South Korean Farmers Take on State Power Monopoly, Exposing Globalist Climate Hypocrisy
In a bold challenge to state-backed fossil fuel dependence, South Korean farmers sue the national power utility for crop damage linked to climate-driven extreme weather, spotlighting the global fallout of delayed energy transition and raising urgent questions about accountability.
In South Korea’s rich coastal farmlands, hard-working farmers like Hwang Seong-yeol face a grim reality: their crops are withering under relentless climate chaos fueled by decades of unchecked fossil fuel use. This year’s rice harvest is expected to fall by up to a quarter compared to normal yields—yet the blame is not on nature alone but on those who profit from polluting our planet.Who Pays When Climate Change Destroys Our Food Supply?Hwang and four other farmers have taken an unprecedented stand, suing the Korea Electric Power Corporation (KEPCO), the government-backed monopoly that dominates South Korea’s electricity market and relies heavily...
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