Environmental protest groups have been actively opposing the auto industry in Germany this summer, blocking a train carrying new Volkswagen vehicles earlier this month with their bodies.

Several groups combining forces for a protest at the public opening date for the Frankfurt auto show, as seen in the photo above.

They are demanding more efficient electric vehicles, an end to internal combustion, slower speed limits, and climate neutrality, among other things.

UPDATE 9/14/19: Anti-SUV protestors entered the Frankfurt auto show when it opened to the public on Thursday, according to the Associated Press and as seen in the photo above. These protestors climbed on top of certain SUV models at the show and showed posters labeled "Klimakiller," or "Climate Killer."

UPDATE 9/9/19: Greenpeace and a German climate-change activist group, Deutsche Umwelthilfe, issued a statement demanding a ban on sport-utility vehicles. The Greenpeace International website declared: "What we are witnessing is a 'SUVization' of the model ranges being offered" and called today's auto industry "truly grotesque." Volkswagen CEO Herbert Diess will meet with the activists on Monday night for a debate about these issues, the New York Times reported today.



As the automotive industry gets ready to shift its attention to the Frankfurt auto show in Germany, a group of activists is organizing a massive demonstration that calls for an immediate phase-out of internal-combustion engines, a dramatic slowing of speed limits, and climate-neutral mobility by 2035.



Bodo Marks/Getty Images

Earlier this month, protesters sat down in front of trains carrying new Volkswagen vehicles to dealers. The BBC reported that the activists "chained themselves to tracks to stop a train transporting cars" from the Wolfsburg plant in Germany.

The protest organizers say that the auto show is a place where "crooked car companies celebrate their powerful SUVs and gas guzzlers while the German government applauds."

The protest will take place September 14 at the Frankfurt auto show and will include marchers and bikers converging outside the convention center as well as smaller events. The organizers say that the auto show is a place where "crooked car companies celebrate their powerful SUVs and gas guzzlers while the German government applauds . . . But we the citizens are sick and tired of transport policies fixated on cars." IAA organizers say that security will be tightened for this year's event.

"Step out! The traffic is turning around" reads this protest announcement.

The groups involved in the protest are demanding a robust Climate Protection Law by late 2019, improved streets for pedestrians and cyclists along with "a massive increase in bus and train services," lower speed limits on the autobahn (to a maximum of 75 mph) and in residential areas (down to 19 mph in cities and 50 mph in outlying areas), and that the auto industry provide "efficient electro mobility instead of big electric SUVs."

In a possibly related incident, a number of vehicles were vandalized at an auto dealer in Kronberg, near Frankfurt. More than 40 luxury vehicles, including some from Land Rover, Aston Martin, and Jaguar, were damaged by having their windows, lights, or mirrors smashed, as the video below, shared on Facebook, shows. Body panels were also damaged in the attack. Local police are investigating and have said they are looking into an anonymous post on IndyMedia, supposedly by a protest group calling itself Rocks in the Gearbox. Police have not said if they consider the post to be authentic. The post claims, "In social movements, it is necessary to cross the line, to disobey, and also to be militant" and: "Enough! No one needs to drive luxury cars! Find yourself another status symbol, if you're not good enough on your own."

This content is imported from Facebook. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

A Rocks in the Gearbox spokesperson told the Frankfurter Neue Presse that the group was unaware of the vandalism and that sabotage is not one of its methods. "The people who did this are not part of our group," she said, while also expressing solidarity with anyone who stands against the auto industry, "as long as no one is harmed."

Rocks in the Gearbox is affiliated with the planned Frankfurt protest and is planning its own blockade of the auto show on September 15. The group is focused on climate change and mobility and demands car-free cities, more room for pedestrians and bikes, and a massive (and free) public transit network.

This content is imported from {embed-name}. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io