Homeless penguins at Bristol Airport and debunking BT Pensions greenwash

Bris­tol Ris­ing Tide actions dur­ing Co-Mutiny week

Bris­tol Ris­ing Tide actions dur­ing Co-Mutiny week
Ris­ing Tide was one of many groups tak­ing part in the Bris­tol Co-Mutiny week of action. While we are group of activists focussing on tack­ling the root caus­es of cli­mate chaos we want­ed to make the links with oth­er issues and cam­paigns. In par­tic­u­lar we want­ed to show that the exploita­tion of fos­sil fuels by big cor­po­rate inter­ests is result­ing in mass migra­tion, resource wars, and wide­spread social injus­tice. Like all the groups involved in Co-Mutiny, we want to con­front the forces of cap­i­tal­ism. This is the root cause of cli­mate chaos. Key tar­gets in the week of action were Bris­tol Inter­na­tion­al Air­port, BT Pen­sions who are invest­ing in open­cast coal min­ing in South Wales and the big banks which finance the oil, gas, and coal indus­tries.

On Thurs­day 17th Sep­tem­ber, a dozen home­less pen­guins invad­ed Bris­tol Inter­na­tion­al Air­port and hand­ed out leaflets high­light­ing the impact of air­port expan­sion, and there­fore increased CO2 emis­sions, on cli­mate change. Due to the cur­rent pace of cli­mate change and result­ing melt­ing of the ice sheet some Emper­or pen­guin colonies have halved in num­bers.

The planned increase in com­mer­cial flights at Bris­tol from 6.2m in 2008 to 10m by 2016 will also con­tribute in the increased suf­fer­ing for mil­lions of humans. From flood plains in Bangladesh, to islanders in the Mal­dives being forced to leave due to sea lev­el ris­es, and Africans faced with drought — large areas of the world are becom­ing unin­hab­it­able as a result of cli­mate change. The poor­est peo­ple are the worst affect­ed — peo­ple who will nev­er fly any­where.

Local­ly the BIA expan­sion will mean a flight every 210 sec­onds over 16 hours of nor­mal open­ing hours and thus more noise pol­lu­tion for local res­i­dents. Increased pas­sen­ger num­bers mean increased road traf­fic with a pro­ject­ed extra 2 mil­lion car jour­neys per year, and an esti­mat­ed cost to the local coun­cil of £50m in order to extend the Bus Rapid Trans­port sys­tem from cen­tral Bris­tol

The avi­a­tion sec­tor cur­rent­ly amounts to 13% of the UK’s total cli­mate impact and this will grow to 30% with BIA and oth­er UK air­port expan­sion plans. This is at a time when the UK Gov­ern­ment has com­mit­ted the UK to an 80% cut in CO2 emis­sions by 2050. In order to achieve this with the cur­rent plans for air­port expan­sion across the coun­try such as that at BIA, we would need to reduce emis­sions from all oth­er sec­tors by an addi­tion­al 10% to 90%. In order to make up this addi­tion­al 10% ordi­nary peo­ple are expect­ed to work even hard­er just to com­pen­sate for com­pa­nies like BIA, Easy­jet and Ryanair expand­ing their prof­its. Once again the gov­ern­ment is clear­ly putting big business’s inter­ests first – this has been a con­stant theme of the Co-Mutiny week of action.

On Fri­day 18th Sep­tem­ber dur­ing the Co-Mutiny Repos­sess the Banks protest, Ris­ing Tide took action against BT offices in Bris­tol to high­light the link between the BT Pen­sions Scheme and the giant Ffos y Fran open­cast coal mine at Merthyr Tyd­fil in South Wales. Fake coal was strewn on the floor of one office and walk­ing lumps of coal attempt­ed to enter anoth­er. A num­ber of activists were arrest­ed.

We want­ed to show the lie to the claims made by BT Pen­sions Scheme that their invest­ments are made with any regard to social, eth­i­cal, and envi­ron­men­tal cri­te­ria. BTPS own Her­mes, an out­fit that admin­is­ters the pen­sion scheme who in turn own Argent — a part­ner in Miller Argent the devel­op­er of Ffos y Fran, one of Europe’s largest new open­cast coal mines. This open­cast mine is a mas­sive scheme that will blight the lives of peo­ple in Merthyr Tyd­fil for at least 17 years. It is only 37 Metres from the near­est hous­ing estate and is on the edge of a large com­mu­ni­ty. The coal from Ffos y Fran is going to Aberthaw pow­er sta­tion which is the biggest pol­luter in Wales. In 2006 the pow­er sta­tion pumped out more than 7.4million tonnes of CO2 and is in the top 5 largest pol­luters in Britain.

The first Cli­mate Camp Cym­ru was held at Merthyr Tyd­fil in August part­ly to sup­port the local cam­paign against Ffos y Fran and to high­light the mas­sive devel­op­ment of new coal projects through­out the UK .

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