• Latest
There is no climate justice without reparatory justice

There is no climate justice without reparatory justice

October 3, 2025
Gov’t Worried as Farmers Abandon Vanilla

Uganda posts sharp rise in Vanilla exports

December 4, 2025

The Key to Uganda’s Climate Future is Stronger Institutions, Not More Promises

December 3, 2025
VINAStech Advert
Stanbic launches Digital Creators Summit in Kampala

Stanbic launches Digital Creators Summit in Kampala

December 3, 2025

A Procedural Fatal Blow to Justice for the EACOP-Affected

December 3, 2025

WIPO Director General to Visit Uganda for a Major High-Level IP Mission as URSB Steers National Engagements

December 3, 2025
UPC condemns police brutality against opposition candidates

UPC condemns police brutality against opposition candidates

December 3, 2025

Uganda’s electricity demand surges as energy targets fall behind

December 3, 2025
Motorcyclist Arrested Over Alleged Attempted Murder of Senior Police Officer in Mbarara

Motorcyclist Arrested Over Alleged Attempted Murder of Senior Police Officer in Mbarara

December 2, 2025
UNAIDS Warns of Fragile Progress Amid Funding Cuts and Human Rights Setbacks

UNAIDS Warns of Fragile Progress Amid Funding Cuts and Human Rights Setbacks

December 2, 2025
Stanbic Bank Unveils Scholarships Ahead of Digital Creators Summit

Stanbic Bank Unveils Scholarships Ahead of Digital Creators Summit

December 2, 2025

31-Year-Old Woman Dies at Self-Proclaimed Bishop’s Church in Pallisa

December 1, 2025

Residents Decry Delayed Garbage Collection in Kampala

November 30, 2025
  • About Us
  • Internship
  • Contact Us
Thursday, December 4, 2025
Parrots Media
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • News
    UPC condemns police brutality against opposition candidates

    UPC condemns police brutality against opposition candidates

    Uganda’s electricity demand surges as energy targets fall behind

    Major-General Horta Inta-a sworn in as Guinea Bissau president

    Major-General Horta Inta-a sworn in as Guinea Bissau president

    “I Am Part of the Unreported Statistics of Male Victims of Domestic Violence,” says Journalist Canary Mugume

    “I Am Part of the Unreported Statistics of Male Victims of Domestic Violence,” says Journalist Canary Mugume

    Embaló Ousted as Army Announce Control in Guinea-Bissau

    Embaló Ousted as Army Announce Control in Guinea-Bissau

    UPC denies being dominant only in Lango

    UPC Turns to Supporters for 2026 Campaign Funding

    Trending Tags

  • Climate Change
  • Business
  • Science and Technology
  • Sports and Entertainment
  • Business
  • Others
    • Education
    • Lifestyle
    • Religion
    • Opinions
  • News
    UPC condemns police brutality against opposition candidates

    UPC condemns police brutality against opposition candidates

    Uganda’s electricity demand surges as energy targets fall behind

    Major-General Horta Inta-a sworn in as Guinea Bissau president

    Major-General Horta Inta-a sworn in as Guinea Bissau president

    “I Am Part of the Unreported Statistics of Male Victims of Domestic Violence,” says Journalist Canary Mugume

    “I Am Part of the Unreported Statistics of Male Victims of Domestic Violence,” says Journalist Canary Mugume

    Embaló Ousted as Army Announce Control in Guinea-Bissau

    Embaló Ousted as Army Announce Control in Guinea-Bissau

    UPC denies being dominant only in Lango

    UPC Turns to Supporters for 2026 Campaign Funding

    Trending Tags

  • Climate Change
  • Business
  • Science and Technology
  • Sports and Entertainment
  • Business
  • Others
    • Education
    • Lifestyle
    • Religion
    • Opinions
No Result
View All Result
Parrots Media
No Result
View All Result
Home CLIMATE ACTION REPORTS

There is no climate justice without reparatory justice

Columnist by Columnist
October 3, 2025
in CLIMATE ACTION REPORTS
0
There is no climate justice without reparatory justice

Phionah Ndyamuhaki, Ugandan Climate Activist

12
SHARES
120
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on X

OPINION
In recent years, climate justice has become a rallying cry from boardrooms to protest matches. It appears in policy papers, corporate sustainability reports, and global climate negotiations.

While the term has become mainstream, its meaning has often been diluted, reduced to vague commitments to equity and inclusion in climate action.

READ ALSO

The Key to Uganda’s Climate Future is Stronger Institutions, Not More Promises

The road to COP30, Uganda’s Climate Contradiction as EACOP threatens NDC Goals

True climate justice, however, cannot exist without reparatory justice. To treat them as separate is to misunderstand the very roots of the climate crisis and to perpetuate the same historical injustices that made it possible in the first place.

Notably, the climate crisis is not a naturally occurring disaster, it is a human made emergency, built on centuries of colonial extraction, environmental plunder, and exploitation of people and land. The countries and corporations most responsible for historical emissions grew rich through colonialism, slavery, and industrial expansion fuelled by cheap Labor and stolen resources.

Today, the countries least responsible for climate change particularly Africa, bear the worst consequences. From rising sea levels and prolonged droughts to deadly heatwaves and loss of biodiversity, these regions are suffering environmental, economic, and cultural losses that they did not cause and cannot afford to fix on their own.

This is not just a problem of carbon; it’s a problem of justice. Any attempt of climate justice that does not acknowledge and address this unequal history is incomplete at best and performative at worst.

Thus, reparatory justice calls for the repair of historical harm material, cultural, psychological, and ecological. It involves more than just financial compensation. It means transferring resources, decision making power, and technology to the communities that have been marginalized by centuries of extractive systems. It means debt cancellation, land restitution, and funding for loss and damage, not as charity, but as a matter of historical accountability.

Crucially, reparatory justice reframes the narrative. It doesn’t ask how can we help the vulnerable, but rather, what is owed to those who were made vulnerable through systems we still benefit from.

For example, when Caribbean nations call for climate reparations, they are not asking for handouts. They demanding that the countries most responsible for climate change recognize heir ecological debt and respond accordingly with grants not loans, with solidarity not saviorism.

Although states have passed various climate policies that emphasize market-based solutions, carbon offsets, net-zero targets, green finance as the pathway to justice, these policies have entrenched inequality. When carbon offset programs push indigenous communities off their land in the name of conservation, or when infrastructure is built on backs of exploited Labor in the Global south, we must ask: Justice for who?

This is a clear indication that technocratic solutions can reduce emissions without ever addressing the underlying systems of colonialism, capitalism and racism that caused the crisis. That is not climate justice, it is climate management

Climate justice, at its core, demands repair. Not just of ecosystems, but of relationships between people, between nations and humanity, and the planet. Without reparatory justice, the climate movement risks replicating the very hierarchies it seeks to dismantle.

However, this does not mean climate action should be paralysed until reparations are paid. It means that any serious climate action must embed reparatory principles into its foundation not as an aforethought, but as a starting point.

Therefore, the path to a liveable planet is inseparable from the path to a just one. We cannot engineer our way out of climate collapse without confronting the colonial legacies and economic systems that got us here. Climate justice without reparatory justice is not justice, it is greenwashing inequality.

If the global community is truly committed to climate justice, then it must be committed to repair. Only then can we build a future that is not only sustainable, but fair.

By Phionah Ndyamuhaki
Email: ndyamuhakiphionah3@gmail.com

Tags: Climate JusticeColonial LegacyGreen FinanceReparatory justice

Related Posts

CLIMATE ACTION REPORTS

The Key to Uganda’s Climate Future is Stronger Institutions, Not More Promises

December 3, 2025
It’s time for Uganda to align its investments with nature and climate goals
CLIMATE ACTION REPORTS

The road to COP30, Uganda’s Climate Contradiction as EACOP threatens NDC Goals

November 12, 2025
ANT Condemns Attacks on Bobi Wine Camp
CLIMATE ACTION REPORTS

ANT Condemns Attacks on Bobi Wine Camp

November 8, 2025
It’s time for Uganda to align its investments with nature and climate goals
CLIMATE ACTION REPORTS

Balancing oil ambitions and climate commitments ahead of COP30

November 8, 2025
Beyond Drainage: Tackling Urban Flooding
CLIMATE ACTION REPORTS

Works Ministry Warns Road Users Against Crossing Flooded Roads

November 5, 2025
CLIMATE ACTION REPORTS

Women Climate Defenders Arrested Over Lwera Wetland Protest

October 23, 2025
Next Post
COU Head Criticizes Canterbury Appointment

Sarah Mullally named first female Archbishop of Canterbury

POPULAR NEWS

Minister Amongi, Akena Scrapped from EC Voters’ Register Oops

Minister Amongi, Akena Scrapped from EC Voters’ Register Oops

September 3, 2025
Bubangizi SS Student Dies Hours to UACE Exams

Bubangizi SS Student Dies Hours to UACE Exams

November 9, 2025
Catholic Priest Speaks Out Against Museveni and Son’s Leadership

Catholic Priest Speaks Out Against Museveni and Son’s Leadership

February 16, 2025

“Life Is Scum”: Kabale University Student Leaves Suicide Note, Takes Own Life

July 25, 2025

Former IGP Okoth Ogola Dies

February 14, 2025

EDITOR'S PICK

Museveni appoints Betty Kamya new IGG

Male candidates perform better than females in UBTEB

September 3, 2021

DP Warns on Garbage Menace in Kampala

September 24, 2024
Report ranks Uganda best country to invest in East Africa

Report ranks Uganda best country to invest in East Africa

September 26, 2023
UACE kicks off: UNEB Cautions Schools Against Malpractice

UACE kicks off: UNEB Cautions Schools Against Malpractice

November 13, 2023
VINAStech advert VINAStech advert VINAStech advert
ADVERTISEMENT

About

Parrots Media

A Public Relations and Media Services Company registered and licensed to operate in Uganda and the Great Lakes Region.

Follow us

Categories

  • Business
  • BUSINESS REPORTS
  • CLIMATE ACTION REPORTS
  • Climate Change
  • COMMUNITY REPORTS
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • FEATURES
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • News
  • News
  • OBITUARY
  • Obituary
  • Opinions
  • Religion
  • RELIGION
  • Science and Technology
  • Sports
  • Sports and Entertainment
  • TOURISM

Recent Updates

  • Uganda posts sharp rise in Vanilla exports
  • The Key to Uganda’s Climate Future is Stronger Institutions, Not More Promises
  • Stanbic launches Digital Creators Summit in Kampala
  • A Procedural Fatal Blow to Justice for the EACOP-Affected
December 2025
M T W T F S S
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293031  
« Nov    
  • About Us
  • Internship
  • Contact Us

© 2025 Parrots Media | Website Designed and Maintained by VINAStech

No Result
View All Result
  • Parrots Media
  • News
  • Business
  • Science and Technology
  • Sports and Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Others
    • Climate Change
    • Education
    • Religion
    • Opinions

© 2025 Parrots Media | Website Designed and Maintained by VINAStech

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

You cannot copy content of this page