Hundreds Shut Down Chemical Supplier in NC Fracking Protest

9238329523_b11d5ad684_h 8 July 2013 UPDATE: Many have been a

9238329523_b11d5ad684_h 8 July 2013 UPDATE: Many have been arrested at today’s action for blockading chemical shipments and in attempted lockdowns. One activist is still up in a tripod and being denied support. Please support them by sending donations to the Croatan Earth First! legal fund here 

More photos of the action here

First tripod sitter and other activists block Momentive facility gate as protesters occupy tanker

By halting delivery of fracking proppants protesters hope to stall fracking efforts in North Carolina. See bottom of article for list of Momentive facilities worldwide, and take action! 

Morganton, NC – On the edge of the western mountain range, protesters with Croatan Earth First! are currently occupying an industrial manufacturing facility owned by Momentive and located at 114 Industrial Drive.  North Carolinians, who have been fighting to prevent hydraulic fracturing from coming to central North Carolina are joined in this action by people from around the country who also oppose shale gas extraction nationwide.  Momentive is one of the largest worldwide distributors of “resin coated proppants,”  a necessary component for fracking.  Each fracturing stage requires approximately 136 tonnes of proppants.   

 “We are here to send a message to the oil and gas industries: we will not stand idly by as you destroy this land, or any other, for your personal profit. Respect existence, or expect resistance,” said an Earth First! activist.

 

Second tripod blocking Momentive driveway

Second tripod blocking Momentive driveway

The North Carolina legislature plans to begin permitting frack sites as early as March 2015 in the Cumnock Shale Basin located underneath Lee, Moore, Chatham, and surrounding counties.  Fracking has been tied to water aquifer contamination in Pavilion, Wyoming according to an EPA study and linked to high levels of methane in Pennsylvania water wells according to a study by Duke University.  Researchers with Cornell University found that fracking operations nationwide released massive amounts of methane (a greenhouse gas) straight into the atmosphere, and concluded that, if not curbed, would speed climate change faster than carbon emissions. 

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The NC legislature is negotiating on the possibility of legalizing toxic wastewater injection in state or transporting it elsewhere.  The process uses 1-8 million gallons of clean water each time a well is fracked.

  “We are under drought conditions already, yet the oil and gas industry is allowed to pump millions of gallons of water out of our streams.  This is devastating life in our rivers and streams.  To make matters worse they send this water back into the riverways poisoned with radioactive materials,” said organizer Lydia Nickles.  “Preserving our waters is preserving our lives and all life. We want an end to shale gas extraction everywhere.”     

Activists with the Earth First! Movement are calling on people nationwide to resist fracking where they live and organize solidarity actions. 

“Even if you don’t have a rig in your area to shut down, you can affect the industry.   Momentive and other companies that create proppants for the gas industry have facilities nationwide as well as internationally.  It’s time to disrupt the chain of supply.  Go to www.frackindustry.org and organize to take action now!” 

Momentive’s worldwide headquarters are located in Columbus, Ohio and other locations can be found online at:  http://www.momentive.com/locations_home.aspx?id=293

A message from Croatan Earth First!:  “We are acting in solidarity with and take inspiration from the courageous many who have been standing together to take action in the North Carolina capital during Moral Mondays, and we encourage everyone to continue to show our collective power, acting up against the repressive corporate and legislative powers for the liberation of all and the integrity of land, water and air.”

 

Croatan Earth First! encourages others to follow this example and take action against fracking and proppant manufacturing facilities. Find a location near you:

Momentive Worldwide Locations

Americas

Brazil

Cotia
Parque Alexandre 502Cotia, SP06714-285 Brazil
Curitiba
 Rua Cyro Correa Pereira,2525 – CICCuritiba, PR81450-090 Brazil
Itatiba
Rodovia Engenheiro Constancio Cintra Km 78,5
Distrito Industrial Alfredo Rela
Itatiba, Brazil
13255-846
Montenegro
 RS 124, esquina com via 2MontenegroBrazil
Paulinia
 Fazenda São Franciscos/n° CP 921,Paulinia, Sao Paulo13140-000 Brazil
 

Canada

Calgary
633 6th Avenue, SW, #400Calgary, ABT2P 2Y5 Canada
Edmonton
12621 156th St NWEdmonton, ABT5V 1E1 Canada
St-Romuald
675 PerreaultSt-Romuald, QuébecG6W 7Z9 Canada
Sturgeon
305 Park RdFort Saskatchewan, ABCanada

Colombia

Cali
Calle 154  #1-25Cali, YumboColombia

Mexico

Mexico
 Avenida Juarez No. 40
Int.206
Col. ExHacienda Santa Monica
EDM 54050, Mexico

United States

Alabama

Demopolis, AL
1700 Lock & Dam RoadDemopolis, AL36732 USA

Arkansas

Batesville, AR
2120 N. St Louis StBatesville, AR 72501
Hope, AR
185 North Industrial DriveHope, AR71801 USA

California

Chino, CA
 4045 Cheyenne Court
Chino, CA
91710 USA
Fremont, CA
41100 Boyce RoadFremont, CA94538 USA

Florida

Lakeland, FL
2525 South Combee RoadLakeland, FL33801 USA
New Smyrna Beach, FL
703 South Street 
New Smyrna Beach, FL
32168-5867 USA

Georgia

Columbus, GA
6906 Dixie StreetColumbus, GA31907 USA
Columbus, GA
1201 10th AvenueColumbus, GA31901 USA

Illinois

Argo, IL
8600 West 71st StreetBedford Park, IL60501 USA
Oregon, IL
1449 Devil’s Backbone RoadOregon, IL61061 USA
Westmont, IL
630 Oakmont LaneWestmont, IL60559 USA
 

Indiana

Garrett, IN
 500 North Taylor Road
Garrett, IN
46738-1846 USA

Kentucky

Louisville, KY
1800 Meidinger TowerLouisville,  KY 40216
Louisville, KY
6200 Campground RoadLouisville, KY40216 USA
Louisville, KY(2)
6210 Campground RoadLouisville, KY40216
 

Louisiana

Alexandria, LA
 3901 Sugar House RoadAlexandria, LA71302 USA
Baton Rouge, LA
 18167 East Petroleum DriveBaton Rouge, LA70809 USA
Geismar, LA
9288 Hwy. 75Geismar, LA70734 USA
Gonzales, LA
 9288 Hwy. 75 River RoadGeismar, LA70734 USA
Norco, LA
16122 River RoadWest Site Admin Bldg.Norco, LA70079 USA
 

Montana

Missoula, MT
3670 Grant Creek RoadMissoula, MT59808 USA

New York

Moreau, NY
64 Farnan RoadSouth Glens Falls, NY12803 USA
Tarrytown, NY
 769 Old Saw Mill River Road
Tarrytown, NY
10591 USA
Waterford, NY
 260 Hudson River Road
Waterford, NY
12188 USA
 

North Carolina

Acme, NC
 333 Neils Eddy RoadRiegelwood, NC28456 USA
Charlotte
 1950 Continental Boulevard
Charlotte, NC
28273 USA
Fayetteville, NC
1411 Industrial DriveFayetteville, NC28301 USA
High Point, NC
1717 Ward StreetHigh Point, NC27260 USA
Huntersville
 9930 Kincey Avenue
Huntersville, NC
28078-6468 USA
Lenoir, NC
Miller Hill RoadLenoir, NC28645 USA
Morganton, NC
114 Industrial Blvd.Morganton, NC28655 USA
Reigelwood, NC
333 Neils Eddy RoadReigelwood, NC 28456

Ohio

Columbus, OH
 180 East Broad  StreetColumbus, OH43215 USA
Gahanna, OH
630 Morrison Rd, Suite 300Gahanna, OH43232 USA
Newark, OH
 611 O’Neill Drive SE
Hebron, OH
43025-9680 USA
Richmond Heights, OH
 24400 Highland Road
Richmond Heights, OH
44143-2503 USA
Strongsville, OH
 22557 West Lunn Road
Strongsville, OH
44149-4871 USA
Toledo, OH
 4243 South AvenueToledo, OH43615 USA
Willoughby, OH
 4901 Campbell Road
Willoughby, OH
44094-3366 USA
 

Oklahoma

Oklahoma City, OK
4601 S. MacArthurOklahoma City, OK73179 USA

Oregon

LaGrande, OR
62575 Oregon Hwy 82Island City, OR97850 USA
Portland, OR
10915 N. LombardPortland, OR97203 USA
Springfield, OR
470 South Second StreetSpringfield, OR97477 USA
Springfield, OR
610 South Second StreetSpringfield, OR97477 USA
Springfield, OR(2)
155 West “A” A-1Springfield, OR 97477
 

Pennsylvania

Mount Jewett, PA
253 Borden DriveMount Jewett, PA16740 USA

South Carolina

Roebuck, SC
200 Railroad StreetRoebuck, SC29376 USA

Texas

Baytown, TX
8450 West Bay RoadBaytown, TX77520 USA
Brady, TX
45 Acfrac Rd. & Old Mason RoadBrady, TX76825 USA
Cleburne, TX
3202 Windmill RoadCleburne, TX76033 USA
Deer Park, TX
5900 Highway 225Deer Park, TX77536 USA
Diboll, TX
100 W. Borden DriveDiboll, TX75941 USA
Houston, TX
12650 Directors Dr, Suite 100Stafford, TX77477 USA
Houston, TX
15366 Park RowHouston, TX77084 USA
Longview, TX
10 Robert Wilson RoadLongview, TX75602-4886 USA

Washington

Bellevue, WA
 520 112th Ave NE, Suite 220Bellevue, WA98004 USA

West Virginia

Sistersville, WV
3500 South State Route 2
Friendly, WV
26146-9750 USA

Wisconsin

Sheboygan, WI
 2522 South 24th StreetSheboygan, WI53081 USA

 

Asia Pacific

Australia

Brimbank
 Gate 3 – 765 Ballarat Road
Deer Park, VIC
3023
Australia
Brisbane
194 Paringa RdGibson Island, Murarrie, QLD4172 Australia
Somersby
3 Warringah CloseSomersby, NSW2250 Australia
 

China

Nantong
Nantong Economic Tech Development ParkNantong, China
Shanghai
No. 227 Libing Road
Zhangjiang Hi-Tech Park, Pudong
Shanghai 201203
China

India

Bangalore
 The Millenia, Tower B, 4th Floor, Murphy Road, Ulsoor
Bangalore – 560008
India

Japan

Kobe
Kobe International Business Center, North5-5-2 Minatojima Minamimachi,Chuo-ku, Kobe, Hyogo650-0047
Kozuki
Kozuki580-39 Aza Koseno-uchiKuzaki-cho, Sayo-gun, Hyogo679-5641
Ohta
 Ohta133, Nishi-shinmachiOhta, Gunma373-8505
Japan
Tokyo
Akasaka Park Building5-2-20, AkasakaMinato-ku, Tokyo107-6109Japan

Korea

Seoul
Gu-Plaza Bldg, 8th Fl,63-14,  Sinsu DongSEOUL, 121-854, KOREA
Ulsan
580-3, Hwasan-ri, Onsan-eup, Ulju-gunUlsan,Korea

Malaysia

Sg. Petani
Petani Sdn Bhd (370808-K)C 22 Susur Lencongan Timur Kanan, Kawasan Perindustrian Cendana Sungai Petani0800 Malaysia

New Zealand

Hornby
135 -147 Waterloo Road – Hornby
Christchurch, Canterbury
8042
New Zealand
Mountview
165 Totara Street
Mt. Maunganui
3118
New Zealand

Singapore

Singapore
100 Beach Road#20-01/02 Shaw TowerSingapore 189702

Taiwan

Taipei
11F-1, No. 171 Sung Der RoadTaipei11085 Taiwan

Thailand

Bangkok
3195/6, Vibulthani Tower 11st Floor, Rama IV RoadKlongton, KlongtoeyBangkok10110 Thailand
Rayong
 1/2 M00 4 Asia Industrial Estate
Rayong
21130 Thailand
Samutsakorn
84/2 Moo 4, Tambol Bangtorad Rama II Road, km 41Samutsakorn7400 Thailand
 

 

Europe, Middle East and Africa

Belgium

Louvain
Avenue Jean Monnet 1Ottignies Louvain-la-Neuve,1348 Belgium
Zwijndrecht
 Haven 1053 Nieuwe Weg 1
2070 Zwijndrecht
Belgium

Czech Republic

Pardubice
Areal Uma53354 Pardubice SemtínCzech Republic
Prague
 Luzna 716/2
16000 Prague 6
Czech Republic
Sokolov
Tovární c.p. 209335601 SokolovCzech Republic
 

Finland

Puhos
Teollisuustie 20 BPuhos,FIN-82430 Finland

France

La Rochette
 41 Rue Corot
77000 La Rochette
France
Ribécourt
704, rue Pierre et Marie Curie60772 RibécourtFrance
Rouen
 3 et 5 Rue Barbet76250 Déville-les-Rouen,France
 

Germany

Duisburg
Varziner Str. 4947138 DuisburgGermany
Frielendorf
Glockenrain 234621 FrielendorfGermany
Geesthacht
 Borsigstraße 1-7
21502 Geesthacht
Germany
Iserlohn-Letmathe
Gennaer Str. 2-458642 IserlohnGermany
Leuna
Am Haupttor, Bau 610106237 LeunaGermany
Leverkusen
 Chempark, Building V 7
51368 Leverkusen
Germany
Stuttgart
Fritz Mueller Str. 114Esslingen am Neckar,D-73730Germany
Wesseling, Germany
Bruhler Strasse 1450389 WesselingGermany

Italy

Sant Albano
Via Morozzo, 2712040 Sant Albano SturaItaly
Solbiate Olona
Via Mazzini, 104I-21058 Solbiate Olona, VAItaly
Termoli
 Zona Industriale, Calle Poste 79CP 79 86039 Termoli (CB)
Italy
 

Netherlands

Chamber of Commerce Number 2429476

Bergen op Zoom
Plasticslaan 1, 4612 PX
Bergen op Zoom
The Netherlands
Moerdijk, Netherlands
Chemieweg 254782SJ Moerdijk,The Netherlands
Pernis
Vondelingenweg 601Harbour no. 31903196 KK Hoogvliet Rt, PernisThe Netherlands
Rotterdam
Seattleweg 173195 ND Rotterdam, PortparkThe Netherlands
Rotterdam, Botlek
Chemiestraat 303197 KB Rotterdam, BotlekThe Netherlands
 

Poland

Warzawa
 Oddzial w Polsce ul. Smolenskiego 4/10
01 – 698 Warzawa
Poland

Russia

Moscow
 Ulitsa Smolnaya 24 D125445 MoscowRussia

South Africa

South Africa
 10 Quark Crescent, Linbro Business Park, Sandton
2065 South Africa, Meridian Commercial Tower
South Africa

Spain

Asua
Camino de Sangroniz num 848150 Sondika (Vizcaya)Spain
Barbastro
Pol.  Industrial Valle del Cina22300 Barbastro (Huesca)Spain
Lantarón
Pol. Ind. De Lantero cp 121301213 Lantarón (Alava)Spain
 

Turkey

Turkey
Beykoz, Kavacik Mahallesi Cavusbasi Caddesi Yayabey
Sokagi no. 12, c/o Southern Chemicals (Pty)
Turkey

UK

Barry
Sully Moors RoadSully Penarth, South GlamorganCF64 5YU United Kingdom
Chandlers Ford
School LaneChandlers FordUnited Kingdom
Clayton
Ashton New RoadClayton, ManchesterM11 4AT United Kingdom
Cowie
Station RoadCowie, StirlingFK7 7BQ United Kingdom
Lostock
 5, Cranfield Road, Lostock Industrial Estate, Lostock
Bolton BL 64QD
United Kingdom
Peterlee
North West Industrial EstatePeterlee, Co. DurhamSR8 2HR United Kingdom
Stanlow, United Kingdom
Stanlow Mfg ComplexEllesmere PortCH65 4HB United Kingdom
 

United Arab Emirates

Dubai
 PO Box 17193Jebel AliDubai

 

Protest halts Newmont Gold work in NZ

7 July 2013 Protesters have occupied a mining exploration site on conservation land in the Coromandel Peninsula.

7 July 2013 Protesters have occupied a mining exploration site on conservation land in the Coromandel Peninsula.

The protest, in the Parakiwai Valley near Whangamata, stopped work at the site during the weekend.

Coromandel Watchdog spokeswoman Renee Annan said about 10 protesters asked workers to turn the drilling rig off on Saturday morning and the two groups had remained in a calm stand off since.

Newmont Gold executives flew in by helicopter and told the protesters they were trespassing, Ms Annan told NZ Newswire.

However, there was no sign of police getting involved yet, she said.

The area should have been included in Schedule Four Conservation land when the park was created, she said.

It was home to the critically endangered Archey’s frog species, and other rare species such as Helms butterfly and Coromandel brown kiwi.

Ms Annan said that while the drilling was only exploratory, it should still be banned from conservation land.

The group would give Newmont the information it needed to decide whether or not to mine.

“Any kind of mining is totally inappropriate in this area.”

Newmont could not be contacted for comment.

Communities Protest Against Oil Company In Akwa Ibom

4 July 2013 The host communities of Universal Energy Resource, an oil company, have staged a peaceful protest against it for alleged non-implementation of development projects in 2012.

4 July 2013 The host communities of Universal Energy Resource, an oil company, have staged a peaceful protest against it for alleged non-implementation of development projects in 2012.

The protest was staged by the people of Ntak Inyang in Esit Eket and Unyenge in Mbo and communities in Oron Local Government Areas of Akwa Ibom on Wednesday.

The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that their placards had the following inscriptions: “implement the provisions of the MoU; we reject injustice, we reject divide and rule system. No community development, no universal energy.”

The Secretary of Memorandum Implementation Committee (MIC), Chief Okon Ani, said the protest was aimed at reminding the company of the agreement it signed with the host communities.

Today’s protest is peaceful but the next one may not be peaceful. The problem is that the operation of the company is supposed to be that of empowerment but it has turned out to be exploitation.

The 2012 development project is long overdue and it has not been implemented

For the eight years that the company has been on ground, no positive development impact has been made by the company to the host communities.

We want the world to know that the company has not implemented any item in the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) they signed with the host communities.

The Local Content Act has been totally neglected by the company in terms of employment, contract awards, scholarships and empowerment of youths and the women from the host communities.

It is better to address these pressing issues before the youths become hostile and make it difficult for the company to operate in our environment,” Ani said.

The General Manager, Finance, of the company, Mr Ukpe Udoette, said 99.9 per cent of the implementation of the MoU has been achieved with the relocation of the company’s headquarters from Lagos to Akwa Ibom.

The relocation would make it easier for the company to address issues affecting the host communities.’’

He said the company could not act unilaterally without the consent of Sinopet, a Chinese company.

The Public Affairs Officer of the company, Mr Aniefiok Ewaudofia, said it had a lot of empowerment and development plans for the host communities.

The company is not giving deaf ears to the host communities because if we do that, it means we don’t want to be welcomed.

The host communities at this moment should be rejoicing that the company has finally relocated its headquarters from Lagos to Akwa Ibom,” he said.

He said that the issue of employment, empowerment and scholarships would be resolved quickly following the relocation.

CHP Removes Willits Bypass Protester from Tower

3 July 2013 An environmental protester who had been perched 50 feet up a piece of construction equipment outside Willits for more than a week has been removed a

3 July 2013 An environmental protester who had been perched 50 feet up a piece of construction equipment outside Willits for more than a week has been removed and arrested by the CHP.

Will Parrish, 31, of Ukiah was arrested Monday after being cut loose from a locking device he had connected to one of two 100-foot wick-drain installers being used on the Highway 101 bypass project outside Willits.

The $210 million bypass is being built to skirt the city of Willits, where traffic regularly slows to a crawl as Highway 101 narrows to two lanes through downtown. Proponents say it’s necessary to reduce traffic congestion and restore the city’s small-town feel. Opponents say it is a costly and ugly mistake that will hurt streams and fisheries and increase flooding.

Parrish’s protest had prevented the wick-drain installers from operating since June 20. Work resumed on Tuesday, Caltrans said.

More than 30 arrests have been made among protesters since April.

On Monday, CHP officers, acting on a request from Caltrans, which owns the property, used cherry-picker-type lifts to reach Parrish.

“We had a team go up and first made sure he was OK and didn’t need medical attention,” said CHP Capt. Jim Epperson. “After we were sure he was OK, we hydrated him — gave him some Gatorade.”

Officers then cut his locking device and brought Parrish down.

He and another protester, Amanda “Warbler” Senseman, were arrested on trespassing charges, Epperson said. Senseman sat in a tree for two months earlier this year as a protest against the bypass.

Caltrans spokesman Phil Frisbie said Parrish was “putting himself and others at risk and delaying construction by trespassing.”

“And with the ongoing hot weather forecasted, we are also concerned about his health and safety,” he said.

Protest leader Freddie Long said one tree-sitter remains in an ash grove north of where Parrish was perched. So far, that person hasn’t been confronted, Long said.

The 5.9-mile bypass is expected to be completed in the fall of 2016.

Locals Risk Their Lives Fighting Mining in Mexico

1 July 2013 “They brutally repressed us. The mining company buys off people’s consciences, it divides the community, but we’ll keep fighting it.

1 July 2013 “They brutally repressed us. The mining company buys off people’s consciences, it divides the community, but we’ll keep fighting it. Some people have had to flee the community,” Rosalinda Dionisio, a Zapoteca indigenous woman in the southern Mexican state of Oaxaca, said, sobbing.

Her moving testimony illustrated the growing conflicts between local communities and mining companies in Mexico.

Dionisio, 30, still walks with a limp from the leg injuries she sustained when she and other activists from the Coordinadora de Pueblos Unidos del Valle de Ocotlán anti-mining organisation survived an attempt on their lives in March 2012.

The Coordinadora is made up of local residents fighting the San José mining company run by the Compania Minera Cuzcatlan S.A., a subsidiary of Fortuna Silver Mines Inc of Canada, which mines for gold and silver on an area of 700 hectares.

The deposits are located near San José del Progreso, one of the three poorest towns in Oaxaca, which is Mexico’s second-most impoverished state. Most of the 6,200 people in the town are opposed to the mining company’s activities in the area because of the soil and water pollution they cause.

But Mayor Alberto Sánchez heads a group of local residents who back the company. The community is divided and confrontations have occurred – like in other mining towns in Mexico.

Stories like Dionisio’s abound in this Latin American country, which is experiencing a mining boom fomented by the government of conservative President Felipe Calderón (2006-2012).

Under the 1992 mining law, Mexico has granted around 31,000 concessions to some 300 companies for more than 800 mining projects on nearly 51 million hectares. Most of the companies involved are Canadian, according to the economy ministry’s most recent figures.

ProMéxico, the government office dedicated to drawing in foreign investment, and the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) report that Mexico is the world’s top producer of silver, in third place for bismuth, fifth for molybdenum and lead, and ninth for gold.

In 2012, the mining industry generated 300,000 direct jobs in Mexico, accounted for seven billion dollars in investment, and represented two percent of GDP, according to official figures.

ProMéxico predicts that in 2014, the mining industry’s contribution to GDP will rise to four percent, and that in the next six years, the sector will bring in 35 billion dollars in investment, in a country where 70 percent of the territory has significant mineral deposits, according to official estimates.

But local communities have clashed with the mining companies because of the deforestation, water pollution and dumping of toxic liquid waste.

Since the 1970s, the people of La Mira, in the western state of Michoacán, have been fighting the Las Truchas iron mine, owned by Siderúrgica Lázaro Cárdenas-Las Truchas, a subsidiary of India’s ArcelorMittal steel and mining company.

“They polluted the water and the air, they damaged our houses, and they’re just taking everything,” complained Melitón Izazaga, a leader of the non-governmental Colonias Unidas de La Mira, which groups residents who have been affected by the nearby mine and steelworks that produce 100,000 tons a month of steel.

The mine and the factory dump waste into a reservoir that pollutes nearby rivers and streams, which are the source of water for the local communities. But so far legal action aimed at curbing the mine’s pollution has been unsuccessful.

San José and La Mira were among the cases presented Jun. 21-23 to the Mexican section of the Permanent People’s Tribunal, in a pre-hearing on the mining industry’s impact on the environment and the rights of local people, which was attended by IPS in Cuernavaca, the capital of the central state of Morelos.

The Tribunal began its work in Mexico in 2011 and will conclude its hearings in 2014 with non-binding rulings based on the evidence collected under seven categories: violence; impunity and lack of access to justice; migration; femicide and gender violence; attacks against maize and food sovereignty; environmental destruction; and peoples’ rights.

“The new mining activity is not seeking to develop anything, but merely wants to extract gold, silver, or whatever. It’s a model for exploitation, not for development of the communities. If we don’t fight them, we’re going to have to leave,” Fernanda Campa, a researcher at the Autonomous University of Mexico City, said.

The government of conservative President Enrique Peña Nieto, who took office Dec. 1, has kept in place the guarantees offered investors in the mining industry. But academics and activists complain that there have been no guarantees for the rights of local communities, and of indigenous people in particular.

Mexico’s indigenous population is variously estimated to make up between 12 and 30 percent of the country’s 107 million people (the smaller, official, estimate is based on the number of people who speak an indigenous language).

From 2000 to 2012, mining concessions were granted for two million hectares of the 28 million hectares that make up officially recognised ancestral lands of native peoples in Mexico.

According to the Observatory on Mining Conflicts in Latin America, there are 175 socio-environmental conflicts or clashes over natural resource use ongoing in the region, involving 183 mining projects and 246 communities. Twenty-one of these conflicts are in Mexico.

“We don’t want more deaths, but we prefer to lose our lives than go down on our knees before the state. We haven’t managed to get the company to leave; we want justice,” said Dionisio, who spent two months in hospital after the attack that her organisation blames on armed militias hired by Cuzcatlán.

So far, four activists opposed to the mine in San José del Progreso have been killed.

Another criticism of extractive industry policies in Mexico is the low level of benefits that go to the state. Mining companies currently pay between 36 cents of a dollar and eight dollars a year per hectare of their concessions for extracting metals and minerals. The only additional tax they pay is income tax, the amount of which is kept secret.

A “study on the extractive industries in Mexico and the situation of indigenous peoples in the territories in which those industries are located” documented native peoples’ complaints that their rights have not been respected or protected.

They stressed that they have not been made participants in consultation and citizen input processes, and that their free, prior and informed consent has not been sought before concessions are granted to mining companies in their territories – as required by International Labour Organisation Convention 169 Concerning Indigenous and Tribal Peoples.

The report on extractive industries and the situation of indigenous peoples, commissioned by the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, also cites the criminalisation of protests, the loss of natural resources, negative environmental impacts, health effects and a total lack of benefits for the local population from the mining industry’s activities.

“Federal authorities should fulfil their role as protectors of the rights of indigenous peoples; monitor the assumption of corporate social responsibility by companies; decriminalise the holding of protests by indigenous peoples against mining companies; and punish those responsible for crimes against indigenous leaders,” the report says.

“One day the hillside is going to slide down on us and bury the town,” as a result of the mining activity, Izazaga said.

Extra gardai on duty at Shell pipeline after €150,000 damage to machinery

30 June 2013 Extra gardai are on duty in Co Mayo this weekend after violence broke out at a protest against the Shell gas pipeline last Sunday when a security guard had his arm badly injured and €150,000 worth of damage was done to machinery, writes Jim Cusack.

30 June 2013 Extra gardai are on duty in Co Mayo this weekend after violence broke out at a protest against the Shell gas pipeline last Sunday when a security guard had his arm badly injured and €150,000 worth of damage was done to machinery, writes Jim Cusack.

Sixty protesters, mostly local people but including anarchists who travelled to Ireland for the G8 summit protest, were said to have been involved. Gardai made six arrests last Wednesday and Thursday after examining CCTV images and are preparing prosecutions files.

The protesters targeted a construction site at Aughoose last weekend as part of an annual protest campaign, and security guards at the scene were assaulted.

Gardaí frustrated as protests in Mayo continue

30 June 2013 This week has seen large numbers of people continually walking down to Shell's tunneling compound, disrupting work and blocking Shell traffic, and man

30 June 2013 This week has seen large numbers of people continually walking down to Shell's tunneling compound, disrupting work and blocking Shell traffic, and many people from the camp have taken advantage of the sunny weather to spend the days helping locals with turf collecting- many hands make light work! Meanwhile the guards have spent their time patrolling around harassing people on the roads.

 

A Brief blow by blow

Thursday morning as a convoy passed the camp, 20 Gardaí tried to block the gate to the camp and threw people into ditches, pushing one person's head into the water in the ditch and generally being a bit violent. Two people were arrested. One was let out with a caution and the other was held in custody, brought to court in Castlebar Friday morning and denied bail, so he is now in Castlerea Prison awaiting a court appearance 5th July.

Later on Thursday morning a small group went to Belmullet Garda station to collect their friends and one person was dragged outside the copshop, pushed to the ground and arrested for alleged criminal damage on Sunday 23rd June. He was held overnight and brought to court in Castlebar on Friday morning. He has been granted bail and released on the condition he not enter or interfere with Shell property or traffic, and signs on once a week at Belmullet Garda Station. He will be up in court on 10th July.

Thursday afternoon a large group of 30 or so people walked down to the Shell compound in Aughoose, stopping work inside the compound and stopping any Shell traffic from entering or exiting the compound for over 3 hours. Once again IRMS (Shell private security) was policing the public road, pushing people and holding people until the guards arrived. Two people were arrested on the road. One person was released and will appear in Belmullet Court on 10th July, the other was arrested for outstanding fines and brought to Mountjoy women's prison in Dublin. She was held overnight and released Friday morning.

Thursday finished off at 6pm when the guards finally attempted to clear the road, everyone left and no one else was arrested. A long queue of 20 vehicles and lorries which had been stuck inside finally were able to leave the compound.

Friday 28th June at 7am one person climbed a tripod erected in the road between Bellanaboy refinery and the Aughoose tunneling compound, stopping all traffic going into the compound until 11.30am when the road was cleared and the person was arrested. That person is being charged with Sections 8 and 9 of the public order act and will be up in Belmullet court on 10th July.

Three people walking back to camp from the tripod on Friday were followed by guards, and an attempt was made to arrest one of them but they jumped into a field and got away. This isn't the first time that people have been harassed on the roads this week by Gardaí. Tuesday night as people were walking back from the pub the guards were stopping people who were walking in twos or alone, asking for names addresses and even emails. One person refused to give his details, saying he hadn't done anything out of the ordinary and was only walking home, and he was arrested and brought to Belmullet garda station. He was released in the early hours of the morning with no charges.

Other things that have happened this week: Windows of a Shell house were broken, graffiti appeared on the main gates of the tunneling compound, and a Shell truck ran into problems with spuds up the exhaust and someone doing in its tyres. Who knows what else the pixies have gotten up to….

Cops assaulting people on the road
Cops assaulting people on the road

Pushing people into ditches then arresting them
Pushing people into ditches then arresting them

This is the pipe being laid between the refinery and the tunneling compound
This is the pipe being laid between the refinery and the tunneling compound

Paddlers Charge Silver River, Protesting Expected Cattle Ranch

Paddlers charge the iconic Silver River, protesting Adena Springs Ranch

30 June 2013 Grassfed beef ain’t all it’s cracked up to be.

Paddlers charge the iconic Silver River, protesting Adena Springs Ranch

30 June 2013 Grassfed beef ain’t all it’s cracked up to be.

Take Adena Springs Ranch, a proposed cattle ranch being developed by billionaire Frank Stronach in Florida. The beef project is expected to span 10,000 acres and, according to their website, hold up to 15,000 cattle. Adena Springs Ranch plans to raise the cattle on a grassfed diet, calling their industrial farming practices “healthier” and “better for the environment.”

This past Saturday, individuals concerned with the proposed ranch gathered alongside the iconic Silver River, a river formed from the discharge of Silver Springs, one of the largest natural artesian wells in the world. Silver Springs historically discharged over 550 million gallons of water per day. In recent years, though, its flow has decreased significantly. According to the New York Times, the “flow rate has dropped by a third over 10 years.” If Adena Springs Ranch gets the go ahead from state officials, its farming practices will have a direct impact on the flow and water quality of Silver Springs.

A flyover by the Putnam County Environmental Council showing the Adena Springs Ranch property

A flyover by the Putnam County Environmental Council showing the Adena Springs Ranch property. Photo: PCEC

Adena Springs Ranch is currently applying for a consumptive use permit that will allow them to draw 5.3 million gallons of water per day from the Floridan Aquifer, the underground reservoir of water that provides drinking water to Florida residents, draws tourism money to the state and encourages residents and visitors to get out into the wilds of Florida and experience its natural beauty.

The permit, if approved, will allow the ranch to draw water from the area surrounding Silver Springs, impacting the entire springshed, all for the purpose of watering the grass that will feed the cattle. When asked about the impact their water withdrawals would have, Adena engineer – and Frank Stronach puppet – William Dunn said that “they do not consider current hydrological conditions when they do their calculations.”

About the only thing natural in this intensive cattle operation will be the release of cow shit and urine into the 130-acre grazing lots. Adena Springs Ranch says they will complete regular soil tests to ensure that they’re “not sending runoff downstream to neighbors or nearby waterbodies.”

The Floridan Aquifer, however, can be thought of as a giant limestone sponge forming the foundation of the state. Rainwater and runoff seeps through topsoil and permeable limestone and slowly flows through the Aquifer until it rushes out through natural springs or is drawn up for drinking or irrigation purposes. If cow manure – a nitrogen-rich fertilizer sold in garden shops everywhere – coming from Stronach’s cows somehow manages to have a neutral effect on the environment, and on the nutrient levels of the surrounding area, than the makeup of that cowshit would defy vegetable gardeners everywhere.

A paddler on the spring-fed Silver River.

A paddler on the spring-fed Silver River. Photo: Matt Keene

Find out more information about the protest and the issues surrounding Adena Springs by checking out the Water Action Team website.

Notes from White Castle

 
29 June 2013
 
Last night I slept in a warm, soft, bed, my housemates murmuring and playing music a floor below; tonight I lay on the cold, damp, ground a Yew Tree right above me, with cinnamon red bark and a trun

 
29 June 2013
 
Last night I slept in a warm, soft, bed, my housemates murmuring and playing music a floor below; tonight I lay on the cold, damp, ground a Yew Tree right above me, with cinnamon red bark and a trunk that twists and curves, an old gnarled body reaching for the sky.
 I hear the Yew Tree grows quite slowly, curving and bending its way toward the much taller, Douglas Firs. Swaths of pale-green lichen hang from the branches and blanket the trunks of these giants, a sign that the air is clean and moist. I look down. I am stepping on  decaying logs, turning into fecund soil, right below my feet. There is a mass of life and death out here, feeding into itself, again and again: a perfect, waste-less, system.
To remove any part of this forest would be an injustice to what is truly wild: the self-containing, self-informed, ecosystems that make up the biosphere. To think that humans could come into a place, so perfectly, and delicately balanced, with trucks and machinery, destroying the undergrowth, the trees, the canopy,  to think that they would do this place a favor, creating “early seral habitat.” It is not just a ridiculous idea: it is utterly dangerous and ecocidal.
We are talking about laying a pristine forest, never before logged, on the cruel alter of industry and human experimentation, and justifying it by saying that it is for the butterflies. Well, I’ve seen the butterflies here, and I’ve seen the birds and the trees and the deer, and they seem quite content with the way the forest is, as it stands. They have the sense that exists before defined ideas and suppositions that tells them how to be in this place: no heavy machinery need interject.
Tomorrow, I will wake up to the morning chorus. It starts with a few distant chirps and builds and eventually crescendos: hundreds of birds singing their love of this place and the day that has arrived.  And I will get up with them and I will climb up into a tree and I wont leave, to protect the day, and days to come, here at White Castle.
 

Cardiff Shell petrol station rooftop occupation

A report of the rooftop occupation of the Shell petrol station in Pontprennau, Cardiff on 29th June 2013.

A report of the rooftop occupation of the Shell petrol station in Pontprennau, Cardiff on 29th June 2013.


In solidarity with the protest camp in County Mayo Ireland, as part of their anti-Shell week of action, on Saturday morning a group of individuals from South Wales dropped banners and held a rooftop occupation of a Shell petrol station on the outskirts of Cardiff. The activists handed out leaflets to motorists and passers by, explaining the issues, and had some in depth conversations with passers by. There were no arrests.

The occupation started at 9:50 and protestors distributed leaflets and informed local consumers of Shell's actions internationally and in County Mayo, until they ran out of flyers. The occupier came down in their own time at 11.30, due to the fact that business continued operating as usual, and the point had been made. 3 banners were left on the roof of the garage, reading "Solidarity with Mayo", "One Earth (A)", and "Occupy Oil- Shell Kills". Comrades from Italy, London and Brighton sent messages of solidarity, along with local comrades.

Solidarity with all peoples and communities affected and dispersed by Shell's (and other profiteers') despicable greed and profit-driven ecocide. From Alaska to Ireland, from Japan to Nigeria, and here in Cardiff also, the struggle against the suicidal convenience culture continues.

Fuck fracking! South Wales will resist!

Love and Rage
Some Anarchists