Save Leyton Marsh Camp & Boules stop work

29th March 2012

29th March 2012

The tent occupation which sprang up on Saturday in solidarity with the Campaign to Save Leyton Marsh has entered its 5th day.  The camp continues to grow with supporters arriving every day.  Local residents and campaigners visit all day long providing support, bringing supplies and chatting with the campers.  Basic facilities have been setup including a field kitchen and washing up area.  There is also a communications tent.  

No construction work has taken place on the Leyton Marsh site since Friday when local campaigners from the Save Leyton Marsh group stood in front of lorries preventing them from entering the site.  On Monday, the occupation campers joined with local residents standing in front and lying down under lorries.  

Today a Police Community Support Officer arrived at the camp in the early morning to inform the group that the Olympic Delivery Authority will be coming to the camp on Friday morning.  The PCSO said that the purpose of the visit was to negotiate with the Save Leyton Marsh Campaign and Campers about the situation (an update will be published when more info is known).  

The occupiers welcome any and all support. There is plenty of space for more people to get involved. It is located Behind Lee Valley Ice Cente on Lea Bridge Rd, Leyton Map: http://tinyurl.com/6ntfscy

For more info check out: 

http://saveleytonmarsh.wordpress.com/

http://www.gamesmonitor.org.uk/

 

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23rd March 2012

This Morning’s game of boules was a real joy. We managed to talk to a lot of people, including the police, the site manager, who said nothing, passer-bys . We prevented at least 4 trucks (8am) to enter the site. It was all very peaceful and joyful. Everyone wanted to play boules, even the police and the gate keepers on site were tempted.

Update: no lorries entered the site all day. This was really great team work in action…So they give the LVPRA planning permission for ‘assembly and leisure’ on Leyton Marsh and we take them at their word. Walkers of the world unite, you have nothing to lose but some boules!

Photos at http://saveleytonmarsh.wordpress.com/2012/03/23/boules/

Take the Flour Back! Mass action against GM wheat – meetup point announced

Take the flour back!
Sunday 27th May 2012
 
Public day of action against the Rothamsted genetically modified wheat trial.
 
Meet-up point: Rothamsted Park, Harpenden, Herts (30 mins from London by train) 12 noon on 27th May. At 1.30pm we’ll take a 20 minute stroll on public footpaths to the trial site.

Frequent trains run from London to Harpenden – the journey takes 30 mins from St Pancras. A ten minute walk from Harpenden Station gets you to the park. Directions available at the station.

Check back to our website for legal briefings nearer the time.

 
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Bakers, farmers, growers, allotment holders, scientists, beekeepers, and people who eat food are turning out to voice their opposition to GM crops coming back to the UK.
 
Meet Sunday 27th May, at 12 noon, in Rothamsted, Harpenden, Herts. Or take your own action in your own way, at your own time. Together we can stop this trial.
 
Cow genes on toast anyone? No thanks!
 
 
What's up with the trial?
 
It could be dangerous.
This trial is testing a brand-new synthetically-constructed 'fake' gene that is 'most similar to one found in a cow'. This is a concerning use of synthetic genes and of animal genes in plants.
 
It's not wanted.
Even the USA has abandoned attempts to commercialise GM wheat because there is no market for it. Biotech company BASF recently backed out of Europe because no-one wanted to buy GM food.
 
Once it flowers, it's here to stay.
The trial is happening in the open air, meaning that when it starts to flower it can cross contaminate other wheat crops and wild grasses. This is a real threat. In Canada there is no organic oilseed rape left because all the farms have been cross-contaminated with GM rapeseed.
 
For more info nearer the time, go to www.taketheflourback.org or contact us at info [AT] taketheflourback.org

Shell targeted in anti-greenwash stunt at international conference

27.03.2012

27.03.2012

Yesterday's prestigious Planet Under Pressure 2012 conference in the International Conference Centre (ICC) at the ExCeL Centre, London was interrupted by two London Rising Tide protesters.

During a panel discussion entitled “The planet in 2050”, at the exact moment that Shell's senior energy advisor Martin Haigh was about to speak the two protesters walked calmly across the stage, banner in hand, and were greeted with a loud, spontaneous round of applause from hundreds of people in the audience. As the protesters left the auditorium they were rewarded with hand shakes, thumbs up and another round of applause. Haigh was flustered and responded with words along the lines of “No-one will want to listen to me after that!”

London Rising Tide are asking why Shell were ever allowed to take part in this conference in the first place, given their record of environmental and human rights atrocities in Nigeria, Ireland, and Canada to name but a few places, and their investments in carbon-intensive fossil fuels such as oil from tar sands and shale gas, while abandoning funding for renewable energies.

More information:

Rising Tide:  http://risingtide.org.uk/
Shell To Sea:  http://shelltosea.com/

BBVA pours more blood

Last march 16th activists from Bilbao belonging to environmentalist, anti-militarist, internationalist groups and trade-unions protested outside BBVA’s AGM. BBVA is a Bilbao bank which has grown to nº 66 of the Forbes list as most powerful transnational in the world. The Platform against BBVA denounces BBVA’s funding of arms manufacturing and exportation as well as very destructive projects and companies: nuclear plants, dams, oil and gas pipes, extraction, mines and quarries, etc. all over the world but mainly in Latin America. In the last year BBVA has also been involved in the eviction of families unable to pay their mortgage, finding organized resistance. Meanwhile BBVA launches face-washing propaganda to pretend caring for environment, being responsible, etc., which is pure demagogy. That’s why, once again, as it has happened in the last 5 years, five activists poured red paint down their head, symbolizing BBVA’s bloody businesses. The activists manage to pass the police cordon while round 100 more held a vigil. They got the attention of the media holding a press conference right in the access to Euskalduna Palace, venue for BBVA’s AGM.  No one was arrested but just charged with criminal damage.

 

You can find more information, pictures and videos at the Platform’s site: www.bbvagh.org

bikes alive bike blockade protest at king’s cross

12.3.12

12.3.12

earlier this evening, a couple of dozen cyclists brought a little chaos to the junctions outside king's cross station in protest at new revelations over TfL's complicity in road deaths there. despite dozens of deaths and injuries to cyclists at the dangerous king's cross road intersections, it has recently come to light that between 2005 and 2009, TfL actually instructed its planners to ignore the needs of cyclists.

also, where the planners, buchanan and partners, made bicycle-friendly recommendations, their draft report was watered down by TfL before final publication.

tonight's protest, attracting just a couple of dozen cyclists and pedestrians, held up traffic by processing slowly in a route up and down the euston road outside the station, while more than 200 explanatory leaflets were distributed to passers-by. it was the latest in a series of fortnightly actions, and the next one, to which all pedestrians and human-powered vehicles are invited, will begin promptly at 6.30pm on monday the 26th march.

later that week, friday 30th will celebrate the 15th anniversary of critical mass in london.

more info at http://bikesalive.wordpress.com
also see http://www.criticalmasslondon.org.uk/main.html

Anti-nuclear activists claim double record at Hinkley Point demo

11 March 2012

On the first anniversary of the Fukushima disaster, anti-nuclear campaigners claimed two records in two days. The mass protest at Hinkley Point nuclear power station on Saturday attracted more than 1,000 people from all over the UK – the largest protests against a the construction of a nuclear power station in four decades.

11 March 2012

On the first anniversary of the Fukushima disaster, anti-nuclear campaigners claimed two records in two days. The mass protest at Hinkley Point nuclear power station on Saturday attracted more than 1,000 people from all over the UK – the largest protests against a the construction of a nuclear power station in four decades.

And today (Sunday) the Stop New Nuclear alliance successfully concluded the first ever 24-hour blockade of a UK nuclear power station. Nancy Birch, spokesperson for the alliance said: “This is a major victory for the anti-nuclear movement and a sign that the tide is turning against the government’s nuclear renaissance.”

On Saturday, leading environmentalists Jonathon Porritt and Caroline Lucas MP joined over 1000 demonstrators at Hinkley Point to mark the first anniversary of Fukushima and to call for a halt to the government’s bid to build eight new nuclear power stations. Protesters came from as far away as Ireland, France and Taiwan.

A mini tent city then emerged as over 100 people remained outside the main gate at Hinkley overnight – camping on the tarmac in makeshift tents. The blockade formally ended at 2pm today when Japanese bhuddist monks performed a prayer for the victims of the Tsunami that precipitated the Fukushima disaster and to urge the UK government to take a more enlightened view on energy provision.

Nancy Birch added: “It is clear that the public is waking up to the fact that we don’t need nuclear power to keep the lights on. Germany is leading the way in creating a blueprint for a sustainable energy future that is nuclear-free, affordable and doesn’t leave its citizens with the shadow of another Fukushima hanging over their heads. The burning question is, if Germany can do it, why can’t we?”

Martyn Lowe, a verteran anti-nuclear campaigner said he had not seen such a large turnout since the mass protest against the construction of the Torness nuclear power station in 1979.

He added, “The simple fact it that that ‘new nuclear’ is dangerous, expensive and completely unnecessary.”

ENDS

For more information contact Nancy Birch on: 07980 509986

Notes to the editor:
Jonathon Porritt is launching a new book which provides a warts and all overview of nuclear giant EDF Energy’s influence on Whitehall and Westminster.

Actioncamp Foz da Tua (Portugal)

We are reaching the critical stage to stop one of the biggest atrocities committed in one of the most beautiful rivers in Portugal.

We are reaching the critical stage to stop one of the biggest atrocities committed in one of the most beautiful rivers in Portugal. This is a struggle spanning several years already, although all the effort made to preserve the Tua River Valley, it’s natural and cultural wealth, has been contradicted by the political and economical forces organized to expropriate us from a universal common good.

Construction work for the dam has already started! The Tua river valley is encompassed within the Alto Douro Vinhateiro Region – a World Heritage Site that  celebrated 10 years of UNESCO classification last December – and is now under the threat of being completely destroyed. We must act. We must work together to preserve a Heritage that is all of ours.

The building of the Tua valley dam is part of the National Dam Plan, an energy strategy created by the last government proposing building 10 news dams of high hydroelectric potential. Most civil society organizations protested against this, since it defines the biggest environmental assault being committed in the country. In spite of all the effort invested by these organizations, the economic interests that drive the companies involved have overcome all the legal challenges set in their course.

We need all the help we can get to stop the Foz-Tua dam. So then we make an Open Call for a wide mobilization of people and organizations to protect and valorize the World Heritage and the Sustainable Development of the People.

The 14 of March celebrates the International Day of Action for Rivers. The rivers Tua, Sabor, Tâmega and all the threatened rivers must not be forgotten. We want to mark this date with an event where our voice will be heard. From the 10 to the 18 of March 2012 we will organize a camp for the preservation of the Tua Valley and the public censorship of the proponents of this deadly project.

This camp seeks to bend over this historical moment for the region, when it’s on the brink of loosing the potential for grounded development, and share the reality and culture of a community living in communion with the river valley for so long. Simultaneously the camp will be a place for networking, skill sharing and debating environmental, social and political ideas and concerns. It will also be a platform for protest, alongside the people and places most directly affected, to call for the immediate suspension of the building work. We cannot allow the construction of this dam to condemn the Tua River Valley region with loosing the World Heritage status, the flooding of the 125 year old train line, so we walk against the building of the EDP dam.

The Camp
 

The camp is being organized by a constellation of volunteers. We need all the help from associations and individuals that wish to participate in the organization of this camp. This is a self-organized camp and we ask for everyone to organize actions and materials for the Tua, against the dam. Support could take several forms:

  • broadcasting campaign material, invitations, other information;
  • organizing collective transportation to Trás-os-Montes;
  • collecting materials such as tents/marquees/wooden structures/composting toilets/cooking equipment//paints;
  • getting involved in planning meetings/proposing workshops;
  • helping in the kitchen staff, searching for local food suppliers and and preparing everyday meals
  • contributing with donations;

 
The impacts that the dam will cause are numerous and irreversible. Here are some:

  • the drowning of a historic train line of local populations, the only transport suitable for people and goods in this region, that has also enormous turistic potential and is therefore instrumental for economic and social development;
  • the forfeiting of a common asset at a huge capital cost with zero total gain;
  • the irreversible destruction of farm land, ecosystem balance, natural and human landscapes, social, ecological and economical sustainability;
  • the loosing of the UNESCO World Heritage Site classification (see ICOMOS report on EDP dam impacts on UNESCO World Heritage);
  • the unmeasurable loss of visitor flux and wealth generation for the region;
  • the violation of the Water Quality Directive, an action plan by the European Union to ensure water protection.

 

All hands are welcome! Let’s not allow the Tua River Valley to flood!
Actua Camp, 10 to 18 March 2012, Foz-Tua, Trás-os-Montes

Actua pelo Tua Art Contest // Use Your Art // every art form accepted
Exhibition // 14 March Foz-Tua // On going call out for entries

Contact: acampamentoactua@gmail.com

 
Info: http://acampamentoactua.wordpress.com/english/

Quebec Police Dismantle Innu Blockade Against Controversial Hydro Complex

March 11, 2012

Quebec provincial police went on the march last Friday to dismantle a blockade that a group of Innu citizens erected to protest the construction of hydro transmission lines through their traditional territory.

March 11, 2012

Quebec provincial police went on the march last Friday to dismantle a blockade that a group of Innu citizens erected to protest the construction of hydro transmission lines through their traditional territory.

According to available reports, no one was arrested during the court-backed offensive, which the Innu passively tried to resist. However, a total of thirteen people were arrested, including ten women.

The blockade/checkpoint went up went up on March 5 after Innu representatives walked away from negotiations with Hydro-Québec over the proposed La Romaine Hydroelectric Complex.

The $6.5 billion project includes four new hydro dams that would ultimately provide electricity for various industrial projects including mines and aluminum refineries as part of the Plan Nord, "the Quebéc government's plan to ravage northern Québec, with many ecologically devastating projects slated for development on Innu territory, or Nitassinan, without the consent of the Innu people," comments Collectif solidaire anti-colonial / Anti-Colonial Solidarity Collective.

The project was approved by Quebec's environmental assessment board more than two years ago. However, the Innu communities of Uashat and Maliotenam have continuously challenged that decision because, the Innu say that the board failed to consider how the transmission lines for the project would affect their lands.

Speaking from the blockade, Michael MacKenzie, vice-Chef at Innu Takuaikan Uashat mak Mani-Utenam commented, Everything is peaceful. There’s no aggression from our side. What we’re doing today is legitimate and this is what it’s come to. Our rights have been trampled.”

“We had the Arab Spring, I think we’re now seeing an Innu Spring,” added Christopher Scott, a spokesperson from the Alliance Romaine, who has been supporting the Innu.

Clearly, Hydro-Québec didn't think much of that. Soon after the blockade settled in, the Crown corporation ran to the Superior Court complaining of losses amounting to more than $1/2 million for every day that the blockade remained in place. It also spiced things up by alleging that it would have to shut down any ongoing work on Friday, unless the blockade was dismantled.

On Friday afternoon, the Superior Court granted Hydro-Québec a temporary injunction. The Sureté du Québec made their move later that night.

Video

The injunction will be in effect until March 19, 2012, at which time the matter will be discussed in court.

For those in the Montreal Area, the Anti-Colonial Solidarity Collective is organizing a protest for Monday March 12 to "Demonstrate our solidarity in the face of legal harassment by Hydro-Québec and the arrogance of the Québec state.

 

More Charges Brought Against Tar Sands “Megaload” Protesters in Moscow, Idaho

10th March 2012

10th March 2012

As some of the last five of over 70 massive parts of an Alberta tar sands upgrader plant rumbled through the small, quiet, college town of Moscow, Idaho, at about 11 pm on Sunday, March 4, four protesters linked arms and sat down in the middle of Washington Street to stop three of these “megaloads” weighing 200,000 to 415,000 pounds and measuring 150 to 200 feet long.  Police arrested Cass Davis and Jim Prall for resisting and obstructing officers and dragged Jeanne McHale and Pat Monger to the sidewalk, as another 40 protesters voiced their opposition to expanding tar sands mining operations.  Again on Tuesday, March 6, when the final two similarly huge shipments crossed this 22,000-person city, demonstrators pounded drums, chanted slogans, played music, and engaged in street theater.  Helen Yost tossed a cardboard protest sign at the rear of the last megaload and air-kicked the transports and their police escorts out of town, resulting in misdemeanor charges for throwing an object at a moving highway vehicle and attempted battery of a peace officer.

All three accused protesters are pleading not guilty based on the necessity of their actions induced by their moral obligation to directly confront the causes of climate change that are currently killing millions of people, plants, and animals around the globe.  For their statements, please listen to Cass Davis and Jim Prall on Flashpoints and Helen Yost on KRFP Radio Free Moscow.  Other articles, photos, and videos of numerous megaload passages and protests are available on the Wild Idaho Rising Tide (WIRT) facebook page and website.

At about forty direct actions since July 15, 2011, when the shipments started traversing two-lane Highway 95 several nights a week, WIRT members and their community have practiced simple acts of non-violent civil disobedience to draw Americans’ attention to ongoing crimes against nature and humanity perpetrated by one of the wealthiest corporations in the world, ExxonMobil, and its Canadian subsidiary, Imperial Oil.  Their struggle began in May 2010, when Idaho citizens first learned that Governor Butch Otter and the Idaho Transportation Department had promised easy Idaho passage of at least 207 Korean-built modules to booming tar sands operations in Canada.  Thirty four pieces of cheaply constructed equipment destined for the Kearl Oil Sands Project in northeastern Alberta arrived in October 2010 by barge at the Port of Lewiston, Idaho, 465 river miles inland from the Pacific Ocean.  ExxonMobil/Imperial Oil originally intended to transport these megaloads through the Clearwater and Lochsa River valleys, up a 216-mile stretch of Highway 12 between Lewiston and Missoula, Montana.

This wild and pristine route through the largest wilderness complex in the lower 48 states encompasses not a single overpass that would prevent passage of these gigantic components weighing up to 600,000 pounds, towering 30 feet tall, and crowding the winding, two-lane road with their 24-foot widths and over 200-foot lengths.  Among the first three National Scenic Byways and one of only 31 All-American Roads, Highway 12 runs through a Wild and Scenic River federal easement and carries national historic significance as the parallel river route of the Nez Perce and Lewis and Clark trails.  These designations and the untrammeled nature of the place foster a vibrant, local, tourism industry that has flourished even while the national economy has floundered.

But Big Oil and its corporate interest in Highway 12 and other narrow, rural roadways in Idaho and Montana as permanent, high and wide, industrial corridors to the tar sands naively stumbled into an ambush in this rugged country.  Since August 2010, regional citizens have challenged, delayed, and possibly permanently impeded Imperial Oil’s plans, through four administrative and district court cases in both states and an Idaho Supreme Court hearing.  The one ‘test validation module’ that did traverse Highway 12 in April 2011 has remained stranded at Lolo Pass, high in the Bitterroot Mountains, protected from local scorn by ongoing private security, in mute testament to effective litigation and corporate folly.  During 2011, less than a dozen other transports with similar dimensions belonging to other companies attempted this arduous course.

In January 2011, Imperial Oil began spending $17 million to split its modules previously certified as “irreducible in size” into pieces only 15 feet high for transport on Highway 95 north from the port to Interstates 90 and 15 and Canada.  As residents raged in the streets of Moscow during over forty protests since Highway 95 shipments commenced in mid-July 2011, ExxonMobil shifted its transportation plans in October 2011 to the Port of Pasco and Highway 395 in eastern Washington.  In February 2012, in a lawsuit initiated by Missoula County Commissioners, a Montana judge modified a temporary court injunction into a permanent stay, effectively barring Imperial Oil traffic on Highway 12 until the Montana Department of Transportation produces a more thorough review of potential project impacts.

Since the Idaho Transportation Department first granted overlegal load permits for these unwelcome behemoths on February 1, 2011, most state and local officials have complicitly assented to Imperial Oil’s use of Moscow’s beautiful tree-lined streets and north Idaho’s winding rural roads as industrial corridors to the 232-square-mile complex of Canadian tar sands mines considered the “the most destructive project on earth[1]”.  The moral outrage of impacted citizens has swelled over almost two years, as spirited demonstrations have confronted every passage of these Imperial Oil transports hauled by Mammoet and their overbearing convoys of industry paid state, county, and city police and contracted pilot vehicle drivers and flaggers.  On August 26, about 150 protesters filled the streets and six citizens were arrested when they stopped a megaload for nearly half an hour.  Two shipment monitors were targeted and jailed on the following night, and two bicyclists riding on sidewalks near the transports were unlawfully detained and charged on October 6.

Myriad offensive social and environmental injustices have already and will continue to result from this transportation project, which hastens the Alberta tar sands development that climate scientist James Hansen has warned would ensure “game over for the climate.[2]”  Alberta upgrader plants release substantial carbon dioxide, greenhouse gases, heavy metals, and even the dirty tar mixture called bitumen that they process.  Energy- and water-intensive mining and upgrading processes release toxic emissions and wastewater stews that fill vast lagoons.  This extensive pollution not only poisons downwind and downstream water, air, and soil, plant and wildlife communities, and First Nations villages, it contributes to the single greatest point source of global climate chaos in North America.  For billions of people around the planet, climate change-driven warming and destabilized weather are threatening the health and life ways of human populations with intensifying storms, flooding, drought, desertification, famine, and rising sea levels[3].  The conservative International Energy Agency recently reported that unless we shift our infrastructure demands from fossil fuels to low-carbon alternatives within the next five years, “the results are likely to be disastrous.[4]

In Idaho, megaloads have imperiled the safety and schedules of travelers, delayed and blocked traffic with their 22- to 24-foot (two-lane) widths and lengthy convoys, impeded public and private emergency services, caused personal injury and property damage through numerous collisions with vehicles, power lines, cliffs, and tree branches, degraded our highways with washboard ruts in lane centers, and pummeled saturated road beds, crumbling shoulders, and outdated bridges.  Citizens concerned about the lax state oversight and myriad impacts of these overlegal loads, who have monitored and documented dangerous convoy practices and conditions, have additionally faced unwarranted targeting, surveillance, intimidation, harassment, and arrest by state troopers sworn to serve public safety, but who instead protect corporate interests that compromise Idahoans’ civil liberties and risk the health and wellbeing of people, places, and the planet.

Idaho residents monitoring, protesting, and blocking tar sands megaloads are not radicals but concerned citizens compelled by their consciences to take a courageous and persistent stand for a livable world.  They understand that their government is broken, that Americans need to abandon use of oil, coal, and natural gas, and that humans and all other life forms may not be capable of adapting their physiologies, as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce insists, to a rapidly warming climate hotter than humans have ever experienced.  The true radicals are U.S. Congressional members who mock widely-accepted scientific evidence of climate change and the fossil-fuel industries who alter the chemistry of the Earth’s atmosphere and who hire public relations firms to confound energy issues.

As their consciences compel them, Wild Idaho Rising Tide and Moscow activists seek only to preserve the global home that they know and love, for the benefit of everyone but particularly for the youngest and most vulnerable people.  They are standing on their convictions in solidarity with other communities in the path of this industrial juggernaut, near dozens of tar sands pipeline and transportation routes and refineries.  Over the last year, they have come to understand that resistance to Big Oil is not futile but essential and mandatory for people of good will to bequeath a livable planet to all of its present and future inhabitants.  Every resistance movement that has ever changed the world began with just a few people expressing their dissatisfaction and defiance, empowering their fellow citizens, and deepening their resolve to effect long overdue changes.  Through cold and wet winter weather, often into the early morning hours, some of the 400 regional and 940 national members of WIRT have borne witness to this ongoing tar sands atrocity and opposed its abuses with all the resources that they can muster.  But they are only among the first wave of a rising tide of resistance that tar sands profiteers can expect across our nation.

When vehicle-dependent Americans, who consume 97 percent of Alberta tar sands products, import the majority of their foreign oil from Canada but export a surplus, steam cleaning oily sand to obtain the purported best and most secure new source of petroleum appears not only unnecessary but expensive and excessive.  Further tar sands development in Canada and the American West would prolong the U.S. oil addiction admitted by George W. Bush, exacerbate global warming, and forestall transitions to safe, clean, infinitely sustainable energy sources.  Political leadership independent of unaccountable multinational corporations that channel millions of dollars reaped from tar sands production to American and Canadian administrative and legislative officials must effectively resolve the biggest challenge that humanity has ever faced.

Although President Obama on his campaign trail heralded “the moment when the rise of the oceans begins to slow and our planet begins to heal,” Americans continue to reel from the insidiously deadly effects of fossil fuel extraction, as victims of the shameful aftermaths of the Exxon Valdez and BP Deepwater Horizon spills, water contaminated by coal mining and hydraulic fracturing, and extensive tar sands devastation.  We cannot rely on state and national politicians, dirty energy executives, or industry workers to honor and protect people’s most basic rights and interests.  As life around the world struggles with the consequences of our collective delay in taking responsible actions to reverse climate change, we can only hope that investors and finance managers realize that smart money will abandon tar sands projects soon, before emerging grassroots initiatives reduce the value of their fiscal commitments to outmoded energy sources.

Catalyzed by projected atmospheric carbon concentrations of more than 450 parts per million, positive feedback mechanisms could overshadow efforts to reasonably shape energy policy, as chaotic weather rapidly transforms our landscapes and infrastructure.  A more stable economic future already thrives through the development of abundant domestic sources of wind, solar, geothermal, and other non-depletable energy.  Responsible energy providers can safely harvest these ample resources in perpetuity and offer enough power and mobility and better long-term security to meet energy needs.  Our international energy crisis and widespread ignorance of the clear scientific consensus on climate change may indeed represent the eleventh hour for humanity; our shared response could also signal its finest hour.


[1] Environmental Defence, Canada’s Toxic Tar Sands, The Most Destructive Project on Earth, February 2008: http://www.desmogblog.com/sites/beta.desmogblog.com/files/TarSands_TheReport%20final.pdf.

[2] James Hansen, Silence Is Deadly, I’m Speaking Out Against The Canada-U.S. Tar Sands Pipeline, Energy Bulletin, June 4, 2011: http://energybulletin.net/stories/2011-06-04/silence-deadly-i%E2%80%99m-speaking-out-against-canada-us-tar-sands-pipeline.

[3] United Nations Environment Programme, Potential Impact of Sea-Level Rise on Bangladesh, 2000: http://maps.grida.no/go/graphic/potential-impact-of-sea-level-rise-on-bangladesh.

[4] Fiona Harvey, World Headed for Irreversible Climate Change in Five Years, IEA Warns, If fossil fuel infrastructure is not rapidly changed, the world will ‘lose forever’ the chance to avoid dangerous climate change, The Guardian, November 9, 2011: http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2011/nov/09/fossil-fuel-infrastructure-climate-change.

The Whalers Head Home!

March 8 2012

The Japanese Whaling Fleet Leaves the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary

Operation Divine Wind is over! The Japanese whalers are going home!

March 8 2012

The Japanese Whaling Fleet Leaves the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary

Operation Divine Wind is over! The Japanese whalers are going home!

The Japanese whaling fleet has left the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary and they are heading home.  “Once Captain Peter Hammerstedt and his crew on the Bob Barker closed in on the Nisshin Maru on March 5th, the whaling season was effectively over for the season,” said Captain Paul Watson on the Sea Shepherd flagship Steve Irwin recently returned and now berthed in Williamstown, Victoria, Australia.

Since March 1st, the Bob Barker has followed the Nisshin Maru as they headed steadily northwestward. The Japanese harpoon vessels have stopped tailing the Bob Barker. The fleet has left the waters of the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary, according to Captain Peter Hammarstedt. The Japanese government security vessel, Shonan Maru #2, has been spotted by fishing vessels at thirty degrees South, which is due east of Brisbane, Australia indicating that the vessel is well on its way back to Japan.

It has been a long and difficult campaign and although handicapped by the temporary loss of the scout vessel the Brigitte Bardot, the Steve Irwin and the Bob Barker were able to chase the Japanese whaling fleet for more than 17,000 miles, giving them little time to kill whales. In addition, two of the three harpoon vessels spent more time tailing the two Sea Shepherd ships than killing whales.

“The kill figures will not be released by Japan until April, but in my opinion they will not get over 50% for certain and my prediction is it will not be above 30%. Not as good as last season, but much better than all the previous years.”  Said Captain Paul Watson. “It has been a successful campaign. There are hundreds of whales swimming free in the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary that would now be dead if we had not been down there for the last three months. That makes us very happy indeed."

The Bob Barker will return to Hobart, Tasmania, the Brigitte Bardot is completing repairs in Fremantle, and the Steve Irwin is now berthed in Williamstown.

In December 2012, if the Japanese whaling fleet returns to the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society will launch Operation Cetacean Justice with four ships, two helicopters, four UAV (drones), and 120 volunteers.

“If the Japanese whalers return, Sea Shepherd will return. We are committed to the defense of the Southern Ocean Whale Sanctuary.” Said Captain Paul Watson. “No matter how long it takes, no matter how risky or expensive. The word “sanctuary” actually means something to us and that something is worth fighting for.”