In recent years there has been a greater proliferation in ecofascist groups globally in line with the proliferation of ecofascist rhetoric, and a more general increase in far-right and fascist political thought and sentiment.
Australia Australia has seen an increasing prominence of ecofascism among its far-right groups in recent years. Scholars have highlighted that Australia is particularly primed for such an increase due to being acutely affected by global warming, having a history of highly restrictive immigration policies, and its geopolitical situation in Oceania in relation to Asia.
Austria until 2014 By the 1980s neo-Nazis and far-right individuals had managed to take on leading positions in the and the , many also being members of the far-right
World Union for Protection of Life. (DGÖ) was founded in 1982 by the former
National Democratic Party (NDP) official Alfred Bayer to use the popularity of the green movement at the time for the purposes of the NDP. The party managed to win a number of municipal seats in the mid-1980s but in 1988 the
Constitutional Court banned the party on grounds of neo-Nazism alongside a parallel ban on the NDP.
Denmark The
National Socialist Movement of Denmark took part in the 1988 elections in Denmark with the campaign "A Green Denmark for White People", focusing on environmental issues. The party's magazine championed
organic farming and condemned synthetic fertilizers, pharmaceuticals, hormones, pesticides, and genetic modification. A paper by Claus Bundgård Christensen of the
University of Roskilde states "there is no doubt that Ecofascist ideological values play a prominent role amongst contemporary Danish National Socialists." Nordic Resistance Movement that is active in Denmark supports green causes and frequently refers to the Danish Nazi leader
Povl Riis-Knudsen who promoted ecofascism and Savitri Devi's works.
Finland The neo-fascist
Blue-and-Black Movement includes ecofascist policy goals, stating that they aim to protect the nature and biodiversity of Finland, and to live in harmony with nature, ending ritual slaughter, fur-farming and animal testing. According to the
Finnish Broadcasting Company, the Movement can be described as ecofascist, and the group draws considerable support from traditional
Green League voters. Finnish ecofascist and the author of the book "National Socialism - Ideology of Nature Conservation", Werner Toivonen, has been a featured speaker at significant Finnish extreme right events, including the (Finland Awakens) march and the "Awakening" conference.
France Nouvelle Droite movement The European movement, developed by
Alain de Benoist and other individuals involved with the
GRECE think tank, have also combined various left-wing ideas, including green politics, with right-wing ideas such as European
ethnonationalism. Various other far-right figures have taken the lead from de Benoist, providing an
appeal to nature in their politics, including:
Guillaume Faye, Renaud Camus, and
Hervé Juvin. From the nineteenth century to Zemmour, ecofascism contaminates the political debate (reporterre.net)
Génération identitaire In 2020, following articles from self-described ecofascist , a spokesperson for , Clément Martin, advocated for , ethnically homogenous zones to be violently defended in order to protect the environment.
National Rally Marine Le Pen, president of the far-right
National Rally (, or
RN) in the French
National Assembly, has shown an ecofascist approach towards climate change issue and has incorporated environmental issues into her platform, although her policies regarding the climate often reflect a nationalist and protectionist stance to address it. Le Pen has stated that concern for the climate is inherently nationalist, and that immigrants
"do not care about the environment".
Jordan Bardella, president of National Rally, embraces similar beliefs and has stated
"Borders are the environment’s greatest ally; it is through them we will save the planet." Solutions for
climate change proposed for Le Pen also align with right-wing conservative economics. She has disregarded liberal
free trade economics, under her belief that it
"kills the planet" and creates
"suffering for animals". Rather than supporting mass production of international commerce, she designed a localist project for
"economic patriotism" to boost French products. Climate change was not in the RN's party platform until around 2019, when the issue began to be capitalised electorally by both leftist and center parties alike. In response to this rising awareness regarding environmental issues, Le Pen designed an energy plan focused on
fossil fuels, opposing
wind and
solar energy, and emphasising expanding
nuclear power wherein she delineated a party policy where 70% of France's electricity was to come from nuclear energy by 2050. Additionally, Le Pen supports maintaining oil heating systems and reducing taxes on fossil fuels, which contradicts climate experts' recommendations, and could increase France's dependence on fossil fuels.
Germany Staudenmaier points to how from the post-war period in Germany an ecofascist section has always been present in the German far-right, though as a minor peripheral section, with others pointing out a long history of right-wing individuals and groups being present in the environmental and green movement in Germany.
Die Heimat , the leader of the
National Democratic Party of Germany from 2014 to 2024, photographed in 2017
Die Heimat (The Homeland), previously known as the National Democratic Party of Germany (NPD), a German Nationalist far-right party, has long sought to utilise the
green movement. This is one of many strategies the party has used to try to gain supporters. The German far-right has published the magazine , that masquerades as a garden and nature publication but intertwines garden tips with extremist political ideology. This is known as a "camouflage publication" in which the NPD has spread its mission and ideologies through a discrete source and made its way into homes they otherwise wouldn't. Right-wing environmentalists are settling in the northern regions of rural Germany and are forming nationalistic and authoritarian communities which produce honey, fresh produce, baked goods, and other such farm goods for profit. Their ideology is centered around "blood and soil"
ruralism in which they humanely raise produce and animals for profit and sustenance. Through their support of this operation, and the backing of many others, it's reported that the NPD is trying to wrestle the
green movement, which has been dominated by the left since the 1980s, back from the left through these avenues. It's difficult to know if when one is buying local produce or farm fresh eggs from a farmer at their stand, they're supporting a right-wing agenda. Various efforts are being made to halt or slow the infiltration of right-wing ecologists into the community of organic farmers such as brochures about their communities and common practices. However, as the organic cultivation organisation, Biopark, demonstrates with their vetting process, it's difficult to keep people out of communities because of their ideologies. Biopark specifies that they vet based on cultivation habits, not opinions or doctrines, especially when they're not explicitly stated.
AfD In the wake of the Christchurch mosque shootings multiple elected officials of (Alternative for Germany) referred to Tarrant as a "green fascist", and used the shootings to attack domestic green policies. Anti-fascist watchdog
Belltower.News highlighted that many AfD policies and the rhetoric employed across AfD social media accounts aligned more with Tarrant's manifesto than the green policies that the AfD was choosing to attack. Prominent AfD politician,
Björn Höcke, has stated his desire to "reclaim" natural conservation from the left. Höcke believes that nature conservation is not correctly executed under climate justice politics, and is quoted stating that the AfD has "to take the issue of nature conservation back from the Greens" However, Höcke recognises that a socially conservative position that strongly values environmental protection is not the majority position of the AfD. Regardless, Höcke sees the work of far-right ecological magazine, , as laying a theoretical standpoint for the AfD to later draw from.
Collegium Humanum Other groups The term is also used to a limited extent within the . The neo-Artamans have been identified as ecofascists in their attempts to revive the
agrarian and völkisch traditions of the
Artaman League in communes that they have built up since the 1990s.
Greece Greek neo-Nazi
Golden Dawn has a Green Wing that defines its difference from the liberal environmental movement: "Our love for nature is different than theirs [the left]: The environment is the cradle of our Race, it mirrors our culture and civilization, making it our duty to protect it." The Green Wing worked as volunteer firemen during the
2018 Attica wildfires and took part in the
reforestation projects.
Hungary , leader of the
Our Homeland Movement party, speaking at , 2021 Following the fall of Communism in Hungary at the end of the 1980s, one of the new political parties that emerged in the country was the
Green Party of Hungary. Initially having a moderate centre-right green outlook, after 1993 the party adopted a radical anti-liberal, anti-communist, antisemitic and pro-fascist stance, paired with the creation of a paramilitary wing. This ideological swing resulted in many members breaking off from the party to form new green parties, first with
Green Alternative in 1993 and secondly with
Hungarian Social Green Party in 1995. Each green party remained on the political fringe of Hungarian politics and petered out over time. It was not until the formation of
LMP – Hungary's Green Party in the 2010s that green politics in Hungary consolidated around a single green party. The far-right Hungarian political party
Our Homeland Movement has adopted some elements of environmentalism, and commonly refers to itself as the only true green party; for example, the party has called on Hungarians to show patriotism by supporting the removal of pollution from the
Tisza River while simultaneously placing the blame on the pollution on
Romania and
Ukraine. Similarly, elements of the far-right
Sixty-Four Counties Youth Movement proscribe themselves to the "Eco-Nationalist" label, with one member stating "no real nationalist is a climate denialist".
India addressing at the inauguration of the India Pavilion, at
COP21 Indian Prime Minister
Narendra Modi's leadership of India with the
Bharatiya Janata Party seeks to install a complete system of
Hindutva, with repression of racial and religious minorities as well as an intensification of
caste discrimination. Since 2018 Modi has been increasingly viewed as an environmental champion and used rhetoric about protecting the environment to
greenwash his image and the image of his party. The Modi governments have been accused of using environmental justifications to target minority communities in India for oppressive measures and displacement. In 2022, BJP leader &
Assam Chief Minister
Himanta Biswa Sarma accused the
Muslim minority of 'flood jihad' i.e orchestrating man-made
floods in the lowlying
Hindu-majority areas of the
Brahmaputra Valley by deliberately accelerating
deforestation and
environmental degradation in the surrounding mountains of
Meghalaya. Researchers have also highlighted an increasing securitisation of borders in India in response to climate change.
International Greenline Front is an international network of ecofascists which originated in Eastern Europe, with chapters in a variety of countries such as Argentina, Belarus, Chile, Germany, Italy, Poland, Russia, Serbia, Spain and Switzerland. It disseminates propaganda online that rejects anthropocentrism and monotheism while asserting "blood and soil" mythology. Greenline Front also produces less overt propaganda espousing vegetarianism, veganism, and animal rights, as a way to reach more mainstream audiences, with them notably creating images that replicate propaganda previously produced by groups such as the anarchist
Animal Liberation Front.
Mongolia Tsagaan Khas () is a Mongolian neo-Nazi organisation. In 2013, the group tried to shift its focus to fighting pollution resulting from
mining in Mongolia. Its members have appeared at mining operations, demanding to see paperwork and sometimes sabotaging the operations if they deemed it mismanaged. The group has demanded soil samples from the mining operations, in order to check for
soil contamination. According to the founder of the group, the group wants to fulfill a role which the local authorities have supposedly failed at concerning foreign mining companies.
Online Ecofascist groups and networks have formed online, where ideology is spread with the use of
memes and
hashtags which have often featured in terrorist manifestos. These groups and networks are not a singular cohesive movement, but instead disparate parts of a subculture that seeks to blend environmental catastrophism with white supremacy. This prominent digital footprint has been noted in contrast to the idealised return to supposed "natural" and racial orders espoused by such communities. The memes and propaganda generated by ecofascists often include themes of runes,
cottagecore aesthetics, and admiration of ideological inspirations such as Ted Kaczynski.
Russia Initially a "patriotic environmental group", was run in part by multiple neo-Nazi leaders who eventually took it over. A leader of the violent neo-Nazi United Brigade-88 Sergei Nikulkin is a Mestnye leader. Leonid Simunin, a Mestnye functionary was a supervisor of Russki Obraz, another violent neo-Nazi group. In 2006 groups of Mestnye activists attacked 20 marketplaces in Moscow and detained 73 illegal immigrants, Mestnye leader Sergei Fateev bragging that the neo-Nazi "
Movement Against Illegal Immigration is all talk, but we act." Mestnye is also connected to the neo-Nazi "88th Brigade"
Espanola, which fights in Ukraine, through the Brigade's founder, who is a member. Furthermore, the green movement provides funding to the brigade.
Serbia Leviathan Movement promotes ecology and protects animals from cruelty by, among other things, saving them from abusers. Leviathan has been reported as an ideologically neo-fascist and neo-Nazi group. They used to share an office with the
Serbian Right, a far-right political party, and Leviathan's leader, Pavle Bihali, is seen in pictures on his social media accounts posing with neo-Nazis.
Sweden The
Nordic Resistance Movement, a
pan-Nordic neo-Nazi movement in the
Nordic countries and a political party in
Sweden has been continually described as ecofascist, and have declared themselves as the "new green party" of the Nordics. In their English-language literature they continually link immigration to environmental degradation, as well as linking both to liberalism and the
cultural Marxism conspiracy theory.
Switzerland In Switzerland, the initiators of the
Ecopop initiative were accused of eco-fascism by
Federal Department of Foreign Affairs State Secretary at a
Christian Democratic People's Party of Switzerland event on 11 January 2013. However, after threatening to sue, Rossier apologised for the allegation. Ecopop seeks to preserve the environment by reducing population growth globally by focusing on curbing population growth in developing countries, and by greatly restricting and reducing immigration to Switzerland.
United Kingdom 's appearance on
Question Time, 2009 There is a historic tradition between the far-right and environmentalism in the UK. Throughout its history, the far-right
British National Party has flirted on and off with environmentalism. During the 1970s the party's first leader
John Bean expressed support for the emerging environmentalist movement in the pages of the party's newspaper and suggested the primary cause of pollution as overpopulation, and therefore immigration into Britain must be halted. During the 2000s the BNP sought to position itself as the only 'true' green party in the United Kingdom, dedicating a significant portion of their manifestos to green issues. During an appearance on
BBC One's
Question Time in October 2009, then-leader
Nick Griffin proclaimed: {{Blockquote
The Guardian criticised Griffin's claims that himself and the BNP were truly environmentalists at heart, suggesting it was merely a smokescreen for anti-immigrant rhetoric and pointed to previous statements by Griffin in which he suggested that
climate change was a hoax. These suspicions seemed to be proven correct when in December 2009 the BNP released a 40-page document denying that
global warming is a "man-made" phenomenon. The party reiterated this stance in 2011, as well as making claims that
wind farms were causing the deaths of "thousands of Scottish pensioners from
hypothermia".
John Bean a far-right activist and politician, the first leader of the BNP and latterly a leader within the
National Front, wrote regularly in the National Front’s magazine about the problems of pollution and
environmental degradation tying them to ideas of overpopulation and immigration. In 2024 it was reported by
Searchlight that the fascist groups
Patriotic Alternative and
Homeland party has also started to make claims that the countryside was being destroyed by immigration. In Scotland, former UKIP candidate and activist Alistair McConnachie, who has
denied the Holocaust, founded the
Independent Green Voice in 2003, and multiple ex-BNP members and activists have stood as candidates for the party.
United States During the 1990s a highly militant environmentalist subculture called
Hardline emerged from the
straight edge hardcore punk music scene and established itself in a number of cities across the US. Hardline groups were highly militant; in 1999
Salt Lake City grouped Hardliners as a criminal gang and suggested they were behind dozens of assaults in the metro area. That same year
CBS News reported that Hardliners were behind the firebombing of fast food outlets and clothing stores selling leather items, and attributed 30 attacks to Hardliners. The Hardline subculture dissolved after the 1990s. White supremacist
John Tanton and the network of organisations he created, dubbed the
Tanton network, have been described as ecofascist. Tanton and his organisations spent decades linking immigration to environmental concerns. Political researchers Blair Taylor and Eszter Szenes have identified multiple threads in
alt-right discourse and ideology that align with far-right ecologism and ecofascism. The
Green Party of the United States has also long been the target of various far-right figures, such as
antisemitic conspiracy theorists, who have tried to shift the party drastically to the far-right. The ecobordering engaged in by right-wing politicians such as
Mark Brnovich has been highlighted as an adoption of ecofascist narratives in US government. == Pejorative ==