Monday, January 19, 2026

Freezing EU–US trade deal 'inevitable', Italian MEP Brando Benifei says


By Aida Sanchez Alonso & Méabh Mc Mahon
Published on 

In an interview on Euronews' morning show, Europe Today, MEP Brando Benifei said diplomatic solutions to avoid a trade war "need to be used to the end".

MEP and Head of the European Parliament's delegation for relations with the United States, told Euronews' morning show Europe Today that he does not expect an upcoming vote on the EU-US trade deal scheduled for next week to proceed.

 


"Inevitably, the vote that was foreseen next week in the trade committee of the European Parliament to actually advance the deal will be frozen," Benifei told Euronews. "I'm sure this will be the result."

US President Donald Trump threatened on Saturday to impose new tariffs on eight European countries that don't support his plans to annex Greenland. He then left the NATO alliance reeling with a letter to Norwegian prime minister Jonas Gahr Støre in which he said that he "no longer (felt) an obligation to think purely of Peace” when it comes to seizing the Danish territory.

After an emergency ambassadors meeting in Brussels on Sunday, several sources told Euronews that member states are prioritising diplomacy and dialogue with the US, but Benifei insisted there should be "a clear deadline" for establishing where Brussels and Washington's relationship stands.

"If in a few weeks we do not have clarity and an agreement on the future of Greenland, I think we need to be clear that the measures will be activated", he told Euronews.

One of those measures could be the anti-coercion instrument (ACI), a tool adopted in 2023 that has so far never been used. This would allow the bloc to punish unfriendly countries for "economic blackmail".

Benifei said diplomacy "must be used until the very end", but that "there must be an end".

"The problem of Europe is that the attempt to find a diplomatic solution, sometimes seems to never end. And this benefits, in this case, the US, who think we are not credible."

Benfei said he expects US counterparts to intervene and hopes "many more voices in the US Congress will raise to say that madness has to end, and that we need to sit down and work together as allies".

 

France and Germany push to use EU anti-coercion tools if Trump's new tariffs become reality

German Finance Minister Lars Klingbeil, left, and French Finance Minister Roland Lescure speak at a press conference at the Federal Ministry of Finance in Germany.
Copyright Bernd von Jutrczenka/dpa via AP

By Eleonora Vasques & Mared Gwyn Jones
Published on 

The German and French finance ministers said that the EU should be able to use all tools at its disposal if US president Donald Trump raises tariffs on European goods by 10% on 1 February.

German and French Finance Ministers Lars Klingbeil and Roland Lescure say they will push European partners to use all tools at their disposal, such as anti-coercion measures, if United States President Donald Trump makes good on his threat to increase tariffs on European goods by 10%.

The two ministers told journalists on Monday that they will make everything in their power to prevent these tariffs from being applied, but that if the US proceeds with its threat, the European Union must act accordingly.

Lescure called Trump's pressure "unacceptable" and said that tariffs should not be used as a weapon.

"Europe has to make sure that the threats that have been imposed don’t become reality," he said in Brussels. "We need to show that we’re willing to use all the instruments at our disposal, whether they are tariffs, trade agreements, or anti-coercion measures.”

Klingbel said that the severity of the situation must not be underestimated.

"Now it is time for our American friends to say 'we do not want escalation'. We also want many companies to avoid an escalation. But if President Trump does what he announced on February 1, then we have to react consciously."

Over the weekend, Trump said the US will increase tariffs on European goods by 10% if the bloc continues to oppose his efforts to take control of Greenland.

Among the tools the EU can use there is the Anti-Coercion Instrument, which enables the bloc to punish unfriendly states for economic coercion by restricting them from participating in public procurement tenders, limiting trade licenses, and even shutting off access to the single market.

Adopted in 2023, the instrument has never been used, but the US president's escalating threats over the weekend prompted calls for the instrument to be deployed, including from French President Emmanuel Macron.

Former senior EU officials, including former Commissioners Paolo Gentiloni and Cecilia Malmström, have also backed deploying the instrument.


European allies hit back at US threat to start trade war over Greenland

European leaders have warned transatlantic ties are at risk after President Donald Trump's announcement that eight countries, including France, will face tariffs of up to 25 percent if they continue to oppose the United States' bid to acquire Greenland. French President Emmanuel Macron called the threats "unacceptable".


Issued on: 18/01/2026 - RFI

People protest against President Donald Trump's efforts to take over Greenland in front of the US consulate in Nuuk, Greenland, on 17 January 2026. © AP - Evgeniy Maloletka

EU countries held crisis talks on Sunday after Trump said that he would charge a 10 percent import tax from February on goods from eight European countries that are resisting American control of Greenland – France, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Germany, the United Kingdom, the Netherlands and Finland.

The rate would climb to 25 percent on 1 June if no deal was in place for "the Complete and Total purchase of Greenland" by the US, he wrote on his Truth Social platform on Saturday.

An emergency meeting of EU ambassadors took place in Brussels on Sunday.

Macron will ask the European Union to activate its powerful "Anti-Coercion Instrument" if the US imposes tariffs, his team said before the talks.

The bloc's weapon – dubbed its trade "bazooka" – allows the EU to impose tariffs and investment limits on countries exerting economic pressure on member states to force them to change policy. It has never been used before.

France to open Greenland consulate amid Trump takeover threats

'Dangerous downward spiral'


France is one of several countries that has deployed troops to the autonomous Danish territory in response to Washington's ambitions. Paris says the European military exercise is designed to show the world that it will defend Greenland.

"Tariff threats are unacceptable and have no place in this context," President Macron wrote in a post on X, saying that France and its European allies would present a united response.

"No intimidation or threat can influence us, neither in Ukraine, nor in Greenland, nor anywhere else in the world... We will ensure that European sovereignty is respected," Macron said.

All eight countries named by Trump issued a joint statement saying they backed Denmark and Greenland, and that their military exercise posed no danger to others.

"Tariff threats undermine transatlantic relations and risk a dangerous downward spiral," it said. "We will continue to stand united and coordinated in our response. We are committed to upholding our sovereignty."

In a similarly worded statement, EU leaders said the bloc "stands in full solidarity with Denmark and the people of Greenland".

Day of protests

Trump's threats came as thousands of people protested in the capital of Greenland against his drive to acquire the island, rich in rare minerals and a gateway to the Arctic.

Thousands more demonstrated in Copenhagen and other Danish cities.
People attend a protest against President Donald Trump's demand that the Arctic island be ceded to the US, in front of the US consulate in Nuuk, Greenland, on 17 January 2026. © REUTERS - Marko Djurica


Trump has repeatedly claimed that the United States needs Greenland for US "national security", while alleging without evidence that China and Russia are trying to control it.

It was not immediately clear what authority the US president would invoke to impose the threatened tariffs, nor how he would target individual EU countries when the 27 members trade as a bloc.

If carried out, Trump's threats against NATO partners would create unprecedented tension within the military alliance, already under strain.

"In this escalation of tariffs, he has a lot to lose as well, as do his own farmers and industrialists," French Agriculture Minister Annie Genevard told broadcasters Europe 1 and CNews on Sunday.

The tariff announcement even drew criticism from Trump's populist allies in France.

Jordan Bardella, president of the far-right National Rally party, posted that the EU should suspend last year's deal to avert stiffer US tariffs on European goods, describing Trump’s threats as "commercial blackmail".

That deal, which the European Parliament had been set to ratify by next month, now faces rejection by lawmakers.

(with newswires)

What is the EU anti-coercion 'bazooka' it could use against the US over Greenland?

The EU's anti-coercion instrument, which French President Emmanuel Macron on Sunday mentioned activating after US President Donald Trump's tariffs threats regarding Greenland, is a trade tool that the bloc adopted in 2023 but has never used. Compared by some to a “bazooka”, it aims to respond to any country using trade weapons to pressure an EU member state.


Issued on: 19/01/2026 
By: FRANCE 24


French President Emmanuel Macron speaks during a media conference at the EU Summit in Brussels on December 19, 2025. © Geert Vanden Wijngaert, AP

Calls are growing louder for the EU to deploy its powerful "anti-coercion instrument" in response to US President Donald Trump's threats to impose tariffs in the standoff over Greenland.

Trump stunned Europe on Saturday when he vowed to slap EU members Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, the Netherlands, and Sweden – and non-members Britain and Norway – with levies of up to 25 percent unless the Danish territory is ceded to the US.

French President Emmanuel Macron has raised the prospect of hitting back with the EU's trade weapon that was established in 2023 but has never been activated.

READ MORETrump tariff threats over Greenland prompt calls for unprecedented EU counter-measures


The leader of the liberal Renew group in the European Parliament, Valerie Hayer, also called for the weapon to be used.

Referred to as a "bazooka" or "nuclear" option, the instrument is intended to deter economic coercion against any of the EU's 27 member states.

The EU defines coercion as a third country "applying – or threatening to apply – measures affecting trade or investment", thereby interfering "with the legitimate sovereign choices" of the EU and member states.


How can Europe respond to Trump's tariff threats over Greenland?

© France 24
06:23




What does the instrument do?


The armoury allows the EU to take measures such as import and export restrictions on goods and services in its single market of 450 million people.

It also gives Brussels the power to limit American companies' access to public procurement contracts in Europe.

The EU last year threatened to use the weapon during difficult trade negotiations with Trump to avoid steep levies but the two sides struck a deal.

A major target could be American tech giants since the US has a services surplus with the EU.

Brussels previously drew up a list of US services to potentially target.

The instrument's creation came after Lithuania accused China of banning its exports because Vilnius allowed a Taiwanese diplomatic representation to be opened on its soil in 2021.


How does it work?


Both the commission and member states have the right to seek its activation, but it would then need the green light of at least 55 percent of the member countries voting in favour, representing 65 percent of the bloc's population.

Even if Brussels were to activate the weapon, it could take months before any measures were taken, according to the rules.

First, the European Commission has four months to investigate the third country accused of detrimental trade policies – then member states would have eight to 10 weeks to back any proposal for action.

Only then would the commission have a green light to prepare measures, to take effect within six months. The EU says the timeframe is indicative.

But even just triggering an investigation under the instrument would send a powerful message that Brussels is willing to fight back against its important ally.

"The United States is making a miscalculation that is not only dangerous but could be painful," Renew group's Hayer said in a statement.

"The anti-coercion instrument is our economic nuclear weapon," she said.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP)

Trump also has 'a lot to lose' from threatened tariffs over Greenland, French minister says

French Agriculture Minister Annie Genevard warned Sunday that US President Trump's proposed tariffs on European countries opposing his plans to purchase Greenland would be "deadly for the United States". Trump on Saturday threatened a 10-percent tariff from February 1 on all goods sent to the US from eight European countries, including France.


Issued on: 18/01/2026 
By: FRANCE 24

France's Agriculture Minister Annie Genevard leaves after attending the weekly cabinet meeting at the Elysée Presidential Palace, in Paris, on January 14, 2026. © Ludovic Marin, AFP file photo

The United States will also suffer if President Donald Trump implements threats to impose tariffs on European countries opposing his plans to acquire Greenland, a French minister said on Sunday.

"In this escalation of tariffs, he has a lot to lose as well, as do his own farmers and industrialists," French Agriculture Minister Annie Genevard told broadcasters Europe 1 and CNews.

Trump has threatened to impose a 10-percent tariff from February 1 on all goods sent to the United States from DenmarkNorwaySwedenFranceGermany, the UK, the Netherlands and Finland.


EU looks to present united front in response to US 'blackmail'
© France 24
04:05


All are part of the European Union, except for the United Kingdom and Norway.

That levy would then be increased to 25 percent on June 1 "until such time as a deal is reached for the complete and total purchase of Greenland", said Trump, who claims the United States needs the Arctic island, an autonomous Danish territory, for its national security.
'It could also be deadly for the United States'

An extraordinary meeting of EU ambassadors has been called in Brussels for Sunday afternoon.

"The European Union has a potential strike force" from a commercial standpoint, Genevard said.

"This is a response that must be handled with caution, because this escalation could be deadly – but it could also be deadly for the United States."

Any US takeover of Greenland would be "unacceptable," the minister added.

"It is clear that the Europeans will not let the United States do as it pleases."

(FRANCE 24 with AFP)

Europe's pro-Trump leaders tread carefully as Greenland crisis grows



By Sandor Zsiros
Published on 

Hungary's Viktor Orbán, Slovakia's Robert Fico, and Andrej Babiš from the Czech Republic will play a crucial role in any joint EU response to the Trump administration's threats.

As pressure mounts to calibrate a joint European Union response to the United States's threats over Greenland, EU leaders with ties to US President Donald Trump have yet to push back hard against his latest statements.

Trump threatened on Saturday to impose a 10% extra tariff on goods from European countries that oppose the sale of the Arctic island to the US, and warned that if the US has not been allowed to purchase Greenland by June 1, the rate will be hiked to 25%.

As the EU scrambles for ways to deal with the situation, the process of reaching a joint EU position could depend on three countries in particular: Slovakia, Hungary and the Czech Republic..

Slovakian Prime Minister Robert Fico met Trump in Mar-a-Lago on Saturday, the same day that Trump issued his latest tariff threats on social media. Speaking on a flight back to Slovakia, Fico hailed the two countries' bilateral ties, adding that both Trump and he were critical of the EU.

"We did not avoid the assessment of the EU, its competitiveness, energy and migration policy, while there was a complete agreement in viewing the EU as an institution in deep crisis,” Fico said in a video released on Sunday – not mentioning Greenland or expressing solidarity with the countries Trump directly threatened.

On Sunday, meanwhile, Hungary’s Viktor Orbán announced he had received a letter from Trump inviting him to join the Board of Peace, a body aimed at helping establish post-war administration and reconstruction in Gaza.

“With President Donald Trump comes peace. Another letter has arrived. Hungary’s efforts for peace are being recognised. President Trump has invited Hungary to join the work of The Board of Peace as a founding member,” Orbán tweeted.

But the Hungarian government has kept silent over Trump's latest threats. Orbán has previously said that the issue of Greenland can be discussed inside NATO and need not prompt an international crisis.

Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babiš posted on X on Monday afternoon to say there is no question that Greenland is an autonomous Danish territory, but he stopped short of calling for pushback against Trump's threats.

"There is no doubt about that. But we will support dialogue, not declarations," Babiš wrote. "Foreign policy is about diplomacy, not about who posts the stronger statement on social media."

Earlier, Babiš gave an interview to a conservative Hungarian website, Mandiner, where he said Trump is not helping Europe, but helping the US with his program to "make America great again".

Babiš also described himself as one of the biggest European supporters of Trump, also naming Orbán and Polish President, Karol Nawrocki.

One outlier in Europe's pro-Trump right is Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, who on Sunday criticised Trump’s stance as a “mistake” that could be the result of a misunderstanding.

"The prediction of a tariff increase against nations that have chosen to contribute to Greenland's security is a mistake, and I don't agree with it," Meloni said during a visit to South Korea.

The President of the European Council, António Costa, is convening a special EU summit on Thursday evening to discuss the Greenland issue and agree a collective response.

The agreement of Hungary, Slovakia and the Czech Republic will be needed, and their positions are as yet unknown.

But according to Fabian Zuleg, Chief Executive at the European Policy Centre, unity cannot become an excuse for paralysis when it comes to Greenland.

"If unity cannot be achieved, those governments that are unwilling to act – such as Hungary, but also others on a case-by-case basis – must be excluded, and exclusion must have consequences", he said, arguing that states blocking collective action at the European level should no longer be able to benefit fully from shared defence, security cooperation or industrial investment.

"Solidarity is a two-way street and not unconditional."



World leaders to gather at Davos as Trump reshapes global order

EVIL EYED EAGLE


Copyright AP Photo

By
Aleksandar Brezar
Published on 18/01/2026 - 20:12 GMT+1 •Updated 23:34

The annual gathering of political and business elites comes as Europe faces its biggest test ever over its relationship with Washington, its economic model and its security architecture.


To most Davos regulars, the Sunday before the world's biggest economic and political summit seemed unusually busy.

This year's World Economic Forum, they say, promises to be one like no other.

In the otherwise serene if not sangfroid Swiss resort town, anticipatory anxiety became increasingly palpable as world leaders were about to converge on it for what is almost certainly going to turn into a fundamental reassessment of the existing international system.

All eyes are on the midweek, as US President Donald Trump is expected to make his first appearance at the summit in six years, arriving amid tensions over his attempts to acquire Greenland, his tariff threats against European allies and his military intervention in Venezuela.

The annual gathering of political and business elites comes as Europe faces its biggest test ever over its relationship with Washington, its economic model and its security architecture.

Trump to talk about home, Europeans to expect answers

Trump's keynote speech on Wednesday is likely to focus heavily on concerns back home despite the international setting.

The president faces domestic pressure over affordability, and Trump wants to offset this by revealing "initiatives to drive down housing costs" and "tout his economic agenda that has propelled the United States to lead the world in economic growth," a White House official said.

But Trump will also address European leaders directly. He will "emphasise that the United States and Europe must leave behind economic stagnation and the policies that caused it," the White House official said.

The US president recently threatened tariffs against European NATO allies if they do not support his attempt to take control of Greenland from Denmark. European military personnel have deployed to Greenland in recent days in response.

Danish soldiers disembark at the port in Nuuk, Greenland, 18 January 2026 AP Photo

The series of moves has resulted in significant unease among Europe's leaders, who see the push to take control of the Arctic island "whether they like it or not" as undermining the foundations of NATO and jeopardising an age-old friendship forged by fire in World War II.

On Sunday, the UK, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Norway and Sweden issued a joint statement saying Trump's actions over Greenland risk a “dangerous downward spiral” and undermine transatlantic relations, in one of the most strongly worded messages to Washington in recent times.

While others such as NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte have tried to calm the spirits, with Rutte saying, "We will continue working on (resolving the question of Greenland), and I look forward to seeing him in Davos later this week," anxiety that came with the new year not only persisted, but increased.

What happens in Davos does not stay in Davos


There is also the question of Russia's ongoing all-out war in Ukraine, which Trump has been desperate to find an end to.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who will also appear in Davos in person, hopes to meet Trump to sign new security guarantees for a potential ceasefire deal with Russia. G7 leaders also seek discussions on Ukraine.

Washington's largest-ever Davos delegation includes US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, special envoy Steve Witkoff and son-in-law Jared Kushner, who have all played roles on Ukraine.

While the White House said no bilateral meetings have been scheduled, the presence of Witkoff and Kushner — seen as key to any negotiations with Moscow and Kyiv — has led insiders to believe that a deal between Trump and Zelenskyy will be signed in Davos.

Two men walk up the stairs at the Congress Center where the Annnual Meeting of the World Economy Forum takes place in Davos, 18 January 2026 AP Photo

Meanwhile, Trump is reportedly considering a first meeting of the "Board of Peace" for Gaza at Davos, after announcing its first members in recent days.

A $1 billion (€863 million) contribution secures permanent membership on the Trump-led board, rather than a three-year appointment, which has no contribution requirement, according to a US official who spoke on condition of anonymity about the charter, which has not been made public. The official said the money raised would be used to rebuild Gaza.

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has accepted an invitation to join the board, Foreign Minister Péter Szijjártó told state radio on Sunday. Orbán is one of Trump’s most ardent supporters in Europe.

Jordan, Greece, Cyprus and Pakistan also said Sunday they had received invitations. Canada, Turkey, Egypt, Paraguay, Argentina and Albania have already said they were invited, while an Indian official revealed Delhi has also received an invite. It was not clear how many have been approached in all.

In letters sent Friday to world leaders inviting them to be “founding members,” Trump said the Board of Peace would “embark on a bold new approach to resolving global conflict.”

Critics have claimed that the board might be an attempt by the US president to create an alternative to the UN, which would be under Trump's personal control.
RelatedTrump's Greenland threat risks 'dangerous downward spiral,' European leaders say
Pressure grows on the EU to deploy trade bazooka against Trump's Greenland tariff threat

Questions also surround the future of Venezuela following the blitz US military operation that removed Nicolás Maduro, part of Trump's muscular approach to what he calls America's "backyard".

Then there is also Iran, with reports stating that Trump called off an intervention against the regime in Tehran over its crackdown on widespread protests at the last minute.

While Washington may yet decide ayatollah's time in power is over, the presence of Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi at Davos could signal that conversations on the sidelines are on the cards.

'USA House' talk of the town


The forum has historically been an awkward fit for Trump. His first Davos appearance in 2018 met occasional boos. He returned forcefully in 2020, dismissing "prophets of doom" on climate and the economy.

Trump left office in 2021 after losing re-election but has since returned as a more assertive president domestically and internationally.

The logo of the World Economy Forum is displayed on a window of the Congress Center where the Annual Meeting Forum takes place in Davos, 18 January 2026 AP Photo

Davos might prove crucial to his ambitions, and the fact that the US has two houses in the Swiss town — one of which is a church and a prominent venue — further signalled Washington's intentions to reestablish itself as the leader of the free world.

European leaders attending Davos have recently faced unprecedented pressure to respond to Trump's challenge to the transatlantic alliance that has underpinned the Western economic order for nearly a century.

The gathering comes as Europe grapples with anaemic economic growth, an ever-trigger-happy Moscow on its eastern border and questions about the continent's ability to defend itself without full US security guarantees.



Proposed Surcharge On Oil Would Help Pay For Responses To Climate-Related Disasters In Alaska



U.S. Coast Guard MH-60 Jayhawk helicopter aircrews conduct overflights of Kipnuk, Alaska, after coastal flooding impacted several western Alaska communities, Oct. 12, 2025. The Coast Guard continues to support the state of Alaska’s response efforts in impacted communities. (U.S. Coast Guard photo courtesy of Air Station Kodiak)

January 19, 2026 
Alaska Beacon
By Yereth Rosen

(Alaska Beacon) — Landslides, storm-driven floods, infrastructure-damaging permafrost thaw and intensifying wildfires are among the expensive disasters that scientists link to Alaska’s rapidly changing climate.

Now a state legislator is proposing to levy a 20-cent surcharge on every barrel of Alaska-produced oil to fund programs that respond to and prepare for disasters related to climate change.

Rep. Andy Josephson, D-Anchorage, introduced the measure, House Bill 247, in advance of the legislative session scheduled to start on Jan. 20.

To explain why the state needs such a fund, Josephson ticked off a list of recent disasters in Alaska that imposed heavy costs — and, in some cases, killed people. Those events, which include deadly landslides in Southeast Alaska, landslides that have blocked roads, severe flooding 
“It’s a true statement that a lot of the disaster dollars we need right now are related to climate change. That, in my opinion, is sort of inarguable,” he said.

Disasters like those that have occurred in recent years are expected to continue in the future, he said: “We’re in a new normal.”

The bill is logical from a fiscal standpoint, Josephson said.

As of now, the state’s disaster relief fund is “basically a sub-fund of the general fund,” and it gets whatever lawmakers are able to appropriate, he said. But if there is a new stream of money as proposed by his bill, “we would free up those dollars we’re otherwise spending in the disaster relief fund.”

At 20 cents per barrel, the proposed surcharge would raise about $30 million a year, he said.

In comparison, Gov. Mike Dunleavy in December proposed that lawmakers approve a $40 million appropriation for the state’s existing disaster relief fund. The need could increase from that total if the Trump administration fails to reimburse 100% of the costs for Typhoon Halong relief rather than the normal 75%. The Biden administration in 2022 approved 100% reimbursement for Merbok-related costs.

As introduced by Josephson, the bill would give the Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation oversight over the money generated by the surcharge. It would distribute fund money in the form of grants to local governments and other entities for purposes like disaster response, disaster preparation and upgrades that make infrastructure better protected against climate change.

The surcharge idea has precedent in Alaska. The Department of Environmental Conservation already administers another fund with money coming from a per-barrel fee on oil produced in the state.

After the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill, the state began levying a 5-cent-per-barrel surcharge on oil that goes into the state’s Oil and Hazardous Substance Release Prevention and Response Fund. The fund itself was created by the legislature in 1986, with the surcharge established after the disastrous Prince William Sound spill.

That surcharge and rules concerning the fund’s operations have been modified over the years, broadening the purposes for which the fund can be used and boosting DEC’s reporting requirements, according to the department.

In its current configuration, each 5-cent-per-barrel surcharge sends 1 cent into a spill response account, to be used for spills that have been officially declared disasters. The other 4 cents goes into a spill prevention account, which can be used to address spills that have not been declared disasters, among other functions.

In 2015, refined petroleum products were added to the program. The state added a small surcharge, 0.95 cents per gallon, on refined fuel projects sold, transferred or used at the wholesale level, according to the DEC.

The idea of a similar levy to raise money for climate change preparedness and response is not new.

Rick Steiner, a retired University of Alaska marine conservation professor who founded and leads an environmental organization called Oasis Earth, has been advocating for the approach for several years.

“The legislature has so far seemed unable or unwilling to connect the dots between the many climate-related disasters we are experiencing — typhoon Merbok, wildfires, landslides, floods, coastal erosion, permafrost thaw, storm damage, infrastructure damage, subsistence impacts, commercial fishing impacts, etc..– to see the larger picture of the threat and costs these interrelated climate disasters pose,” he said in a letter to lawmakers sent last September. “The money to address these issues will have to come from government.”

In advocating for what he called an Alaska Climate Resilience Fund, Steiner said funding issues have become more pressing because of federal cutbacks.

The climate-response surcharge idea is not unique to Alaska, either.

Hawaii has put its version of a climate surcharge into law, a measure that seeks to raise money for responses to future disasters like the deadly 2023 Lahaina wildfire on the island of Maui.

In May, Hawaii Gov. Josh Green, a Democrat, signed a bill that increases the state’s hotel and lodging tax by less than a percentage point. The increase is applied to the state’s Transient Accommodations Tax, known at TAT. The governor said the increase would amount to an additional charge of about $3 on a $400-a-night hotel room fee. It is expected to generate about $100 million a year, according to state officials.

Alaska Beacon is an independent, nonpartisan news organization focused on connecting Alaskans to their state government. Alaska, like many states, has seen a decline in the coverage of state news. We aim to reverse that.
Use of private jets to Davos has soared in the past three years. Is it time for a super-rich tax?



Copyright Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved

By Liam Gilliver
Published on 19/01/2026 


The World Economic Forum (WEF) has gotten off to a bumpy start as participants are criticised for their soaring use of private jets.


All eyes turn to Davos today, as the World Economic Forum (WEF) commences its annual meeting.

Some of the world’s most powerful elite, including government leaders and business execs, have gathered in Switzerland to engage in “forward-looking discussions to address global issues and set priorities”.

One of the key themes of this year’s event is building prosperity “within planetary boundaries” - with WEF highlighting that nature loss impacts 75 per cent of Earth’s land and poses “significant economic risks”.

The argument that the world should transition to nature-positive business models to unlock $10 trillion (around €8.6 trillion) annually by 2030 will be put forward tomorrow (20 January) following discussions around electric vehicles (EVs) and the retreat of glaciers.

However, Davos sparked backlash before participants even touched down in Switzerland.

Has Davos turned into a ‘private jet shuttle hub’?

Environmental organisation Greenpeace has published a new analysis of private jet flights to and from Davos-area airports over the past three years - before, during, and after the WEF.

Titled Davos in the Sky, the report found a “sharp rise” in private jet activity, despite overall attendance at the forum remaining broadly stable.

During the week of the 2025 WEF, 709 additional private jet flights were identified at airports near Davos. This roughly works out at almost one private jet flight per four WEF participants.


It marks a 10 per cent increase from 2024, and a threefold rise compared with 2023. In 2024 and 2025, many private jets flew in and out of Davos multiple times during the same week, which Greenpeace argues has turned the event into a “private jet shuttle hub”.

The organisation calculates that around 70 per cent of the private jet routes could have been travelled by train within a day, or with a train and connecting train.
A tax for the super-rich

“It’s pure hypocrisy that the world’s most powerful and super-rich elite discuss global challenges and progress in Davos, while they literally burn the planet with the emissions of their private jets,” says Herwig Schuster of Greenpeace Austria.

The organisation argues that the time for action is “now” as it calls on governments to curb polluting luxury flights and tax the super-rich “for the damage they cause”.

Greenpeace supports UN Tax Convention (UNFCITC) negotiations towards new global tax rules through 2027 and urges a levy on luxury aviation, including private jets and first and business class flights.





Billionaire wealth at new high, Oxfam warns of political influence ahead of Davos

The fortunes of the world’s ultra-rich have surged to a record high and now pose political threats, warns Oxfam’s annual report on billionaires released ahead of the World Economic Forum at Davos, which opens Monday.

Issued on: 19/01/2026 - RFI


Protesters, one dressed up as US President Donald Trump and another as a police officer, at the start of a demonstration against the annual meeting of the World Economy Forum in Davos, Switzerland, 18 January 2026. © Markus Schreiber/AP

By:RFIFollow
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The wealth of the world’s billionaires went up 16.2 percent in 2025, the anti-poverty group said in its report released to coincide with the opening of the Davos forum, which brings together some of the world’s wealthiest people together with political leaders, CEOs, financiers, and international institutions.

Oxfam says the increase has been driven in part by policies put in place by US President Donald Trump, including tax cuts, “the championing of deregulation and undermining agreements to increase corporate taxation have benefited the richest around the world”.

It pointed to Washington's decision to exempt US multinationals from an internationally agreed minimum tax rate of 15 percent as an example of policies that ignore growing inequality.

"In country after country, the super-rich have not only accumulated more wealth than could ever be spent, but have also used this wealth to secure the political power to shape the rules that define our economies and govern nations," the report warned.

Drawing on academic research and data sources ranging from the World Inequality Database to Forbes' rich list, the report found that the world’s 3,000 billionaires are 4,000 times more likely than ordinary citizens to hold political office.

Billionaires highlight France’s complicated relationship with wealth

Oxfam highlighted what it sees as the growing influence of ultra‑wealthy business figures over traditional and digital media.

Billionaires now own more than half of the world’s major media firms, Oxfam said, citing Elon Musk’s takeover of X, Amazon's Jeff Bezos ownership of The Washington Post, and French billionaire Vincent Bolloré’s control of numerous newspapers and television stations in France, as well as his majority stake in the Vivendi media group..

Oxfam urged governments to adopt national inequality reduction plans, raise taxes on the extremely rich, and strengthen firewalls between money and politics, including tighter limits on lobbying and campaign financing.



Would tax hikes for the wealthiest really drive them to flee France?

Only a few countries currently have wealth taxes. In France, which replaced its wealth tax with a narrower tax on real estate assets, debate over reinstating the wider tax resurfaced during the ongoing politically contested debates over the 2026 budget.

(with newswires)






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Surging billionaire wealth leads to ‘dangerous’ political risks, Oxfam warns as Davos forum opens

The world’s billionaires grew richer than ever in 2025, charity Oxfam said on Monday, warning of “highly dangerous” political consequences as elites gather at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. It said US President Donald Trump’s policies helped boost billionaire wealth 16.2 percent to $18.3 trillion in the first year of his second term.



Issued on: 19/01/2026 
By: FRANCE 24

US President Donald Trump, during his last in-person visit to the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, January 22, 2020. © JIM WATSON, AFP

The collective wealth of the planet's billionaires soared to a record level in 2025, charity Oxfam reported Monday, warning of "highly dangerous" political consequences as the global elite gathers for the World Economic Forum.

US President Donald Trump's policies in particular spurred the fortunes of the ultra-rich, which jumped 16.2 percent in the first year of his second term to $18.3 trillion, the NGO said in a report released each year ahead of the Davos forum.

"Actions of the Trump presidency including the championing of deregulation and undermining agreements to increase corporate taxation have benefited the richest around the world," Oxfam said.

The world now has more than 3,000 billionaires for the first time, it added, with the top 12 – led by Tesla and SpaceX chief Elon Musk – having "more wealth than the poorest half of humanity, or more than four billion people".


Increasingly this money is buying political power, Oxfam said, pointing in particular to tycoons' buying newspapers and other media, such as Musk's takeover of X or the purchase of The Washington Post by Amazon's Jeff Bezos.

READ MOREBezos announces restrictions on Washington Post opinion coverage

"The widening gap between the rich and the rest is at the same time creating a political deficit that is highly dangerous and unsustainable," Oxfam's executive director Amitabh Behar said.

Trump will arrive with one of the biggest US delegations ever for the Davos conference, where he is expected to dominate an agenda officially billed as "A Spirit of Dialogue".

© France 24
06:56



Davos protests


Trump's participation galvanised around 300 protesters who arrived in Davos on Sunday, many wearing masks of Musk or US Vice President JD Vance and holding fistfuls of euros.

Nathalie Ruoss of the Swiss Young Socialists said the most powerful people in the world make decisions at Davos that impact everyone.

"And they do it with no democratic legitimacy," she said, calling it "unacceptable" that the WEF welcomed "fascists like Donald Trump".

For Oxfam, Washington's decision to exempt US multinationals from an internationally agreed minimum tax rate of 15 percent was a stark example of ignoring growing inequality.

"In country after country, the super-rich have not only accumulated more wealth than could ever be spent, but have also used this wealth to secure the political power to shape the rules that define our economies and govern nations," it said.

"Such power gives billionaires a grasp over all our futures, undermining political freedom and eroding the rights of the many."

(FRANCE 24 with AFP)



Syrian army deploys in former Kurdish-held areas under ceasefire deal

Deir Ezzor (Syria) (AFP) – Syria's army deployed in formerly Kurdish-led areas in the country's east and north on Monday after a ceasefire announced a day earlier, as Syria's president and the Kurds' leader were set to hold talks.


Issued on: 19/01/2026 - RFI

Syria's army deployed in formerly Kurdish-led areas in the country's east and north after a ceasefire announced a day earlier © OMAR HAJ KADOUR / AFP

The leader of the Syrian Kurdish forces said Sunday he agreed to the deal with Damascus to avoid broader war, integrating the Kurds' administration and his fighters into the state after months of stalled negotiations.

Despite the deal, the government and the US-backed, Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) traded blame on Monday for fresh attacks that the military said killed three soldiers.

Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa announced the accord with SDF chief Mazloum Abdi following two days of rapid gains in Kurdish-controlled territory after the army pushed the SDF out of Aleppo city earlier this month.

Analysts said the deal marked a blow for the minority's long-held ambitions of preserving the de facto autonomy they had exercised in swathes of north and northeast Syria for over a decade.

In Deir Ezzor province in the country's east, an AFP correspondent saw dozens of military vehicles heading to the east of the Euphrates River, while trucks, cars and pedestrians lined up at a small bridge leading to the eastern bank.

Mohammed Khalil, a 50-year-old driver told AFP that he was overjoyed by the arrival of Syrian government forces.

"We hope things will be better than before. There was... no freedom" under the SDF, he said.

Teacher Safia Keddo, 49, said "we want children to return to school without fear, and for electricity, water, and bread to be re

'Protecting civilian lives'

The army said it "started the deployment" into Syria's north and east "to secure it under the agreement", adding that forces had reached the outskirts of Hasakeh city, whose province is the Kurds' stronghold.

The military did not say where its soldiers were killed but accused "terrorist groups" of seeking to disrupt the deal's implementation.

The SDF instead accused the government of launching attacks and reported "violent clashes" near a prison in Raqa that holds detainees from the Islamic State group.

The agreement includes the Kurdish administration's immediate handover of Arab-majority Deir Ezzor and Raqa provinces to the government, which will also take responsibility for IS prisoners and their families held in Kurdish-run jails and camps.

The SDF had seized swathes of the provinces as they expelled the jihadists during Syria's civil war with the support of an international coalition led by the United States.

An AFP correspondent in Raqa said security forces deployed in the main square, while a military convoy passed through the city as sporadic gunfire rang out.

Dozens of residents crossed the Euphrates in boats after two bridges were destroyed, while residents toppled a statue of a woman erected by Kurdish forces.

Raqa resident Khaled al-Afnan, 34, said "we support Kurdish civil rights... but we don't support them having a military role."

"This deal is important for protecting civilian lives," he told AFP.

'Serious doubts'

The SDF on Sunday withdrew from areas under its control in the eastern Deir Ezzor countryside, including the Al-Omar oil field, the country's largest, and the Tanak field.

Local fighters from tribes in the Arab-majority province sided with Damascus and seized the areas before the arrival of government forces.

Some Arab tribes were previously allied with the SDF, which included a significant Arab component.

An energy ministry official told state television on Monday that technical teams were heading to recently taken oil facilities to assess their condition.

The SDF's Abdi said Sunday he agreed to the deal to avoid civil war and end a conflict "imposed" on the Kurds.

Mutlu Civiroglu, a Washington-based analyst and expert on the Kurds, said the government's advance "raises serious doubts about the durability" of the ceasefire and a stalled March agreement between the government and the Kurds.

"Sharaa's confrontations with Kurdish forces, following earlier pressure on Alawite and Druze areas, reinforce doubts about the interim government's legitimacy and its ability to represent Syria's diverse population," he added.

Last year saw sectarian violence in the country's coastal Alawite heartland and in southern Syria's Druze-majority Sweida province.

Sharaa had on Friday issued a decree granting the Kurds official recognition, but the Kurds said it fell short of their expectations.

In Qamishli, the main Kurdish city in the country's northeast, activist Hevi Ahmed, 40, said Sunday's deal was "a disappointment after years of hope that the Syrian constitution might contain a better future for the Kurds."

© 2026 AFP