(Sweden) Swedish Forest Occupation Declares Temporary Victory

Envi­ron­men­tal activists have been cel­e­brat­ing a vic­to­ry on Got­land Island, off the coast of south­east Swe­den, as tree felling machin­ery remained idle on Sat­ur­day evening.

Envi­ron­men­tal activists have been cel­e­brat­ing a vic­to­ry on Got­land Island, off the coast of south­east Swe­den, as tree felling machin­ery remained idle on Sat­ur­day evening.

“It was a smart and brave deci­sion,” field biol­o­gist Alva Snis Sigtryg­gs­son told Swedish news agency TT. “It feels like a par­tial vic­to­ry.”

Ear­li­er in the day police had to use cut­ting equip­ment to remove Green­peace pro­tes­tors who had chained them­selves to the machin­ery. The tree clear­ance was planned to make way for a con­tro­ver­sial lime­stone quar­ry in the Ojnare for­est adja­cent to an EU des­ig­nat­ed Natu­ra 2000 pro­tect­ed area.

The forestry own­ers’ asso­ci­a­tion, Mel­lan­skog, issued a state­ment indi­cat­ing that the for­est clear­ance will be stopped until after a High Court Rul­ing on the issue.

“We are well aware that Nord­kalk has a legal right to start work here but we want to avoid long term splits and bit­ter­ness in this com­mu­ni­ty where we have many mem­bers,” the asso­ci­a­tion wrote.

The min­ing company’s com­mu­ni­ca­tion chief, Eva Feldt, called the deci­sion “deplorable” and blamed the coun­try gov­er­nor for putting pres­sure on the forestry group.

Envi­ron­men­tal groups, includ­ing the Swedish Soci­ety for Nature Con­ser­va­tion and Green­peace have pledged to block all attempts to open a quar­ry in the area which they say should be pro­tect­ed in line with Euro­pean Union rules on bio­di­ver­si­ty.

The Swedish Ojnare For­est has been described as unlike any oth­er on the plan­et – with unique ancient pine forests, short in stature due to the cold cli­mate, yet with indi­vid­ual trees up to 1000 years old, in ecosys­tems con­tain­ing 265 endan­gered species. These old forests shroud the island’s unique and com­plex ground­wa­ter sys­tem, and their destruc­tion will place the island’s biggest fresh­wa­ter source at risk. The area’s unique nat­ur­al ecosys­tem habi­tats are of high nation­al inter­est for nature con­ser­va­tion, as the Ojnare For­est is locat­ed between and adja­cent to two Euro­pean Natu­ra 2000 con­ser­va­tion areas, and is pro­posed to become a Nation­al Park. The Ojnare For­est and its nat­ur­al ecosys­tems are under attack by a large open pit lime­stone mine that would cov­er 420 acres with a 26 meter deep tox­ic hole.

Over the objec­tions of the Swedish Envi­ron­men­tal Pro­tec­tion Agency, and despite appeals to the Supreme Court, prepara­to­ry work for the mine is already under­way. There is a major for­est protest occu­pa­tion ongo­ing at Got­land Island against this log­ging and min­ing. Pro­test­ers have been occu­py­ing Ojnaresko­gen since July, and in recent days some 70 police offi­cers have come to remove them, and the num­ber of pro­tes­tors has risen to over 100 – rang­ing from self-described rebels against eco­cide, to fam­i­lies with small chil­dren. Despite hav­ing already start­ed clear­ing land for in excess of what had been approved, Mel­lan­skog decid­ed on Sat­ur­day to sus­pend the ongo­ing log­ging on Got­land pend­ing a deci­sion from the Supreme Court. While a pos­i­tive devel­op­ment, protest con­tin­ues until the log­ging and entire project are can­celled.

Although the acute­ly threat­ened area is “only” 170 hectares in size, the case reveals Sweden’s weak for­est pro­tec­tion leg­is­la­tion and pos­si­ble resource allo­ca­tion cor­rup­tion. Only a few per­cent of Sweden’s high con­ser­va­tion val­ue forests remain, and only 3.3 per­cent of the pro­duc­tive for­est area is pro­tect­ed. The ver­dict in this case will be used by oth­er cor­po­ra­tions to clearcut and exploit oth­er old nat­ur­al ecosys­tems in the coun­try. Eco­log­i­cal Inter­net has a long his­to­ry of suc­cess­ful­ly sup­port­ing local Scan­di­na­vian old-growth for­est pro­tec­tion move­ments. In 2009, our net­work sent 1,117,294 protest emails in a suc­cess­ful cam­paign stop­ping indus­tri­al devel­op­ment in 80% of Finland’s Cen­tral Lap­land wilder­ness, cov­er­ing tens of thou­sands of hectares. Few thought such pro­tec­tions were pos­si­ble, yet with strong local orga­niz­ing backed up by EI’s unprece­dent­ed glob­al network’s inter­na­tion­al cam­paign, it was one of many great vic­to­ries for Earth’s old forests.