good and important that the heads of state and government talk and negotiate with each other, but they must also keep their promises," said Scherwin Saedi of ONE Germany.

Above all, Saedi underlined the importance of the pledge to free 500 million people from hunger by 2030, made in 2015 at the last G7 summit under the German presidency. "What we see is that the numbers have been rising since 2017," said Saedi. "In 2022, we have over 150 million more people suffering from malnutrition than we did then. That's moving in the opposite direction."

War, hunger, climate, COVID — never before has a G7 summit had to deal with so many problems at once. The effects of the conflict in Ukraine on energy supplies are causing prices to rise worldwide and exacerbating hunger. As a result, the world has been paying less attention to the climate emergency — and yet, with droughts and record temperatures, it is relentlessly becoming more urgent.

No one will be 'fobbed off with warm words'

How can solutions be found without pitting one crisis against the other? The organization Global Citizen accused the German chancellor of trying to water down agreements on international climate protection. Because of the energy crisis, Germany is trying to reverse its voluntary commitment to phasing out public financing of fossil fuels by the end of 2022, said the group's Friederike Meister.

That would send a "fatal signal" to the rest of the world, and could lead to blocking progress at the climate conference in Egypt later this year, said Meister, who is calling for the G7 to commit to an international coal phaseout by 2030. She also said countries must keep their promise to provide financial support to those nations particularly affected by climate change.

At this summit, no one will be "fobbed off with warm words," ONE said. At the last German G7 summit in 2015, many promises were made, but little came out in the end. "We can't let the G7 get away with that."

This article was originally published in German

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