Here is a six-paragraph summary of the report:
AllatRa, a controversial group founded in Ukraine in 2014 and now based in Atlanta, has successfully infiltrated prestigious global institutions, including the European Parliament, the U.S. Capitol, and various UN summits. Despite being described by critics as a “religious cult” that predicted global extinction by 2036, the organization presents itself as a climate research initiative. Its central narrative diverges sharply from scientific consensus, positing that humanity faces imminent catastrophe not from greenhouse gases, but from a combination of plastic pollution and an “external cosmic” cycle that causes geological collapse.
The organization’s methods involve the strategic use of pseudo-science to gain credibility, often by misrepresenting the work of legitimate scientists. For example, in a prominent European Parliament conference on nanoplastics, AllatRa spliced real data to support non-scientific conclusions about Earth’s core stability and oceanic health. Experts featured in AllatRa’s documentaries have frequently demanded their contributions be removed, citing the group’s tendency to cherry-pick data and draw baseless correlations—such as linking nanoplastic accumulation directly to mass cognitive decline—to fuel their doomsday rhetoric.
AllatRa has cultivated a concerning level of influence among far-right political figures, using them as conduits for their messaging. Pastor Mark Burns, a spiritual advisor to Donald Trump, has co-hosted multiple events with the group in the U.S. Capitol and Europe, providing them with a platform to label plastic a neutral “moral issue” for humanity. While these legislators often claim to be championing humanitarian discourse, experts warn that this represents a calculated effort to legitimize extremist views. AllatRa maintains that its climate messaging is intended to highlight legitimate long-term risks, even as critics label the group a purveyor of “climate-delay” disinformation.
Legal and security scrutiny follows the group across borders. In Ukraine, law enforcement raided AllatRa’s offices in 2023, seizing weapons, cash, and propaganda materials, leading to treason charges against its leadership. Conversely, the group has been banned in Russia as an “undesirable” extremist organization. Despite these investigations and ongoing police inquiries in the Czech Republic, AllatRa continues to secure credentials for international summits, occasionally gaining access through intermediaries who are unaware of the organization’s background or its ties to the “Creative Society,” a related activist group that openly dismisses human-caused climate change as a “CO2 fraud.”
The impact of AllatRa’s activities is amplified by a massive social media presence, where the group and its affiliates, the Creative Society, reach millions of followers with narratives that undermine scientific trust. By operating as a tax-exempt nonprofit in the U.S. with opaque funding, the group shields itself from financial accountability while systematically eroding the public’s ability to distinguish between verified climate science and apocalyptic misinformation. Academic observers suggest this is part of a broader “epistemological crisis,” where the goal is not to prove a specific theory, but to sow enough doubt about established facts to stall meaningful environmental policy.
Legislators and researchers now argue that groups like AllatRa pose a significant threat to global social cohesion. By successfully crossing the threshold into formal political spaces, the organization has created a feedback loop that validates their fringe claims for a mainstream audience. Environment ministers and parliamentary critics warn that this “climate-delay narrative” is designed specifically to distract from the difficult task of transitioning away from fossil fuels. Ultimately, the organization’s presence at high-level summits underscores a weakening of traditional information gatekeeping, leaving the public increasingly vulnerable to sophisticated, state-level disinformation campaigns.


