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Ahead of VW’s Annual Shareholders’ Meeting: Organizations Call for a Halt to Carbon Project in Tanzania

Ahead of VW’s Annual Shareholders’ Meeting: Organizations Call for a Halt to Carbon Project in Tanzania

Volkswagen’s Climate Strategy Faces Criticism Once Again

Ahead of Volkswagen AG’s Annual General Meeting on June 18, 2026, human rights and environmental organizations are ramping up pressure on the company: FIAN, Survival International, Misereor, STP, and the Association of Ethical Shareholders are calling on Volkswagen to halt the “Longido and Monduli Rangelands Carbon Project” in Tanzania, which it is financing. The organizations accuse Volkswagen of seeking to improve its carbon footprint at the expense of the rights of indigenous Maasai communities.

At the Annual General Meeting, representatives of the organizations, together with a Maasai representative, will report on the specific impacts of the project on the ground. They will discuss the threat of restrictions on traditional pastoralism as well as the failure to take women and young people into account. “The internationally binding principle of free, prior, and informed consent has been violated on multiple occasions. Community members were neither adequately informed nor effectively involved in decision-making processes. Furthermore, advance payments to village councils constitute a problematic form of influence,” said Roman Herre of FIAN.

What the organizations have repeatedly criticized since early 2025 is now also reflected in the number of complaints: In April 2026 alone, more than 100 complaints were filed against the project. “What local people are reporting is clear: The affected communities do not want to be subject to the rules of a German corporation for decades—on their land, which they have been farming for generations,” criticizes Linda Poppe of Survival International.

From the organizations’ perspective, offset projects do not address the root causes of the climate crisis but merely shift its consequences. “Corporations that are among the biggest contributors to the climate crisis are buying their way out of their responsibility to consistently reduce emissions within their own companies—at the expense of local communities in the Global South, who have contributed very little to the climate crisis,” says Selina Wiredu of Misereor.

“Volkswagen is at a crossroads. The company must demonstrate that climate protection and human rights go hand in hand,” explains Laura Mahler of STP. “Projects that restrict Indigenous Peoples’ control over their land without their consent and jeopardize their self-determination have no place in a credible sustainability strategy.”

Background: The “Longido and Monduli Rangelands Carbon Project” is part of a Volkswagen-funded joint venture with the German company ClimatePartner. The project aims to generate carbon credits on nearly one million hectares. Local Maasai representatives report increasing pressure on Maasai communities to sign contracts that could severely restrict their traditional grazing practices for 40 years.

The press release is supported by the Society for Threatened Peoples (STP), the FoodFirst Information and Action Network (FIAN), Misereor as a member of the MISA network (Maasai International Solidarity Alliance), Survival International, and the Association of Ethical Shareholders.

2025 MISA study on the project: https://assets.zyrosite.com/YrDWbZbewLfG5Dor/eng-YbNBPR4nQlHg8bqw.pdf Current MISA complaint regarding the certification process: https://assets.zyrosite.com/YrDWbZbewLfG5Dor/260404-public-comment-by-survival-misa-on-project-4924—vcs-and-ccb-0HixvADPDFTKPhUT.pdf

This press release was translated from German to English using AI. If you come across errors or ambiguities, please contact us at 65]G378o6DD6CA.

Laura Mahler

Laura Mahler

Referentin für Subsahara-Afrika

Thematische Schwerpunkte:

  • Namibia
  • Ovaherero und Nama
  • Maasai
  • Tansania
  • Westsahara

E-Mail: l.mahler@gfbv.de 

Telefon: +49 3051 695 825 3