Oil Train Opponents Blockade Tracks at Port Westward (USA)

photo courtesy Portland Rising Tide

Sep­tem­ber 18th, 201

photo courtesy Portland Rising Tide

Sep­tem­ber 18th, 2014

Clatskanie, OR—Climate jus­tice activists, local Clatskanie farm­ers, and oil train oppo­nents from all over Colum­bia Coun­ty are blockad­ing the tracks that lead to Port West­ward on the Colum­bia Riv­er. The block­ade con­sists of a 20-foot-high tri­pod of steel poles, its apex occu­pied by 27-year-old Port­land Ris­ing Tide activist Sun­ny Glover.

Any train move­ment would risk her life, as would any attempt to remove her from the struc­ture. A ban­ner sus­pend­ed from the tri­pod reads: “Oil trains fuel cli­mate chaos.” She has vowed to stay as long as she is able. Mass­a­chu­setts-based Glob­al Part­ners ships oil by rail from the frack­ing fields of the Bakken Shale to the block­ad­ed facil­i­ty.

From there, it is loaded onto ocean­go­ing ves­sels bound for West Coast refiner­ies. The facil­i­ty was con­struct­ed with pub­lic clean ener­gy loans and tax cred­its to man­u­fac­ture ethanol in 2008. The own­ers declared bank­rupt­cy almost imme­di­ate­ly, and in a twist of sav­age irony, it became a crude oil ter­mi­nal.

“Fos­sil fuels are cat­a­stroph­i­cal­ly destruc­tive,” Glover said. “Extrac­tion rav­ages land, water, and the health of local com­mu­ni­ties – trans­port results in dead­ly explo­sions, tox­ic spills and dust – and as they are burned, the Earth is forced ever deep­er into immense cli­mate insta­bil­i­ty. Fos­sil fuel pro­duc­tion is vio­lence, and on an incred­i­bly vast scale.”

Dozens are join­ing Glover on the tracks.

Photo courtesy Portland Rising Tide

The increase in US oil pro­duc­tion in recent years, and the con­se­quent rise in oil train traf­fic, has out­raged a diver­si­ty of groups and com­mu­ni­ties. Ris­ing Tide activists, hop­ing to deter the most severe effects of cli­mate change, are demand­ing a rapid dis­man­tling of fos­sil fuel infra­struc­ture through­out the region and the world.

Res­i­dents of areas effect­ed by oil train traf­fic are hor­ri­fied by the propen­si­ty of Bakken crude trains to derail in fiery explosions—a May, 2014 emer­gency order by the US Depart­ment of Trans­porta­tion describes the trains as an “immi­nent haz­ard.”

Res­i­dents of the patch­work of farms, dikes, and water­ways north of Clatskanie are fight­ing to pro­tect agri­cul­tur­al land and salmon habi­tat from indus­tri­al­iza­tion.

“When the crude oil trains began rolling through Colum­bia Coun­ty, we had no pri­or warning—not from DEQ, not from the Port of St. Helens, not from the coun­ty, and not from the State of Ore­gon,” said Nan­cy Whit­ney.

“With the close prox­im­i­ty of our towns, and par­tic­u­lar­ly our schools, and con­sid­er­ing the track record of crude oil derail­ments, my fear is that the poten­tial dev­as­ta­tion from leak­age or explo­sion could be astronomical—and it will hap­pen unless these trains are stopped.”

This is the fifth oil train block­ade in the Pacif­ic North­west since June.

“This is only the begin­ning,” said Noah Hochman. “We will con­tin­ue to block­ade until it is finan­cial­ly, logis­ti­cal­ly, and polit­i­cal­ly unten­able for oil trains to threat­en cli­mate and com­mu­ni­ties.”

Update:

Police Risk Protester’s Life to End 9‑Hour Oil Train Blockade

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Yes­ter­day after­noon, cli­mate jus­tice group Port­land Ris­ing Tide and allies from Colum­bia Coun­ty erect­ed a 20-foot-tall tri­pod of steel poles to block­ade the Port West­ward oil ter­mi­nal. Dozens of police, work­ing at night under flood­lights, were mobi­lized to remove 27-year-old Sun­ny Glover from the tripod’s apex. After an ini­tial attempt to remove her with a buck­et truck—which she foiled by lock­ing her neck to one of the tripod’s poles—the police resort­ed to far more dras­tic and per­ilous mea­sures.

In a sur­re­al scene, the amassed law enforce­ment offi­cers began using a cir­cu­lar saw to cut through the tripod’s legs in approx­i­mate­ly foot-long incre­ments, grad­u­al­ly low­er­ing the struc­ture to the ground amidst a show­er of sparks from the saw. Glover’s neck remained locked to a pole the entire time. Each pre­car­i­ous cut threat­ened to top­ple the struc­ture. About 40 pro­test­ers shout­ed words of encour­age­ment from a near­by road until she was arrest­ed and dri­ven from the scene around 11:30pm.

“The courage my friend Sun­ny exhib­it­ed tonight was tremen­dous,” Scott Schroder said. “Unfor­tu­nate­ly, she lives in a world of ter­ri­fy­ing sce­nar­ios. She can either have her life jeop­ar­dized by the police or by cat­a­stroph­ic cli­mate change and explod­ing oil trains. She chose to resist because she under­stands acqui­es­cence is the greater per­il.”

The ter­mi­nal, oper­at­ed by Mass­a­chu­setts-based Glob­al Part­ners, has been con­tro­ver­sial since its incep­tion. At the protest today were res­i­dents of the Colum­bia Coun­ty towns of St. Helens, Scap­poose, and Clatskanie, whose homes and busi­ness­es are with­in the blast zone should an oil train derail and explode. Ris­ing Tide activists are demand­ing a rapid phase-out of fos­sil fuels in order to avert a cli­mate cat­a­stro­phe that would be felt for mil­len­nia.

Pro­test­ers were crit­i­cal of the tremen­dous mobi­liza­tion of pub­lic resources to dis­man­tle the blockade—there were approx­i­mate­ly 40 com­bined fire, police, and med­ical per­son­nel on site—saying it amount­ed to essen­tial­ly anoth­er sub­sidy for the fos­sil fuel indus­try.

“Tax­pay­ers have already giv­en Glob­al Part­ners mil­lions of dol­lars in clean ener­gy con­struc­tion sub­si­dies, when we thought their facil­i­ty was going to be an ethanol plant,” said David Osborn. “Now the pub­lic is hand­ing over thou­sands more to keep the train tracks free of peo­ple out­raged by their bait-and-switch.”

This sum­mer, Ris­ing Tide col­lec­tives have block­ad­ed oil train facil­i­ties in Wash­ing­ton and Ore­gon five times. The groups say they are work­ing toward mass mobi­liza­tions that will sig­nif­i­cant­ly impede the abil­i­ty of oil to be trans­port­ed by rail in the Pacif­ic North­west.

“We will be back,” Schroder said. “Over and over again. And we’re bring­ing more peo­ple every time.”

PHOTOS, VIDEO, AUDIO: https://drive.google.com/folderview?id=0B8Tw30qC0uQib2xlLXk0cERaeVk&usp=sharing_eil

09/18 ACTION PRESS RELEASE: https://drive.google.com/?usp=folder&authuser=0#folders/0B8Tw30qC0uQib2xlLXk0cERaeVk

BACKGROUND ON OREGON OIL TRAINS AND THE CLIMATE CRISIS:http://portlandrisingtide.org/oil-trains-oregon-bakken-shale-uinta-basin-climate-crisis/

Two Arrested in Gas Pipeline Protest, USA

unnamed

Sep­tem­ber 17th, 2014

unnamed

Sep­tem­ber 17th, 2014

Two men were arrest­ed on Sep­tem­ber 16 after chain­ing them­selves to pipe being laid for Ver­mont Gas’ fracked gas pipeline.  The action took place a day before the Ver­mont Pub­lic Ser­vice Board begins a process which could result in the revok­ing of the per­mits required for Ver­mont Gas to con­tin­ue con­struc­tion.

Con­struc­tion was halt­ed around 3:45, and did not resume for the rest of the day. The two men were charged and released.

“Ver­mont Gas lied,” said Will Ben­ning­ton, a spokesper­son for Ris­ing Tide Ver­mont. “They’ve lied about the cli­mate and envi­ron­men­tal impacts of the project, they’ve lied to landown­ers and bro­ken promis­es, and now they’ve lied about the cost of this project.  The Pub­lic Ser­vice Board, and ulti­mate­ly Gov­er­nor Shum­lin, have no rea­son to believe Ver­mont Gas is act­ing in the pub­lic good.”

In July, Ver­mont Gas announced a 40 per­cent increase in the cost of con­struc­tion for Phase 1 of the fracked gas pipeline.  The com­pa­ny hopes to pass this cost on to ratepay­ers, increas­ing the price of gas at a time when many Ver­mon­ters are already strug­gling to heat their homes.

Demon­stra­tors oppose the pipeline because it will lock Ver­mont com­mu­ni­ties into decades more of dirty fos­sil fuel use, at a time when a rapid tran­si­tion away from fos­sil fuels and extreme ener­gy use is need­ed.  They are also con­cerned with impacts to local landown­ers and the lack of trans­paren­cy sur­round­ing the per­mit­ting process.

The Pub­lic Ser­vice Board is host­ing a hear­ing tomor­row in Mont­pe­lier to decide whether or not to re-open the company’s Cer­tifi­cate of Pub­lic Good.

“This isn’t the begin­ning, and this isn’t the end,” Ben­ning­ton said. “We are going to con­tin­ue to do every­thing we can to stop this pipeline.  It is moral­ly rep­re­hen­si­ble to be build­ing new fos­sil fuel infra­struc­ture in this day and age, espe­cial­ly in a state that has already banned frack­ing.”
Local copo­rate video cov­er­age here and here

Update from Hambach: Action Day Ticker!

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The Ham­bach is a for­est in Ger­many pro­posed for lig­nite (brown coal) strip min­ing. There is cur­rent­ly a for­est occu­pa­tion under­way, as well as an action camp, and action days at the end of every month.

Sep­tem­ber 16th, 2014

from Ham­bach For­est

 

español

deutsch

Today, the new part of the Au­to­bahn, which they built to help fur­ther the ex­pan­si­on of the mine, will be opened with an of­fi­ci­al ce­le­bra­ti­on. Ap­pa­r­ent­ly, the po­li­ce chose the same day to dis­turb our re­sis­tan­ce in the fo­rest and on the mea­dow. They ap­peared as ear­ly as 8:00h this morn­ing and are gi­ving us trou­b­le since then. Fol­low us here today, we will re­gu­lar­ly pu­blish new up­dates, ti­ck­er-​style.

8:00 First ap­pearan­ce of cops in the fo­rest and on the mea­dow, buil­ding up to around 100 cops at 8:30
8:20 Per­son at­ta­cked by po­li­ce for now re­a­son, ex­cept as­king what they want
8:30 Re­mo­val of bar­ri­ca­des on the fo­rest paths, takes them about 2 hours
10:20 Po­li­ce are try­ing to evict beech town (tree oc­cupa­ti­on) de­s­troy­ing ever­y­thing on the ground – clim­bing units are pre­sent
10:30 Po­li­ce are amas­sing at plane han­gar close to mea­dow – we‘re no lon­ger re­acha­ble by car
11.​20 Po­li­ce van by the mea­dow oc­cupa­ti­on
11.​40 Po­li­ce and RWE on way to de­s­troy kit­chen near mea­dow
11.​50 Food packs for the po­li­ce (it locks that they want to work lon­ger)
12.​00 The ope­ning of the high­way A4 starts – 400 peop­le on of­fi­ci­al ope­ning (ho­no­red guests) The de­mons­tra­ti­on against it with 50 peop­le works, but not di­rect­ly by the ope­ning par­ty, 50 po­li­ce are there – traf­fic mi­nis­ter tal­king shit
12.​10 the bar­ri­ca­des to düren are evic­ted and the po­li­ce are blo­cka­ding the way to beech town
12.​28 the po­li­ce start to come on the mea­dow oc­cupa­ti­on, hid­ing duty num­bers. Po­li­ce­block from Aa­chen: (Li­cen­se Plate NRW-​4-​4623, pic­tu­re of po­li­ce stan­ding on the mea­dow )
12.​50 the of­fi­ci­al ope­ning at the high­way is over.
13.​10 po­li­ce „re­tre­ats“ a bit, lea­ving oa­k­town, a tre­e­hou­se oc­cupa­ti­on, for now.
13:20 Po­li­ce no lon­ger vi­si­ble on the mea­dow
13:25 News from the fo­rest – one har­vester (ma­chi­ne for cut­ting trees) is da­ma­ged (flu­ids lea­king out)
13:30 Peop­le are doing a sit­ting blo­cka­de in the Fo­rest, on the way to beech town oc­cupa­ti­on
13:40 A small group of peop­le got con­trol­led by Po­li­ce, one per­son ar­rested for lack of I.D.
13:40 Har­vester is dri­ve­able again, but is lea­ving the Fo­rest, pro­tec­ted by RWE and Po­li­ce
15:00 No more po­li­ce or oth­er en­emies in the Fo­rest – one se­cu­ri­ty car was pas­sing through the re­mo­ved bar­ri­ca­des, but left again quite quick­ly. The ti­cker will go on break for now, if there’s any more ac­tion we‘ll be up­dating again.

some pic­tu­res of today: 16.​09.​14

Eviction Underway at La ZAD du Testet

Last week, occu­piers buried them­selves in the ground to defend La ZAD du Testet. Pho­to from @seamymsg

Sep­tem­ber 16th, 2014

Occu­pied since Octo­ber 2013, the ZAD du Testet is one of the many “zones a defendre” which were cre­at­ed after the medi­a­ti­za­tion of the ZAD at Notre-Dame-des Lan­des in Octo­ber 2012. The col­lec­tive in Testet, a val­ley in the Tarn region of south­east France, is a mix of “zadistes, farm­ers, clowns and peo­ple in revolt”, resist­ing a dam project which would destroy a wood­ed, wet­land area with over 100 threat­ened species, to sup­ply 24 agro-indus­tri­al farms with water.

The squat­ted for­est was vio­lent­ly evict­ed in Feb­ru­ary 2014, the 10–20 oppo­nents chose to use non­vi­o­lent tac­tics, and then reoc­cu­pied. They were evict­ed again in May of 2014.

August 15, a larg­er re-occu­pa­tion was orga­nized, under heavy police and mil­i­tary atten­tion, with arbi­trary arrests and road block­ades pre­vent­ing build­ing mate­r­i­al from arriv­ing on site. August 25th, biol­o­gists came to give their exper­tise and fill out paper­work to approve the project, and evic­tions began. Peo­ple resist­ed with burn­ing bar­ri­cades and molo­tovs, and there has been almost dai­ly con­fronta­tion ever since. The region went under mar­tial law on August 31st, with the police chief declar­ing- “the law must remain strong”, and work­ers began cut­ting the for­est on Sep­tem­ber 1. A press release from the col­lec­tive against the dam- “Tant qu’il y aura des Bouilles” said- “…these new events show the dis­dain that the Tarn Region­al Coun­cil shows for dia­logue and for the oppo­nents of this project. We con­demn this show of force. This kind of behav­ior breeds rage, even in the most paci­fist of oppo­nents, and so one can under­stand that actions will become more and more rad­i­cal.”

Peo­ple have resist­ed in a vari­ety of ways- a hunger strike by locals in their 50s and 60s, numer­ous block­ades using trac­tors, fire, buried peo­ple, tripods, bulls, human chains etc, a 24/7 occu­pa­tion of the square in front of the city coun­cil, climb­ing on machines and in trees, and fight­ing on the ground. There are about 800 peo­ple against the project cur­rent­ly in and around the for­est, and they fre­quent­ly encounter tear gas, con­cus­sion grenades and rub­ber bul­lets. Today (Sep­tem­ber 15th) action cen­tered around the Gaza(d) tree­house, which still hasn’t been evict­ed, although 5 peo­ple were hos­pi­tal­ized (no thanks to the police, who blocked the ambu­lances). There are still quite a lot of peo­ple in the trees, and the actions are slow­ing or block­ing work every day.

There have also been numer­ous sol­i­dar­i­ty actions, from a high school walk­out in Gail­lac to occu­py­ing the offices of the dam con­struc­tion com­pa­ny in Nantes. The bour­geois media, per­haps afraid of anoth­er snow­ball effect like in Octo­ber 2012, has kept almost total silence about Testet, despite count­less reports of police bru­tal­i­ty. In addi­tion to the theft or destruc­tion by the police of med­ical sup­plies, food, vehi­cles, tents, sleep­ing bags, any­thing they can get their hands on, the farm­ers who stand to ben­e­fit from the dam and local sus­pect­ed facists have formed a gang with iron bars, rocks, dogs, molo­tovs and hunt­ing rifles- with as of yes­ter­day about 80 peo­ple, and they are patrolling the roads.

A last word from those on the ground: “Thank you to all who are mobi­liz­ing in sol­i­dar­i­ty with the strug­gle in Testet, every­where it’s the same thing, every­where the same sys­tem of rot­ten politi­cians who decide amoungst them­selves what they’re going to do and call it “democ­ra­cy”, and who have only one goal: devel­op their busi­ness­es to strength­en the choke­hold of this sys­tem of machines and tech­nol­o­gy on the nat­ur­al envi­ron­ment and peo­ple. Those who think they are pro­tect­ed are already dead. We refuse to be iso­lat­ed and so we strug­gle, we humbly resist.”

a film in french

web­site of the occu­pa­tion

 

New £15.8m GlaxoSmithKline Laboratory “Completely Destroyed”

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6893498from In the Bel­ly of the Beast

Sep­tem­ber 14th, 2014

A £15 mil­lion wood­en chem­istry lab­o­ra­to­ry will con­tin­ue to burn for a fur­ther 24 hours, fire­fight­ers con­firmed today.

The Car­bon Neu­tral Lab­o­ra­to­ry for Sus­tain­able Chem­istry at Not­ting­ham Uni­ver­si­ty was destroyed after it sev­er­al fires broke out inside the state-of-the-art build­ing on Fri­day night.

The lab­o­ra­to­ry, which was part-fund­ed by a £12 mil­lion grant from phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal com­pa­ny Glax­o­SmithK­line was due to open for the first time next year.

Not­ting­hamshire Fire and Res­cue Ser­vice were called to the scene at 8.30pm after res­i­dents spot­ted the blaze…

…The build­ing was designed to reach car­bon neu­tral sta­tus in 25 years to make up the ener­gy expend­ed dur­ing its con­struc­tion.

‘The Glax­o­SmithK­line Car­bon Neu­tral Lab­o­ra­to­ry for Sus­tain­able Chem­istry is a land­mark build­ing which is the embod­i­ment of the University’s com­mit­ment to sus­tain­abil­i­ty in all its forms, par­tic­u­lar­ly in the area of green chem­istry and we will be work­ing close­ly with our part­ners at GSK, and the con­trac­tors Mor­gan Sin­dall, to devel­op a pos­i­tive plan of action for rebuild­ing.’

It is not yet known what caused the blaze and a spokesper­son for NFRS said work to estab­lish the cause of the blaze can only begin ful­ly once the fire is entire­ly out.

 

source: the dai­ly heil

No-one was injured and no oth­er build­ings were affect­ed

images from many sources, nation­al & local media scum:

Gua­di­an UK Video

Protesters Locks Down on Kinder Morgan Facility (Canada)

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Ris­ing Tide Coast Sal­ish Ter­rior­ies reports that pro­test­ers have used bicy­cle locks to lock them­selves to a Kinder Mor­gan facil­i­ty in Burn­a­by, in unced­ed Coast Sal­ish Ter­ri­to­ries in so-called British Colum­bia.

Kinder Mor­gan has begun sur­vey­ing and cut­ting trees in con­ser­va­tion and park­land on Burn­a­by Moun­tain, unced­ed Coast Sal­ish Ter­ri­to­ries. The giant US oil pipeline com­pa­ny plans to clear park­land in prepa­ra­tion for bor­ing a tun­nel through the North­ridge of Burn­a­by Moun­tain con­trary to city bylaws.

The pur­pose of the tun­nel will be to trans­port crude tar sands oil from the stor­age tanks at For­est Hill to Westridge Ter­mi­nal. Many geol­o­gists and seis­mol­o­gists are con­cerned that the North­ridge will be sub­ject to extreme shak­ing in the event of even a mod­er­ate earth­quake putting at risk the pipeline, the huge oil stor­age tanks at For­est Hill and the Afra­max tankers at Westridge ter­mi­nal. A mod­er­ate earth­quake to the huge tanks, pipeline and ter­mi­nal would make the 2007 pipeline spill at Westridge minor in com­par­i­son.

The pro­test­ers, at the time of writ­ing, were still locked to the gate.

Update: Six peo­ple were arrest­ed after thir­teen hours locked-down and sub­se­quent­ly released.

For updates on the sit­u­a­tion check @risingtide604

 

Cor­rec­tion: We mis­tak­en­ly report­ed that this was a Ris­ing Tide Coast Sal­ish Ter­ri­to­ries action.

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First Nations Protesters Shut Down Northern B.C. Drilling Site

10/9/14

After a sum­mer of protests aimed at min­ing com­pa­nies, mem­bers of the Tahltan Nation in north­ern B.C. say they have shut down an explorato­ry drilling oper­a­tion by tak­ing over the site.

“HAPPENING RIGHT NOW!!!!” states a Mon­day night post­ing on the Face­book page for Tahltan elders. “The Klabona Keep­er mem­bers are occu­py­ing a black hawk drill pad above Ealue Lake!!!”

The elders’ group, which is based in Iskut just south of Dease Lake, has staged sev­er­al protests in the area in recent years block­ing resource com­pa­nies from work­ing in a place known as the Sacred Head­wa­ters. The region is high­ly val­ued by the Tahltan because it holds the head­wa­ters of three impor­tant salmon rivers – the Stikine, Skeena and Nass.

Rho­da Quock, a spokes­woman for the Klabono Keep­ers, said Tues­day a group of pro­test­ers hiked to the remote drill site and took it over.

She said Black Hawk Drilling Ltd., a Smithers, B.C., com­pa­ny that works for Firesteel Resources Inc. of Van­cou­ver and OZ Min­er­als of Aus­tralia, flew its drilling crew out after the occu­pa­tion began.

Protests against the mine explo­ration work began in 2006-07, said Ms. Quock, when Firesteel Resources began exam­in­ing a cop­per-gold deposit in the Sacred Head­wa­ters region.

The Klabona Keep­ers set up road­blocks at that time and the com­pa­ny with­drew, before return­ing ear­li­er this sum­mer, she said.

“In July … we saw drilling equip­ment near the road,” she said. “We told them they had until noon to remove the drill or we’d take it over. And they did [remove the equip­ment].”

But Ms. Quock said heli­copters were lat­er seen fly­ing over­head.

Com­pa­ny offi­cials could not be reached for an inter­view, but on its web­site, Firesteel Resources states that in July it began work­ing with OZ Min­er­als on a drilling pro­gram in the area.

In a brief e‑mail, Michael Hep­worth, Pres­i­dent and chief exec­u­tive offi­cer of Firesteel Resources, said the drilling crew has approval to do explorato­ry drilling.

“We are work­ing in the area under [Tahltan Cen­tral Coun­cil] approval and are ful­ly per­mit­ted by the B.C. gov­ern­ment to work in the area,” said Mr. Hep­worth, who is trav­el­ling out­side Cana­da.

Although the Tahltan Cen­tral Coun­cil is the main gov­ern­ing body of the Tahltan Nation, the Klabona Keep­ers oper­ate inde­pen­dent­ly. The two groups are some­times at odds, but gen­er­al­ly sup­port one anoth­er.

Chad Day, recent­ly elect­ed Pres­i­dent of the Tahltan Cen­tral Coun­cil, could not be reached for com­ment.

David Haslam, a spokesman for the Min­istry of Mines, said in an e‑mail that Firesteel Resources “has all the nec­es­sary tenures and per­mits” it needs and the gov­ern­ment is work­ing with the Tahltan Cen­tral Coun­cil “to devel­op a shared vision for land and resource use.”

Mr. Haslam urged “every­one to remain respect­ful of one anoth­er on the ground while we seek a res­o­lu­tion to the sit­u­a­tion with the Klabona Keep­ers.”

Ms. Quock said mem­bers of the Klabona Keep­ers hiked through the moun­tains on the week­end look­ing for remote drill sites.

“They found the drill, the spill tray on it was over­flow­ing with oil and water,” she said. “We shut the drill down. They are stay­ing there and they are not allow­ing the drill to leave.”

Asked what mes­sage she want­ed to deliv­er, she said: “We want them out. Why are they con­tin­u­ing to put more mon­ey in to a project that will always be protest­ed? We will nev­er approve it.”

The Klabona Keep­ers block­ad­ed Impe­r­i­al Met­als’ Red Chris mine in August because of con­cerns about a tail­ings pond, but stopped the protest when talks began between the com­pa­ny and the Tahltan Cen­tral Coun­cil. Last year, the group blocked For­tune Min­er­als Ltd. from doing work on a coal deposit. On Mon­day, the B.C. gov­ern­ment announced a tem­po­rary hold on coal explo­ration per­mits in the area.

“I don’t want peo­ple to get the impres­sion we’re against all devel­op­ment. We’re not. But these places are sacred and we want to keep it [untouched],” said Ms. Quock.

Klabona Keep­er web­site

Video

Wetlands destruction and resistance

#TESTET #ZAD

#TESTET #ZAD

About an hour’s dri­ve north of Toulouse (sw France)  there is an area of wet­lands called the Testet, in the for­est of #Sivens . This is the last area of wet­lands (“Zone Humide” in French) in the depart­ment of the Tarn. It is home to rare and endan­gered species.

This area (13hectares) will be drowned by a dam. The pur­pose of the dam is prin­ci­pal­ly to irri­gate large-scale maize pro­duc­tion.

It will also be used to reg­u­late the lev­els of water in the riv­er Tescou, so that pol­lu­tion will be dilut­ed and the local author­i­ties can claim to respect Euro­pean envi­ron­ment leg­is­la­tion. The water can also be used if dif­fi­cul­ties arrive at the Golfech nuclear reac­tor.

Maize pro­duc­tion is not appro­pri­ate to this region, it is a high­ly pol­lut­ing form of agri­cul­ture. Euro­pean and French rules say that it should no longer receive sub­si­dies. (Dam financed by local, region­al and Euro­pean bud­gets)

The pro­ject­ed dam is not nec­es­sary, small­er, high­er dams exist upstream, and are not used.

The stud­ies of water avail­abil­i­ty and use, of the cost, impact and of the need for the dam are flawed and par­tial. (Local politi­cians who favour the project have inter­ests in the com­pa­ny which pro­duced the stud­ies — which just hap­pens to be the com­pa­ny which will pock­et the mon­ey for build­ing the dam.…)

Claims about the need to dilute indus­tri­al pol­lu­tion down­stream are non­sense: the milk coop­er­a­tive which used to pump efflu­ent into the Tescou has had fil­ters since 2006.

Envi­ron­men­tal­ists have been defend­ing the wet­lands for almost a year. Log­ging start­ed on the 1st of sep­tem­ber, the army and mil­i­tary police corps have com­mit­ed acts of vio­lence against non-vio­lent pro­tes­tors.

A hunger strike is in progress.

Hun­dreds of dam oppo­nents are active on the site ( block­ing roads, slow­ing the chain­saws, nego­ci­at­ing and demon­strat­ing). Oth­er activists are demon­strat­ing in front of local gov­erne­ment offices (and being sav­age­ly beat­en for their efforts)

Calls for the pub­lic to show oppo­si­tion to this unnec­es­sary and destruc­tive project are online.

Wel­come groups exist for par­tic­i­pants in direct action. The strug­gle is grad­u­al­ly grow­ing, all and any help is need­ed. Sad­ly, at the time of writ­ing the GIGN (spe­cial forces) are clear­ing resis­tance from the Zone.

Futher info:

http://collectif-testet.org/

http://tantquilyauradesbouilles.wordpress.com/

https://www.facebook.com/SoutienTestet

Verdict Handed Down for Six Sea Shepherd Volunteers on Faroe Islands

9.9.14

9.9.14

Vol­un­teers from Sea Shep­herd Con­ser­va­tion Society’s pilot whale defense cam­paign Oper­a­tion Grind­Stop 2014 appeared before a court in the Faroe Islands on Mon­day fol­low­ing their recent arrest in con­junc­tion with try­ing to pre­vent the mur­der of pilot whales. These vol­un­teer crewmem­bers – many of whom are Euro­pean cit­i­zens – have been found guilty of defend­ing the whales, while Den­mark has act­ed in bla­tant defi­ance of Euro­pean Union reg­u­la­tions by defend­ing the slaugh­ter of whales. Sea Shep­herd has issued a state­ment per­tain­ing to the ver­dicts and sup­port­er and actor Mar­tin Sheen is speak­ing out.

The six mem­bers of Sea Shepherd’s onshore team were among a total of 14 vol­un­teers arrest­ed on August 30 on the Faroese island of San­doy for attempt­ing to pro­tect 33 pilot whales from the bru­tal mass slaugh­ter known as “grindadrap” or the “grind.” The onshore crewmem­bers entered the water, bang­ing poles, in an attempt to lead the pilot whales back out to sea and out of dan­ger, but as the pod was dri­ven in quick­ly from close to shore, there was lit­tle time to pre­vent the slaugh­ter. The Roy­al Dan­ish Navy arrest­ed Sea Shepherd’s off­shore crew and seized three of their small boats – the Loki, the Mike Gale­si, and the B.S. Sheen (spon­sored by actor Char­lie Sheen). Despite being an anti-whal­ing EU mem­ber nation, Den­mark act­ed in col­lab­o­ra­tion with the whalers, enabling 33 whales to be killed.

The onshore crewmem­bers face small fines as well as pos­si­ble depor­ta­tion from the Faroes by Den­mark. The court date for the eight mem­bers of the off­shore crew has been sched­uled for Sep­tem­ber 25, and Sea Shepherd’s three small boats will be held “as evi­dence” until that time.

Read more at SeaShepherd.org

Direct actions against open cast mines in germany 2014 – mobilisation for a big blockade/action simultaneous to the COPs in Paris in 2015

On the 1st of August this year sev­er­al actions took place against brown coal min­ing in the rhineland in ger­many.

On the 1st of August this year sev­er­al actions took place against brown coal min­ing in the rhineland in ger­many.

One of the biggest open cast mines of europe are locat­ed in the mid­west of ger­many. Near to Cologne RWE, the biggest ener­gy provider of ger­many runs three open cast mines with an area of 160 km². With an emis­sion of ca. 100 mil­lion CO2 per year RWE is the biggest emit­tent of CO2 in whole Europe. Enough Prof­it for the high­ly indept­ed enter­prise, the loss of nat­ur­al resources for mil­lions of peo­ple of the glob­al south

The local con­se­quences of the brown-coal-minig are desas­trous. High­ly fer­tile soil gets digged away. Tens of thou­sands of peo­ple get reset­tled. Impor­tant ecosys­tems like the ham­bach for­est get cut down. To pre­vent the mines from flood­ing the ground­wa­ter gets pumped down. The neg­a­tive effects for the agri­cul­ture and wet­lands can be locat­ed even in the nether­lands which are ca. 60 km away. The grit and fine dust which are pro­duced by the biggest dig­gers of the world, which work 24/7 includes even radioac­tive par­ti­cles.

There was Resis­tance against the gigan­tic project for the whole time of RWEs eco­nom­ic activ­i­ty since the begin­ning of 1900. Some­times big­ger some­times small­er the resis­tance more­over col­laps­es because of the pow­er RWE devel­ops with lob­by­ism, cor­rup­tion and the under­cut­ting of admin­is­tra­tions, courts and local social com­mu­ni­ties.

For about 4 years a con­stant­ly grow­ing grass­rootsmove­ment tries to pow­er up the resis­tance against the pow­er gen­er­a­tion of coal on a local and nation­wide scale. With con­stant crys­talli­sa­tion points like the ham­bach for­est occu­pa­tion and a house project in the area, with cli­mate camps and help­ing to empow­er the local resis­tance move­ment with sup­port­ing cit­i­zen ini­tia­tives.

 

Embed­ded in the cli­mate camp this year a pow­er­ful action day took place.

The coal train which trans­ports the coal from the ham­bach open cast mine to the pow­er plant was blocked two times. On the the first block­ade chained them­selves to the rails of the coal train which trans­ports the coal of the mine called ham­bach to the pow­er plant and the sec­ond time two peo­ple roped down from a bridge above the rails.

Near­ly at the same time about 80 peo­ple moved the oth­er big mine Garzweil­er to block the infra­struc­ture. 2 Dig­gers were blocked 3 times with lock-on-actions and squattings.From 8 o’clock in the morn­ing to 10 in the evening the dri­vers of the dig­gers and the oth­er per­son­al in the mine had no calm minute.

It seems that more and more peo­ple want to take respon­si­bil­i­ty for them­selves to pro­tect ecosys­tems and nat­ur­al resources and begin to stop the worst effects of cli­mate change with direct actions against fos­sil infra­struc­ture.

 

Pho­tos of the action day:

Lock-on-action and climb­ing action (with oth­er pho­tos of the ham­bach for­est occu­pa­tion)

https://secure.flickr.com/photos/hambacherforst/with/14797606761/

Block­ade of dig­gers:

https://secure.flickr.com/photos/100963658@N02/sets/72157645681194248/

 

Mobil­i­sa­tion for a big infra­struc­ture block­ade simul­ta­ne­ous­ly to the COP21

Accord­ing to the next COP-meet­ing in Paris 2015 we want to invite peo­ple from all over europe to think about what to do. As we don’t want to have such a big depres­sion after the COPs 2009 in Copen­hagen again there is a ten­den­cy to organ­ise a big block­ade of infra­struc­ture of fos­sil fuel ener­gy pro­duc­tion simul­ta­ne­ous­ly some­where cen­tral­ly locat­ed in Europe. If you have ideas and want to dis­trib­ute them you can come to Cologne/Germany from the 3rd to the 5th of octo­bre. There will be acco­mo­da­tion and board.

Eng­lish call­out for the action ple­nary:

http://ekib.blogsport.eu/2014/08/23/invitation-action-plenary-meeting‑3–5‑oct-2014-in-cologne/

 

 

Earth First!

An activist from ausgeco2hlt

 

Unfor­tu­nate­ly the web­sites are not in eng­lish or the eng­lish blogs are not well oper­at­ed

www.ausgeco2hlt.de

www.hambacherforst.blogsport.de / http://hambachforest.blogsport.de/

http://ekib.blogsport.eu/

www.klimacamp-im-rheinland.de