Athens: Action in Solidarity with the Fight in Testet

On Novem­ber 11th, 2014, anar­chists sym­bol­i­cal­ly occu­pied the offices of the AFP (Agence France-Presse) in the afflu­ent neigh­bour­hood of Kolon­a­ki, cen­tral Athens, to protest the police mur­der of Rémi Raisse in the ZAD of Testet, France.

On Novem­ber 11th, 2014, anar­chists sym­bol­i­cal­ly occu­pied the offices of the AFP (Agence France-Presse) in the afflu­ent neigh­bour­hood of Kolon­a­ki, cen­tral Athens, to protest the police mur­der of Rémi Raisse in the ZAD of Testet, France. Com­rades hand­ed out leaflets in Greek and French, read­ing: “From France to Greece, let us trans­form the foci of resis­tance into a sig­nal of rebel­lion towards the oppressed of the whole earth. Sol­i­dar­i­ty is our weapon.”

Brussels: Construction Equipment Burned in Solidarity with the Fight in Testet

Novem­ber 9th, 2014

anony­mous com­mu­niqué / Con­tra info

Novem­ber 9th, 2014

anony­mous com­mu­niqué / Con­tra info

In the night between the 4th and 5th of Novem­ber, an exca­va­tor and a drilling machine were burned on the con­struc­tion site in Van­den­bran­den street in the cen­tre of Brus­sels. A slo­gan was spray-paint­ed on the spot: “For Rémi”.

They gen­tri­fy, we destroy!

[Rémi was killed by police in the ZAD du Testet strug­gle in France. More info.]

USA: Everglades Earth First! Lockdown Halts Destruction of Florida’s Briger Forest

BrigerLD5

Novem­ber 7th, 2014

BrigerLD5

Novem­ber 7th, 2014

PALM BEACH GARDENS, FL— Com­mu­ni­ty activists with Ever­glades Earth First! have halt­ed what they call Kolter Development’s “ille­gal” con­struc­tion in Palm Beach Gar­dens’ Briger For­est. A dis­abled vehi­cle is sit­ting in the road at the con­struc­tion entrance to the site and two peo­ple have locked their bod­ies to it. This week work crews began clear­ing trees for the con­struc­tion, which has been mired in con­tro­ver­sy for years. If com­plet­ed, the devel­op­ment would destroy the 681-acre Briger For­est, one of the largest unpro­tect­ed forests of its size in the south­ern region of the state.

Update: Three activists have now been arrest­ed, while the van con­tin­ues to block­ade the entrance to the con­struc­tion zone. Donate to their bail fund.

“We’re here stop­ping a crime; the ille­gal destruc­tion of the Briger For­est. Kolter Group Co. is vio­lat­ing the Endan­gered Species Act and oper­at­ing with­out all the prop­er per­mits ful­ly approved,” Said Ryan Hart­man. “The time for com­pro­mise is over. If we don’t take direct action and put our bod­ies on the line to pro­tect what we have left, devel­op­ers will pave over and pol­lute every last inch of this place.”

Groups like Ever­glades Earth First! and the Palm Beach Coun­ty Envi­ron­men­tal Coali­tion (PBCEC) have been fight­ing to pro­tect the Briger For­est since 2010. Last win­ter a jus­tice depart­ment lawyer admit­ted to PBCEC’s lawyer Bill Eubanks that there were no prac­ti­cal alter­na­tives to site lay­out designs that could both ben­e­fit con­tin­ued snake use of the site and also sat­is­fy the project’s pur­pose and need, effec­tive­ly sen­tenc­ing to death any East­ern Indi­go Snake on the prop­er­ty. The East­ern Indi­go Snake is one of 13 state and fed­er­al­ly list­ed ani­mal and plant species whom the Briger is suit­able to sup­port. A mem­ber of PBCEC is also appeal­ing per­mits for con­struc­tion need­ed from the South Flori­da Water Man­age­ment Dis­trict. Beyond the legal chal­lenges the groups have gath­ered hun­dreds of peti­tion sig­na­tures, held demon­stra­tions and even staged a six-week tree-sit in the for­est to protest the devel­op­ment.

 

“Kolter and Palm Beach Coun­ty have had a cor­rupt deal from the begin­ning. It is a crime against nature for devel­op­ers to keep bull­doz­ing over wild South Flori­da in order to per­pet­u­ate an ani­mal tor­tur­ing biotech expan­sion agen­da.” Said Ash­ley Lyons.

Since the ear­ly 2000’s, Jeb Bush has tried to lure the Biotech indus­try to Flori­da with heavy state and local sub­si­dies includ­ing this project and the con­struc­tion of a cam­pus for biotech com­pa­ny Scripps Flori­da. In the past few years Scripps has received about half a bil­lion dol­lars in state sub­si­dies for new facil­i­ties and has an agree­ment to lease the coun­ty owned por­tion of the prop­er­ty for $1 dol­lar a year ensur­ing their cor­po­rate
wel­fare for years to come.

With the con­struc­tion of a mas­sive pri­mate breed­ing facil­i­ty in Hendry Coun­ty, the “pro­gres­sive” biotech indus­try is solid­i­fy­ing it’s future of inhu­mane ani­mal test­ing and Scripps will be no excep­tion. Scripps in Lajol­la, CA has a his­to­ry of test­ing on pri­mates and Scripps Phase II will more than like­ly vivi­sect pri­mates if con­struct­ed.

Ever­glades Earth First! promis­es to con­tin­ue fight­ing the devel­op­ment every step of the way.

“We’re going to fight this project until it’s stopped because this for­est is worth fight­ing for.” Said Rachel Kijew­s­ki.

For more infor­ma­tion vis­it www.ScrapScripps.info

brigerLD8

UPDATE: Three Arrested at Everglades EF! Briger Forest Blockade, Jail Support Needed!

Accord­ing to most recent reports from Ever­glades Earth First!,”The three arrest­ed dur­ing the Briger For­est block­ade are in cus­tody at Palm Beach Coun­ty Jail. Each are fac­ing mul­ti­ple mis­de­meanor charges. Bail has yet to be set. The block­ade report­ed­ly stopped work­ers from enter­ing the site for over four hours.”

At least 22 cop cars, an emer­gency field force vehi­cle, and a mobile com­mand unit were on site, and both peo­ple par­tic­i­pat­ing in the lock­down were arrest­ed, along with the sup­port per­son.

Sup­port direct action, and help us con­tin­ue to defend the Briger For­est before it’s too late! Donate to these brave indi­vid­u­als’ legal funds here: https://www.everribbon.com/ribbon/view/16764


 

Groups like Ever­glades Earth First! and the Palm Beach Coun­ty Envi­ron­men­tal Coali­tion (PBCEC) have been fight­ing to pro­tect the Briger For­est since 2010. Last win­ter a jus­tice depart­ment lawyer admit­ted to PBCEC’s lawyer Bill Eubanks that there were no prac­ti­cal alter­na­tives to site lay­out designs that could both ben­e­fit con­tin­ued snake use of the site and also sat­is­fy the project’s pur­pose and need, effec­tive­ly sen­tenc­ing to death any East­ern Indi­go Snake on the prop­er­ty. The East­ern Indi­go Snake is one of 13 state and fed­er­al­ly list­ed ani­mal and plant species whom the Briger is suit­able to sup­port. A mem­ber of PBCEC is also appeal­ing per­mits for con­struc­tion need­ed from the South Flori­da Water Man­age­ment Dis­trict. Beyond the legal chal­lenges the groups have gath­ered hun­dreds of peti­tion sig­na­tures, held demon­stra­tions and even staged a six-week tree-sit in the for­est to protest the devel­op­ment.

“Kolter and Palm Beach Coun­ty have had a cor­rupt deal from the begin­ning. It is a crime against nature for devel­op­ers to keep bull­doz­ing over wild South Flori­da in order to per­pet­u­ate an ani­mal tor­tur­ing biotech expan­sion agen­da,” said Ash­ley Lyons, an orga­niz­er with Ever­glades Earth First!

Since the ear­ly 2000’s, Jeb Bush has tried to lure the Biotech indus­try to Flori­da with heavy state and local sub­si­dies includ­ing this project and the con­struc­tion of a cam­pus for biotech com­pa­ny Scripps Flori­da. In the past few years Scripps has received about half a bil­lion dol­lars in state sub­si­dies for new facil­i­ties and has an agree­ment to lease the coun­ty owned por­tion of the prop­er­ty for $1 dol­lar a year ensur­ing their cor­po­rate wel­fare for years to come.

With the con­struc­tion of a mas­sive pri­mate breed­ing facil­i­ty in Hendry Coun­ty, the “pro­gres­sive” biotech indus­try is solid­i­fy­ing it’s future of inhu­mane ani­mal test­ing and Scripps will be no excep­tion. Scripps in Lajol­la, Cal­i­for­nia, has a his­to­ry of test­ing on pri­mates and Scripps Phase II will more than like­ly vivi­sect pri­mates if con­struct­ed.

Ever­glades Earth First! promis­es to con­tin­ue fight­ing the devel­op­ment every step of the way.

“We’re going to fight this project until it’s stopped because this for­est is worth fight­ing for,” said Rachel Kijew­s­ki.

For more info on the block­ade and its rea­sons, click here.

A Sabotage Report on Biotech Labs from Chile

Activists prepare themselves for more waves of direct action against biotech labs. (photo credit: Icky Pelaez)

Novem­ber 7th, 2014

Activists prepare themselves for more waves of direct action against biotech labs. (photo credit: Icky Pelaez)

Novem­ber 7th, 2014

[from Earth First! Newswire: Edi­tor’s Note: The fol­low­ing piece is a loose and expand­ed trans­la­tion of an arti­cle post­ed by 325 on Octo­ber 28th.]

The evo­lu­tion of sci­ence, as a dom­i­na­tive means of objec­ti­fi­ca­tion, has solid­i­fied into a self-prov­ing enti­ty that is inter­ven­ing with the very cycli­cal net­works of nature.  We, as sen­tient peo­ple, are in revolt against its con­fin­ing move­ment and role as a facil­i­ta­tor of mil­i­ta­riza­tion, psy­chi­a­try, specism, anthro­pocen­trism, and het­ero­nor­ma­tiv­i­ty with­in this cur­rent patri­ar­chal era.

With such moti­va­tion, we are cur­rent­ly focus­ing our actions on biotech labs that are lead­ing stud­ies in genet­ic inter­ven­tion, and fer­til­iz­ing a branch of sci­ence that manip­u­lates the very fibers of life.  Not only are humans regen­er­at­ing stem cells, med­dling with plant prop­er­ties, and exper­i­ment­ing on ani­mals, but are doing so with the sole inten­tion of “improv­ing” our exis­tence.  Such a men­tal­i­ty is a soci­etal con­struct based upon the notion that human­i­ty cra­dles the author­i­ty to trans­gress fel­low beings.

In raw defi­ance, we chose spe­cif­ic loca­tions in which there is a con­cen­tra­tion of genet­ic research and, on the morn­ing of Octo­ber 28th, paint­ed the façades with green and yel­low to por­tray our sol­i­dar­i­ty with nature and our ded­i­ca­tion to active rebel­lion from here on out.

 

Lema, one of these labs, con­cen­trates on bio­chem­i­cal research in the fields of endocrinol­o­gy and nefrol­o­gy, and is heav­i­ly involved in remold­ing human genet­ics;  hor­mon­al exper­i­ments, adjust­ment of the body’s chem­i­cal make-up, and nuclear med­i­cine are all unrav­el­ing with­in its walls.

We also arrived at the cor­ner of San Pablo to smear the win­dows of Cam­pus Lab, a build­ing whose activ­i­ty also revolves around invad­ing the body with tech­nol­o­gy called PCR.  This instru­ment was designed to play with our mol­e­c­u­lar design in hopes of pre­vent­ing infec­tion and post­pon­ing the beau­ti­ful and inevitable descent of mor­tal­i­ty.

We are fab­ri­cat­ing arti­fi­cial puri­ty, a per­me­at­ing image of the human body that rede­fines our eco­log­i­cal rela­tions and the con­cept of ‘health’ and ‘nat­ur­al movement’—although dis­as­so­ci­at­ing our­selves from our sur­round­ings is rather impos­si­ble.  Fur­ther­more, the equip­ment of Cam­pus Lab serves to iden­ti­fy indi­vid­u­als with the inten­tion of lubri­cat­ing the judi­cial machine and increas­ing incar­cer­a­tion rates.

In Nunoa, Gen­eX­press oper­ates as anoth­er com­pa­ny ded­i­cat­ed to sup­ply­ing the biotech indus­try with more data, fund­ing, and pro­gres­sive mate­ri­als.  It aims to infuse the med­ical field with genet­i­cal­ly mod­i­fy­ing inno­va­tions, while avoid­ing pub­lic scruti­ny.  We pro­ceed­ed to smear their walls as well.

We real­ize that our action was a small ges­ture; how­ev­er, we are being called to exer­cise our resources from an array of perch­es, and are pre­pared for more elab­o­rate forms of destruc­tion.  And so, today we have decid­ed to orga­nize and resist the very struc­tures of sci­ence, a per­cep­tu­al approach that is fos­ter­ing ten­sion not only on the eco­nom­ic lev­el, but also at the roots of how we per­ceive our­selves and, con­se­quent­ly, how we project and inter­act with the envi­ron­ment.

We don’t sim­ply seek to gen­er­ate ‘alter­na­tive’ prac­tices, but rather to destroy the shad­ow­ing pil­lars through direct action.  Nor do we believe that some­one who choos­es to ingest tapsin to alle­vi­ate the flu is a mere con­for­mant; we move to ques­tion imped­ing par­a­digms, as well as the very ide­o­log­i­cal strands and every­day actions that main­tain them. To our bod­ies being explo­sions of thought and sen­sa­tions of cre­ative retal­i­a­tion!

Zapatistas: Government Kidnapped Defenders Against Highway Destruction

Screenshot 2014-11-05 at 8.20.38 AM

Novem­ber 6th, 2014

Screenshot 2014-11-05 at 8.20.38 AM

Novem­ber 6th, 2014

Joint Dec­la­ra­tion from the Nation­al Indige­nous Con­gress and the EZLN on the Cow­ard­ly Attack by Gov­ern­ment forces against the Ñatho Indige­nous Com­mu­ni­ty of San Fran­cis­co Xochicuaut­la on Novem­ber 3, 2014:

To the Ñatho Indige­nous Com­mu­ni­ty of San Fran­cis­co Xochicuaut­la
To the Nation­al and Inter­na­tion­al Sixth
To the Peo­ples of the World
Today once again, our broth­ers and sis­ters of the Ñatho Indige­nous Com­mu­ni­ty of San Fran­cis­co Xochicuaut­la have defend­ed their ter­ri­to­ry against the destruc­tion and vora­cious ambi­tion of those above who want to impose their high­way project at any cost and in vio­la­tion of Mex­i­can and inter­na­tion­al law.

 

Not con­tent with hav­ing laid waste to the forests, the bad gov­ern­ments of Enrique Peña Nieto and Eru­viel Ávi­la Vil­le­gas have kid­napped our sis­ters Feli­pa Gutiér­rez Petra (67 years old), Rosa Saave­dra Men­doza (54 years old), and Fran­cis­ca Reyes Flo­res (28 years old), and our broth­ers Arman­do Gar­cía Salazar (50 years old), Venan­cio Hernán­dez Ramírez (57 years old), Domin­go Hernán­dez Ramírez (57 years old), Mauri­cio Reyes Flo­res (28 years old) and Jerón­i­mo Flo­res Arceli­no (73 years old).
We warn those above, in case they have for­got­ten, that as peo­ples and com­mu­ni­ties who have walked a long jour­ney of resis­tance in defense of what we are, what we were, and what we will be, we will not tire of plant­i­ng rebel­lion where they cut the flow­ers, oaks, and firs; we will not tire of build­ing resis­tance where they impose the machin­ery of destruc­tion.
The roots of Xochicuaut­la and the oth­er orig­i­nary peo­ples and indige­nous com­mu­ni­ties reach deep into our hills and coun­try­sides, far deep­er than their high­ways, and they are far stronger than attempts to uproot us from this Mex­i­co that today cries for its young peo­ple, mur­dered and dis­ap­peared by the Bad Gov­ern­ment.
This gov­ern­ment, which is not sati­at­ed by fill­ing the pris­ons with rebel­lious men, women, chil­dren, and elder­ly, has again tak­en by force the free­dom of indige­nous broth­ers and sis­ters. They have done this to our Yaqui broth­ers and our Nahua broth­ers from the vol­cano region, and to so many oth­ers whose pain we also share. To all of these broth­ers and sis­ters we want to say that we walk in the same strug­gle, as peo­ples and com­mu­ni­ties who call our­selves the Nation­al Indige­nous Con­gress.
And to the deaf ears of the bad gov­ern­ments, we say that we know they are scared. They demon­strat­ed this with the 500 riot cops and police heli­copters they brought today to Xochicuaut­la, where next Decem­ber we as indige­nous peo­ples and com­mu­ni­ties will con­verge to share our rebel­lion, our strug­gle, and our seeds of resis­tance.
Their pain is our pain, their rage is our rage!
Novem­ber 3, 2014.
Nev­er Again a Mex­i­co With­out Us
Nation­al Indige­nous Con­gress
Indige­nous Rev­o­lu­tion­ary Clan­des­tine Committee—General Com­mand of the Zap­atista Army for Nation­al Lib­er­a­tion.
 

Hambach Forest: New Treesit, Tree Felling Equipment Halted

Noname

Novem­ber 5th, 2014

Noname

Novem­ber 5th, 2014

The Ham­bach or Ham­bach­er for­est is locat­ed near Cologne, Ger­many and is under threat from an adja­cent lig­nite (brown coal) mine expan­sion. The occu­pa­tion to keep the trees stand­ing has been ongo­ing for three years.

100 meters dis­tant from a new tree occu­pa­tion in the cut­ting area of RWE a har­vester has been squat­ted to block the ongo­ing fellings. Both occu­pa­tions are part of the cam­paign „hands off the trees!“ (ger­man: „Kein Baum fällt“), that con­tin­ues unabat­ed­ly in the light of last week’s repres­sion.
We defend the for­est against your vio­lence!

Since Thurs­day one impris­oned com­rade is await­ing tri­al in Aachen. Please con­tact us to express your sol­i­dar­i­ty via post mail.

UPDATES

14:00 Uhr – RWE per­son­el starts cut­tings near a tree, that has been occu­pied four days ago.
15:00 Uhr – Activists express the immi­nent dan­ger of peo­ple in the trees.
15:30 Uhr – A har­vester is blocked by four per­sons.
16:00 Uhr – Pri­vate secu­ri­ty guards retreat from the tree occu­pa­tion to gath­er at the squat­ted vehi­cle. They are armed with iron ton­fas as usu­al.

forest destruction stopped for several hours +++ 14 arrestees +++ 1 activist remains in Jail +++ Grubenblick-Occupation evicted +++ cruelty against activists at police stations +++ Meadow-occupation raided by police +++

 

After the events on Thurs­day (10/30/2014), 13 of 14 arrest­ed activist are free again. Most of them remained at the police sta­tions for about 24 hours. One per­son is still in jail, prob­a­bly because of extreme­ly severe accu­sa­tions. We will try to put up the pris­on­er sup­port for him on the occu­pa­tion.

Some arrest­ed activists were forced to give their fin­ger­prints by vio­lence. 6 had to give their DNA to the court. While raid­ing the mead­ow occu­pa­tion, the police con­fis­cat­ed sev­er­al items they defined as ille­gal. Some small elec­tron­i­cal devices were stolen by police „in pri­vate“. 5 climb­ing har­ness­es and sev­er­al mobile phones were con­fis­cat­ed from the arrest­ed peo­ple.

While the only tree­house which was locat­ed in the this year clearcut area has been evict­ed, the Ham­bach For­est remains occu­pied at two oth­er spots.

Fourth Consecutive Day of Work Stoppage at Australian Coal Mine

Update: 7am Police Search and Res­cue arrive at the scene

Update: 7am Police Search and Res­cue arrive at the scene

MAULES CREEK 5 Novem­ber 2014: Bat­man returned today to shut down Whitehaven’s Maules Creek project. A per­son dressed as Bat­man has scaled Whitehaven’s largest exca­va­tor, the Hitachi Super Dig­ger. This action comes on the heels of Monday’s report from the UN Inter­gov­ern­men­tal Pan­el on Cli­mate Change (IPCC) find­ing that dam­age to the envi­ron­ment caused by fos­sil fuel use con­tin­ues to increase. Today is the fourth con­sec­u­tive day of the Release the Bats Act Up stop­ping work on White­haven sites.

The Hitachi ex8000 Super Dig­ger is a key piece of ‘ultra class’ min­ing machin­ery with an 800 tonne scoop capac­i­ty. This equip­ment is essen­tial if White­haven is to get coal out on their for­ev­er-shift­ing date for first coal.

Lewis Lau­rence, 23, who is on the exca­va­tor said “We want to draw atten­tion to the human cost of cli­mate change, the real cost of this mine to the glob­al com­mu­ni­ty. What hap­pens here affects fish­er­men thou­sands of miles away, who may no longer have homes to return their boats to. Instead of ask­ing our­selves, ‘Where were we? What did we do?’ We need to ask our­selves, ‘What are we doing now?’ ”

The Unit­ed Nations IPCC report sug­gests that we are doing very lit­tle, warn­ing of cat­a­stroph­ic cli­mate change just around the cor­ner if we do not act now. Accord­ing to the IPCC a pre­dict­ed increase in the glob­al tem­per­a­ture of 20C is a thresh­old beyond which impacts would be irre­versibly dam­ag­ing. Whitehaven’s Maules Creek project is increas­ing­ly detri­men­tal to our cli­mate and envi­ron­ment, glob­al­ly as well as on a local scale.

“White­haven have been giv­en per­mis­sion to destroy a large por­tion of the Leard State For­est for open cut coal and will leave behind a ‘void pit’ which will col­lect water and poi­son the local aquifers,” said Mr. Lau­rence

“White­haven will face no charges and will accept no respon­si­bil­i­ty for their destruc­tion unless peo­ple stand up,” said Emi­ly Rose, Leard For­est Alliance Spokesper­son

The Leard For­est Alliance is call­ing for a stop work order on the Maules Creek project while a full and prop­er audit of the plan­ning and approvals process at state and fed­er­al lev­els is con­duct­ed.

“This mine should nev­er have been approved. The poten­tial dam­age to local aquifers and impacts on cli­mate dis­play a sin­gle-mind­ed inter­est in prof­it from our state and fed­er­al gov­ern­ment. We must heed the inter­na­tion­al con­sen­sus, and leave coal in the ground,” said Ms. Rose

This last week has already seen a num­ber of White­haven sites shut down through peace­ful civ­il dis­obe­di­ence includ­ing: the co-owned Idemit­su and White­haven Tar­ra­won­ga Haul road, access to the Maules Creek mine site, the Maules Creek Hitachi exca­va­tor, as well as Whitehaven’s Narrabri North under­ground mine which also halt­ed a sup­ply train car­ry­ing 6000t of coal.

There have been over 270 peo­ple arrest­ed as part of the cam­paign to defend the Leard State For­est.

Fur­ther Infor­ma­tion:

 

Emi­ly Rose
Leard For­est Alliance Spokesper­son0401 214 729
Meret Mac­Don­ald
Leard For­est Alliance Spokesper­son0402 017 027

 

Twit­ter updates @FLACCoal and #Leard­Block­ade

B1oMoA3CUAAZz_g

image4

B1oF7PXCIAAIZhY.jpg large

from Front Line Action on Coal

Australia: Two Lock to Coal Conveyer Belt in Continuing Protests

NARRABRI-05

Novem­ber 4th, 2014

NARRABRI-05

Novem­ber 4th, 2014

UPDATE 8:30AM (Aus­tralian East­ern Time): Police and Police Res­cue have arrived on the scene.

10:50: Jamie and Seren­i­ty have been arrest­ed in the line of pro­tect­ing our cli­mate and water, and have been tak­en to Narrabri Police sta­tion.

MAULES CREEK, 4 Novem­ber 2014: In the sec­ond day of Leard For­est Alliance’s (LFA) “Release the Bats” Ini­tia­tive against White­haven Coal two peo­ple have locked them­selves to a con­vey­er belt in the White­haven-owned Narrabri North under­ground mine.

Seren­i­ty Hill, 37, and Jamie Yarnald, 32 immo­bilised the belt as part of a week­end of protest against the con­tro­ver­sial White­haven-owned Maules Creek coal mine project. If this mine is allowed to con­tin­ue its oper­a­tions, White­haven will deplete the ground­wa­ter aquifer by up to two metres.

“Work­ing with farms and food has shown me first hand just how impor­tant clean usable water is for our sur­vival. So the con­t­a­m­i­na­tion or lack of our pre­cious water is very con­cern­ing for me,”  said Ms. Hill, a food sys­tems ana­lyst whose action with Mr. Yarnald halt­ed mine oper­a­tions for the course of the morn­ing.

LFA spokesper­son Phil Evans said “The IPCC report released yes­ter­day warns that if we con­tin­ue with the dis­re­gard for our envi­ron­ment we have shown, by 2050 we will see cat­a­stroph­ic cli­mate change.” Evans called upon the NSW gov­ern­ment to “say neigh to coal this Mel­bourne Cup day.”

The LFA is call­ing on the NSW gov­ern­ment to stop work imme­di­ate­ly on the scan­dal-plagued Maules Creek project and to con­duct a full inquiry into the plan­ning and approval meth­ods that allowed this project to pro­ceed.

“Coal needs to stay in the ground for us all to have a live­able, breath­able cli­mate. 80% of coal needs to stay in the ground for us to avoid cat­a­stroph­ic cli­mate change,” said Mr. Yarnald. His arrest with Ms. Hill adds to the over 270 arrests this year in a con­tin­u­ous effort from the com­mu­ni­ty led, non-vio­lent Leard Block­ade cam­paign.

Fur­ther Infor­ma­tion:

Emi­ly Rose
Leard For­est Alliance Spokesper­son
0401 214 729
Phil Evans
Leard For­est Alliance Spokesper­son
0490 064 139

 

High Res­o­lu­tion Pho­tos: mediafire.com/folder/6kj6m626b81xy/4_November_2014

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from Front Line Action on Coal

USA: 15 Arrested as Anti-Gas Blockade in Finger Lakes Enters Third Week

Novem­ber 3rd, 2014

Novem­ber 3rd, 2014

Enter­ing the third week, start­ing at 7:00 AM this morn­ing pro­test­ers blocked the gates of Texas-based Crest­wood Midstream’s gas stor­age facil­i­ty on the shore of Seneca Lake. 15 peo­ple were arrest­ed at about 9:00 AM after Crest­wood called the police. Last week, ten pro­test­ers were arrest­ed in acts of civ­il dis­obe­di­ence block­ing the gates, just as the 15 peo­ple did today. Pro­test­ers have held block­ades at the Crest­wood gate since Thurs­day, Octo­ber 23; on Wednes­day, Octo­ber 29, they began block­ing two of the gates to Crest­wood. Notably, the ongo­ing protests also includ­ed a ral­ly with more than 200 peo­ple at the Crest­wood gate on Fri­day, Octo­ber 24th.

Fri­day, Octo­ber 24th marked the day that major new con­struc­tion on the gas stor­age facil­i­ty was autho­rized to begin. The ongo­ing acts of civ­il dis­obe­di­ence come after the com­mu­ni­ty pur­sued every pos­si­ble avenue to stop the project and after being thwart­ed by an unac­cept­able process and denial of sci­ence.

The uni­fied action is called ‘WE ARE SENECA LAKE’. More infor­ma­tion and pic­tures of the actions over the pre­vi­ous weeks are avail­able at www.WeAreSenecaLake.com.

The protests are tak­ing place at the gates of the Crest­wood com­pres­sor sta­tion site on the shore of Seneca Lake, the largest of New York’s Fin­ger Lakes. The methane gas stor­age expan­sion project is advanc­ing in the face of broad pub­lic oppo­si­tion and unre­solved ques­tions about geo­log­i­cal insta­bil­i­ties, fault lines, and pos­si­ble salin­iza­tion of the lake, which serves as a source of drink­ing water for 100,000 peo­ple. A Cap­i­tal New York inves­ti­ga­tion recent­ly revealed that Gov­er­nor Cuomo’s DEC excised ref­er­ences to the risks of under­ground gas stor­age from a 2011 fed­er­al report on methane con­t­a­m­i­na­tion of drink­ing water and has allowed key data to remain hid­den.

*Note that the WE ARE SENECA LAKE protest is to stop the expan­sion of methane gas stor­age, a sep­a­rate project from Crestwood’s pro­posed Liq­ue­fied Petro­le­um Gas (LPG) stor­age project, which is on hold pend­ing a Depart­ment of Envi­ron­men­tal Con­ser­va­tion Issues Con­fer­ence.

The 15 peo­ple arrest­ed today are: Lyn Ger­ry, John Den­nis, Mari­ah Plum­lee, Bob Hen­rie, Lau­ra Sala­man­dra, Elan Shapiro, Lind­say Clark, Dar­lene Bor­d­well, Jodi Dean, Ruth Young (for­mer Schuyler Coun­ty Leg­is­la­tor), Paul Pas­sa­vant, Stephanie Red­mond, Joanne Cipol­la Den­nis, Martha Fer­g­er, and Ken­neth Fog­a­r­ty.

Ruth Young of Horse­heads, a for­mer mem­ber of the Schuyler Coun­ty Leg­is­la­ture, was among those arrest­ed today, said, “We’re stand­ing on what used to be a part of my leg­isla­tive dis­trict in Schuyler Coun­ty. I am embar­rassed and sad­dened to see what is going on here, I’m sad to see that some of the peo­ple in this dis­trict are actu­al­ly sup­port­ing this endeav­or to store gas in a very unsta­ble salt for­ma­tion.”

John Den­nis, PhD, of Lans­ing, who was arrest­ed today, said, “I’m wor­ried about water qual­i­ty, there are severe salin­i­ty prob­lems already, and I’m almost cer­tain those will get worse because we think the exist­ing prob­lems are caused by gas stor­age start­ed in 1964.”

Mari­ah Plum­lee of Covert, a moth­er of three who was also arrest­ed today, said, “I think it’s real­ly impor­tant to do this, and if every­body did this then we wouldn’t have this prob­lem. We moved here almost ten years ago because we knew it would be a won­der­ful place to raise a fam­i­ly.”

Lyn Ger­ry of Watkins Glen, a radio host in Schuyler Coun­ty, arrest­ed today, said, “Our elect­ed offi­cials have let us down, so we have to take mat­ters into our own hands. I love Seneca Lake, I love this area. I’m not from here orig­i­nal­ly, I’ve trav­eled 3,000 miles to come to this beau­ti­ful place by this beau­ti­ful lake to live, and I’ve come from a place that greed has already destroyed. So I know what a land being destroyed looks like. So now, my back is to the wall and I must defend what I love.”

Note, press are encour­aged to come to the court arraign­ment – for the ten pro­test­ers arrest­ed on Octo­ber 29th – on Nov. 5th start­ing at 6:00 PM at the Read­ing Town Hall, 3914 Coun­ty Rt. 28, Watkins Glen.

As they have for a long time, the pro­test­ers are con­tin­u­ing to call on Pres­i­dent Oba­ma, U.S. Sen­a­tors Schumer and Gilli­brand, Gov­er­nor Cuo­mo, and Con­gress­man Reed to inter­vene on behalf of the com­mu­ni­ty and halt the dan­ger­ous project.

Recent­ly, the Tomp­kins Coun­ty Leg­is­la­ture approved a res­o­lu­tion that oppos­es gas stor­age on the lakeshore, as well as the Yates Coun­ty Leg­is­la­ture.  In so doing, they joined the Board of Super­vi­sors of both Ontario and Seneca coun­ties, which pre­vi­ous­ly passed motions oppos­ing gas stor­age, along with the Gene­va City Coun­cil and the Watkins Glen Vil­lage Board.

In spite of over­whelm­ing oppo­si­tion, grave geo­log­i­cal and pub­lic health con­cerns, Crest­wood has fed­er­al approval to move for­ward with plans to store high­ly pres­sur­ized, explo­sive gas in aban­doned salt cav­erns on the west side of Seneca Lake. While the New York State Depart­ment of Envi­ron­men­tal Con­ser­va­tion (DEC) has tem­porar­i­ly halt­ed plans to stock­pile propane and butane (LPG) in near­by caverns—out of ongo­ing con­cerns for safe­ty, health, and the environment—Crestwood is active­ly con­struct­ing infra­struc­ture for the stor­age of two bil­lion cubic feet of methane (nat­ur­al gas), with the bless­ing of the Fed­er­al Ener­gy Reg­u­la­to­ry Com­mis­sion (FERC).

Back­ground:

Local busi­ness­es and winer­ies are part of broad oppo­si­tion to Texas-based Crestwood-Midstream’s pro­pos­al to use old aban­doned salt cav­erns along Seneca Lake to store mil­lions of bar­rels of liq­uid petro­le­um gas (LPG) and bil­lions of cubic feet of nat­ur­al gas. The pro­pos­al has gen­er­at­ed oppo­si­tion from over 200 busi­ness­es, over 60 winer­ies, 13 munic­i­pal­i­ties (includ­ing neigh­bor­ing Watkins Glen) and thou­sands and thou­sands of res­i­dents in the Fin­ger Lakes region who are con­cerned about the threat it pos­es to pub­lic health and safe­ty, one of the state’s largest sup­plies of drink­ing water, the local econ­o­my, and the area’s grow­ing wine and tourism indus­try.

Res­i­dents, winer­ies and oth­er local busi­ness­es have issued emer­gency calls to Pres­i­dent Oba­ma, U.S. Sen­a­tors Schumer and Gilli­brand, Con­gress­man Reed and Gov­er­nor Cuo­mo to imme­di­ate­ly step in and stop this reck­less project that threat­ens the heart of the Fin­ger Lakes, many people’s health and the drink­ing water source for 100,000 peo­ple.

Addi­tion­al­ly, an inves­tiga­tive jour­nal­ist with DC Bureau recent­ly uncov­ered oth­er sci­en­tif­ic objec­tions to the project, to which FERC did not give due con­sid­er­a­tion in issu­ing approval. Inde­pen­dent sci­en­tists have warned about the unsta­ble geol­o­gy of the salt cav­erns, includ­ing the fact that a 400,000 ton chunk of rock – rough­ly the size of an air­craft car­ri­er – had giv­en way in the very cav­ern that the com­pa­ny pro­posed to use for gas stor­age.

Fur­ther­more, in August, Dr. Rob Macken­zie, a retired CEO of Cayu­ga Med­ical Cen­ter, a hos­pi­tal about 20 miles east, raised objec­tions. An expe­ri­enced risk ana­lyst, Macken­zie pre­pared a for­mal quan­ti­ta­tive risk analy­sis of the Crest­wood methane gas pro­pos­al. Macken­zie ana­lyzed acci­dent events — major fires, explo­sions, col­laps­es, cat­a­stroph­ic loss of prod­uct, evac­u­a­tions — at salt cav­ern stor­age facil­i­ties in the Unit­ed States dat­ing back to 1972. He con­clud­ed that the risk of an “extreme­ly seri­ous” salt cav­ern event with­in Schuyler Coun­ty over the next 25 years is more than 35%.

Accord­ing to Ener­gy Infor­ma­tion Admin­is­tra­tion data uncov­ered by Macken­zie – report­ed by Peter Man­tius of DC Bureau – gas stor­age facil­i­ties in salt cav­erns in the Unit­ed States have had high rates of prob­lems. Between 1972 and 2012,there have been 18 “seri­ous or extreme­ly seri­ous inci­dents” at U.S. salt cav­ern stor­age facil­i­ties, Macken­zie wrote, cit­ing EIA data. That trans­lates to an inci­dent rate in the US of about 60%.

Macken­zie also found that nine of the 18 salt cav­ern inci­dents involved large fires and/or explo­sions; six involved loss of life or seri­ous injury; eight involved evac­u­a­tions of between 30 and 2,000 res­i­dents; and 13 involved extreme­ly seri­ous prop­er­ty loss­es.

Seneca Lake is eco­nom­i­cal­ly crit­i­cal to the region and New York State. A recent report on the state’s grape and wine indus­try showed that it con­tributes $4.8 bil­lion to the New York State econ­o­my every year, sup­port­ing the equiv­a­lent of 25,000 full-time jobs, pay­ing over $408 mil­lion in tax­es, and gen­er­at­ing over 5.2 mil­lion wine-relat­ed tourism vis­its. The Fin­ger Lakes region, in par­tic­u­lar, has gained increas­ing promi­nence as home to world-class wines, with many winer­ies earn­ing awards in nation­al and inter­na­tion­al com­pe­ti­tions. Gov­er­nor Cuo­mo high­light­ed the suc­cess of the indus­try at his 2013 Governor’s Cup Wine Com­pe­ti­tion in Watkins Glen, exact­ly where the gas stor­age facil­i­ty is being pro­posed for loca­tion and this past sum­mer, a Seneca Lake win­ery won the 2014 Governor’s Cup.

The region has become so wide­ly known for its wine­mak­ing that vint­ners from the inter­na­tion­al com­mu­ni­ty have begun to invest in the area as well.

The Fin­ger Lakes is also con­sid­ered a world-class tourism des­ti­na­tion, with Sher­mans Trav­el nam­ing it the #1 Lake Vaca­tion in the world last year.

In addi­tion to the over-indus­tri­al­iza­tion such a stor­age facil­i­ty would cause, salt cav­ern stor­age is his­tor­i­cal­ly unsafe. It presents the poten­tial for explo­sive acci­dents and water con­t­a­m­i­na­tion along the Fin­ger Lakes. Salt cav­ern stor­age rep­re­sents only a small per­cent­age of gas stor­age facil­i­ties, but is respon­si­ble for the major­i­ty of instances of cat­a­stroph­ic fail­ure. In 2001, gas migrat­ed 7 miles from a salt cav­ern stor­age facil­i­ty in Kansas, came up in aban­doned brine wells and explod­ed, killing two peo­ple, destroy­ing build­ings and evac­u­at­ing res­i­dents. There are many such aban­doned brine wells just three miles from the pro­posed facil­i­ty in down­town Watkins Glen, NY.

Australia : Mass Protest Against Whitehaven Coal

Front Line Action On Coal

Novem­ber 2nd, 2014

Front Line Action On Coal

Novem­ber 2nd, 2014

The bats have been released! Mass protests against White­haven Coal.

Maules Creek Mine Main access: A young woman has locked her­self to the inside of a car, block­ing the main access point for Maules creek mine.

UPDATE: Police res­cue have arrived on the scene

Maules Creek Mine, inside: The rail­way line being built inside the mine site has been blocked by a woman sus­pend­ed in a tree with the rope going across the con­struc­tion site.

UPDATE: Work­ers have been able to go under the ropes, trucks are still being held up.

Maules Creek Mine Hitachi Dig­ger: 1 woman has scaled the super dig­ger while anoth­er woman has locked her­self to the huge machine.

 

Leard For­est Alliance Spokesper­son

Mur­ray Drech­sler

0418754869

 

MAULES CREEK 3/11/2014
Over eighty peo­ple have set up sep­a­rate block­ades on and around the con­struc­tion site of the con­tro­ver­sial Maules Creek mine, near Narrabri, in a ramp up of peace­ful action to pre­vent the mine from depres­suris­ing the water table.

White­haven Coal’s Maules Creek mine has been seri­ous­ly delayed by a grow­ing move­ment of farm­ers, envi­ron­men­tal­ists and oth­er sup­port­ers con­cerned that farm bores will fail due to the 600 mega­l­itres of water the mine would use each year.

The Leard For­est Alliance is call­ing on NSW Plan­ning Min­is­ter Rob Stokes to stop con­struc­tion work on the mine while a par­lia­men­tary inquiry into plan­ning deci­sions is under­way.

Spokesper­son for the Leard For­est Alliance Mur­ray Drech­sler said “The amount of water White­haven plans to use over the life of the Maules Creek mine would fill a third of Lake Bur­ley Grif­fin and this is water that should be used for food pro­duc­tion.”

“The com­mu­ni­ty has the courage to stand up for water ahead of coal and we expect Plan­ning Min­is­ter Rob Stokes to do the same.” Con­tin­ued Mr. Drech­sler.

The mine’s state and fed­er­al approvals were grant­ed before White­haven had fin­ished their water man­age­ment plan and that fact was includ­ed in a sub­mis­sion to the par­lia­men­tary inquiry.

Twit­ter:

@FLACcoal #Leard­block­ade

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Front Line Action On Coal

Front Line Action On Coal

Front Line Action On Coal