Blue NG offices in Bath occupied by 13 members of Action Against Agrofuels (AAA)

AAA occu­pied Blue NG offices on Fri­day 17th, Via Campesina Day, in sol­i­dar­i­ty with mil­lions of peas­ant land-work­ers demon­strat­ing glob­al­ly against agro­fu­els.

Blue NG protestAAA occu­pied Blue NG offices on Fri­day 17th, Via Campesina Day, in sol­i­dar­i­ty with mil­lions of peas­ant land-work­ers demon­strat­ing glob­al­ly against agro­fu­els. Blue NG are com­mit­ting a crime against human­i­ty and the plan­et by using mis­in­for­ma­tion* to win sup­port for the new mar­ket of agro­fu­el pow­er sta­tions, when vir­tu­al­ly all agro­fu­els have been shown to cause ecosys­tem destruc­tion, accel­er­at­ed cli­mate change & food pover­ty.

* For more on Blue-NG mis­in­for­ma­tion see…
http://sites.google.com/site/foodnotfuelorg/Home/facts-on-biofuels/biofuels-for-electricity/BlueNGinconsistenciesApril2009.doc?attredirects=0

On 17th April 2009 13 cli­mate and social jus­tice activists occu­pied the head office of Blue NG, the com­pa­ny which is plan­ning to build the UK’s first bio­fu­el pow­er plants. Ban­ners were hung from the build­ing and activists demand­ed that the com­pa­ny stops invest­ing in bio­fu­els.

Blu­eNG ini­tial­ly plans eight pow­er plants which would run on vir­gin veg­etable oil. Cam­paign­ers warn that those pow­er plants will sig­nif­i­cant­ly boost the UK’s imports of palm oil, which is linked to defor­esta­tion and the dis­place­ment of rur­al com­mu­ni­ties, includ­ing indige­nous peo­ples. Blue NG speaks about using rape­seed oil but has failed to rule out using palm oil. In Ger­many, 1.3 bil­lion kWh of ener­gy are pro­duced from palm oil burn­ing because this is the cheap­est veg­etable oil and Ger­man providers have found it impos­si­ble to afford rape­seed oil.

STATEMENT:

We are here to demand that you stop invest­ing in agro­fu­els. We need tru­ly renew­able ener­gy but call­ing pes­ti­cide-sprayed mono­cul­tures for bio­fu­els renew­able is obscene.

Already, small farm­ers and indige­nous peo­ples are being evict­ed, far more peo­ple are going hun­gry and ever more forests and oth­er diverse ecosys­tems are being destroyed in order to grow fuel for our cars. While hun­dreds of civ­il soci­ety groups and insti­tu­tions, includ­ing he Euro­pean Envi­ron­ment Agency, our Envi­ron­men­tal Audit Com­mit­tee, the UN Rap­por­teur for the Right of Food and even the OECD were against Europe’s bio­fu­el tar­gets for trans­port, your com­pa­ny was draw­ing up plans to fur­ther push up an already com­plete­ly unsus­tain­able demand for bio­fu­els.

Soon after sci­en­tists pub­lished stud­ies which unequiv­o­cal­ly show that today’s agro­fu­els are dis­as­ter for the cli­mate and that using land for agro­fu­els means less ecosys­tems and less food, you pub­lished your plans to build the first veg­etable oil pow­er plant in Beck­ton. It so hap­pens that, in Beck­ton, asth­ma lev­els are already excep­tion­al­ly high, almost cer­tain­ly due to air pol­lu­tion.

You then made false and mis­lead­ing claims to gar­ner polit­i­cal sup­port for those destruc­tive plans. Many peo­ple liked what you said about com­bin­ing geo-pres­sure and com­bined heat and pow­er, yet your two pub­lished plan­ning appli­ca­tions involve nei­ther – as for CHP, you don’t even plan to sup­ply heat to prop­er­ties or indus­try. But even if those claims had not been false, the ener­gy will still come from one of the most destruc­tive and cli­mate-dam­ag­ing types of fuel.

You con­tin­ue to make false state­ments about the fuel you will use. You tell media reporters you have a sus­tain­able sourc­ing agree­ment – yet the par­ty you claim to have that agree­ment with knows noth­ing about it. Just this month, you pub­lished claims that you could pow­er your plants from half a mil­lion hectares of set aside land in the UK and that this would be cli­mate-friend­ly. This is absurd – as any­body in the indus­try must know, most of that set aside land has already been ploughed up in what even Defra fears is a dis­as­ter for our bio­di­ver­si­ty. And far from being cli­mate-friend­ly, rape­seed oil is grown with so many fer­tilis­ers that it’s up to 70% worse for the cli­mate than fos­sil fuel oil.

Your bio­mass pol­i­cy boasts that you will min­imise indi­rect impacts. Not sur­pris­ing­ly, you haven’t told any­body just how you plan to do that – after all nobody else has come up with any cred­i­ble ideas for this either. Except for one study which makes it clear that the only way that could be done was by mak­ing sure less food was grown and more peo­ple went hun­gry. Is this what you mean when you say “If we are going to be suc­cess­ful in our fight against cli­mate change in the con­text of an eco­nom­ic down­turn and ris­ing ener­gy and food prices, we have to make some hard choic­es.”? Though the only suc­cess this project might bring is prof­its, no oth­er ben­e­fits.

And final­ly, the rea­son we are here on this par­tic­u­lar day is that we wish to sup­port the Inter­na­tion­al Day of Action called by Via Campesina, in mem­o­ry of land­less farm­ers killed in Brazil on the same day in 1996. Via Campesina and many oth­er groups right­ly demand poli­cies which sup­port food sov­er­eign­ty, not mono­cul­tures to grow fuel for Europe, and rights and sup­port for small farm­ers and for bio­di­verse, organ­ic farm­ing which tru­ly helps to counter cli­mate change. Bio­fu­el com­pa­nies like Blue NG are under­min­ing our hopes for an agri­cul­ture sys­tem which can feed peo­ple, reduce cli­mate change, safe­guard bio­di­ver­si­ty and sup­port com­mu­ni­ties’ rights and liveli­hoods. Your choic­es are your respon­si­bil­i­ty and we demand that you stop all sup­port for agro­fu­els. We will not stop cam­paign­ing until you stop your sup­port for agro­fu­els.