No to Welsh gas pipe, no to new major carbon energy projects

On Monday morning, protestors stopped work on the huge gas pipeline that is being built from Milford Haven to Gloucester.

We occupied the 48″ gas pipeline and digging machinery to ensure that no work continues.

On Monday morning, protestors stopped work on the huge gas pipeline that is being built from Milford Haven to Gloucester.

We occupied the 48″ gas pipeline and digging machinery to ensure that no work continues.

The landowner invited us on to her land after she felt deceived by the national grid, hence there was a strange legal situation as we weren’t trespassing. Furthermore, she refused the police permission to come on her land!

She had agreed to allow the pipe being built after being told it would just be a small pipe – the destruction of a 100m wide strip which runs all through her land and the woods above her farm that her grandfather built show that they conned her.

However on Tuesday the police and national grid bullied her into asking us to leave the land where the pipe is being built (not the field where we are camped) otherwise she would not receive her compensation. People were still in the pipeline and up cranes last night and an illegal eviction was due to happen at 8am today (Wednesday)

The pipeline is 48″ in diameter and the national grid want it to be running at 92bar pressure. They admit they have no experience of running a pipeline at such hgh pressure.

Different figures are floating around over how much it is costing but it seems at least £700million. According to one of the protesters, it is designed to carry a fifth of the UK’s gas supply.

We need to have 90% cuts in carbon emissions by 2030, yet if we allow this mega-project to go ahead, we will be going in completely the opposite direction. This is a major energy infrastructure project and must be confronted. The government are on paper commited to reducing carbon emissions yet are not changing the energy policy. They are terrified that they won’t be able to meet gas supply as this would cause the city to go into panic and result in capital leaving the country.

There are loads of safety issues as well with this pipeline. It is being built on unstable land and parents in the nearby school are threatening to remove their childen from the schol if it gets built above their school – for fear of an repeat of Aberfan, where a landslide killed all the children in the primary school. Already there have been landslides on the hill above the site we have occupied that have blocked roads.

Work was due to end in October because of weather but they are behind schedule and hence rushing to push it through. They are being fined a large figure every day they are late (£1million a day is floating around) and hence are continuing into November.

Anyone who can get out to the site and get involved with stopping the work should definitely do so. The support of the locals is amazing and they are doing their stuff too; marches, legal proceedings; etc. If you want to go up, then there is a local who drives back from work in Cardiff at 5pm every day and is happy to give lifts to anyone heading up there. His number is 07973619183

Phone and Email Blockade of Bayer Cropscience

Monday 22nd of March saw a phone and email blockade of Bayer Cropscience, aimed at undermining their communications and disrupting the smooth running of their offices.

The direct line of Paul Rylott, the head of Bioscience, was chosen along with the main Cropscience email address. Unfortunately Rylott’s line appeared to have been disconected so for the rest of the day it was the backup number – for the bioscience department – which was called instead. It is not known how many people took part in this action but we must have caused some bother as the operator was taken off the phone early in the day and the answerphone switched on instead. Hopefully when they listened to it it was full of anti-gm messages. Hundreds of emails were also sent.

This was the latest of several phone, fax and email blockades, and a ‘virtual sit-in’ to have taken place against Bayer over the last 6 months. There will no doubt be more in the future. To be kept informed of them subscribe to the Stop Bayer’s GM Crops email list – you can do this at www.stopbayergm.org.

Bayer Cropscience are targeted as they only remaining company trying to get approval to grow gm crops commercialLy in the UK.

Hulme Developer gets a Roasting (Manchester)

Digger trashed in action relating to 25 mature trees being felled in Manchester

A property developer, who plans to build on the Loretto College Playing Fields, got a visit from upset local people early on Tuesday 29th July. Around 25 mature trees on the playing fields have recently been destroyed and a large JCB digger has started ground works.

Local people despair at the useless politicians who get voted in for 3-5 years, then enclose green spaces, close swimming baths and sell off schools and playing fields. These are all sold to private developers, who are only there to make money for their shareholders, not our local community.

People broke into the large digger using cutters and doused the cab, electronics and computer in paraffin. Then standing back, threw in the spark. Damage has been estimated at up to £100,000.

Hopefully insurance companies and contractors get the message. Developers who destroy our community green spaces, close footpaths and kill our trees, are not welcome.

It is sad that new diggers only take around a month to build, mature trees take a life time.

======================

There has been a group set up by local residents in response to this unexpected felling of mature trees.

—extract—-
We are a collective mainly based in Hulme but with a network of organisations supporting our cause from all over the city. Our aim is to halt to further expansion of the construction in Birley Fields as well as to activley protect our green spaces that we are sadly loosing by the day.
Through non-violent, peaceful but direct action we will prevail.
Rally interested people to this egroup and we can start the resistance to the destruction of our area, stand up for the environment which we so desperatley need and prove that people power is all we need to make a difference.

Local residents directly oppose development in Hulme, Manchester

How local residents begin campaign against – diversecity – (a not-so-local development company)

Around 10am ish today (and i say 10am ish cos i dont have a watch) Diversecity a development company began survey work on a lovely tree scattered site in Hulme . By 11am ish local residents were waking up to the reality of the Leaf St. development and decided something had to be done! And fast! So a few folk went and spoke to the surveyors giving them fair warning that people didn’t want them to continue their work . One of the surveyors even agreed with local residents, saying “I wouldn’t want it if I lived round here.”
Anyway lets cut to the chase…around 1pm ish the surveyors head of for luncheon… and there it is…

A golden opportunity of spontaneous energetic bliss…….. a free-form-freena-na-gig-group is formed and the butter knife* of justice is called upon and before a surveyor can say “chips peas and gravy, luv!” the bore drill cable is cut through like warm soya margarine…and that’s all the surveying work done for one day at least!!!!!

BIG WHOOPS OF JOY!!!!!!! round one….. local residents – 1 diversecity – 0

* for (butter knife) insert (bolt crimpers)* 🙂

Cumbria peat protest

As part of the need to refocus our actions on other companies like these and not just Scotts, Bolton Fell peat stripping site was visited on Sunday 14 December 2002. The works was very busy but the fields were wet and empty. Drainpipes were blocked with bags of peat, a footbridge was pushed into a drainage ditch and a small railway bridge was dismantled.

– from longer background article at http://www.eco-action.org/dod/no10/peat.htm

More peat sabotage in Cumbria

In November more vehicles, were sabotaged at Solway Moss, this time about 15 peat cutters, owned by L&P Peat, while 3 more were trashed at Bolton Fell, owned by William Sinclair. L&P Peat’s stock of peat was also visited that night with about a quarter of their stock slashed. Both targets are expanding their role in the peat industry as other players back out, and both companies are fighting efforts to protect their sites on environmental grounds.

Both of these sites are candidate SAC* sites, but the companies are both threatening to take the government to judicial review if they are submitted. These actions were carried out because of the companies’ refusal to allow SAC status to proceed and because both companies are expanding in the peat industry.

*SAC glossary & further info – see http://www.eco-action.org/dod/no10/peat.htm

Easter 2002 Scotts Hatfield Moor Peat Blockade

Easter peat blockade 3

Four days of direct action at the Scotts Peat works, Hatfield Moor, near Doncaster.
MONDAY 25TH- THURSDAY 28TH MARCH 2002

Hatfield Moor is an ecologically vital system for over 5,000 species. It has been the subject of a campaign to save it since the 70s. Peat Alert have been disrupting work and taking direct action for over a year. A recent deal by English Nature, meant that while the goverment payed Scotts £17.3 million to stop mining at three sites throughout the country, Scotts have been given 2 more years to dig at Hatfield Moor, which will irreversibly damage the peat bog. Peat Alert had already decided to call a four day blockade of the Peat Works in the week leading up to the Easter Bank Holiday, the Peat industries busiest time.

An action camp for the 4 day blockade was planned for nearby. Before the site was taken, both night-time and daytime actions to Hatfield Moor had been taking place. Filling in ditches and blocking pipes to stop the peat being drained, plus other sabotage actions on the moors and at the works had caused at least £40,000 worth of damage.(Scotts estimate)

When people turned up to crack the prison training/RAF base site, on the Saturday morning, it had been passed from the Ministry of Defence’s hands into a private landowner. The landowner turned up and after some discussion gave us permission to stay at the site and even gave us the keys to his hefty lock! The police put pressure on both the landowner to evict us and the Green Tree Pub where we were meeting for the street party. The cops told the pub we would barricade ourselves into the carpark. The landlady thought this was ridiculous – as it was!

Easter peat blockade 1

The campsite was a fortress – and for once to our favour! Things remained from its MoD days complete with barbed wire rimmed fences and barricades, our own four flags flew from the old radar tower. An evidence gathering team was permanently stationed across from the site. The Anarchist Teapot provided a field kitchen and Generator X supplied us with wind and solar power. Before the blockade begun, Scotts were ringing various campaign groups pleading what could they do to stop the blockade.

Easter peat blockade 2

On the Monday morning, day 1, the police had out a helicopter, police horses, dogs, landrovers and vans at the crossroads leading leading up to the peat works. Police had been searching ditches and found lock on equipment, a tripod and maybe other stuff that groups had been planning to use at exit points.They had tried to get a Section 60 (stop,search, demask) which was at first denied but later granted, A section 14 (designated protest area only) was in place; between a post saying assembly start and point A.

About 100 people left the ‘Green Tree’ pub at one o’clock. Section 14 was read out, but a bicycle sound system played music and various instruments and drums were played. The designated protest area was a pointless insult and didn’t suit us – police formed lines to stop the march. People continued on holding reinforced banners, padding, hard hats and masks. However, we decided to take the path of least resistance so we ran cross country and managed to take the only exit road from the works.

The road was blocked for two and a half hours, with lorries unable to leave the works. 18 vans of cops in riot gear moved in, arresting everyone who stayed in the road (and some who didn’t), targetting specific individuals. It took them a futher hour to clear the road. There were 35 arrests, and 2 that got away. All but one were released by 5 am (except one for refusing bail conditions) The bail conditions were not to go within 2 miles of the works. A police map reading error meant that everyone COULD go back to the site, and onto the south moors where most of the peat extraction takes place. No lorries left the peat works that night.

On Tuesday, day 2, FoE had called a demo in front of the Peat Works, which some of our number attended. Others went out in small groups to try and find a lorry to blockade or going out on the moors ditch filling. The FoE demo was meant to go to the works, but was trapped in the designated protest area. Their presence unnerved the police enough to prevent most of lorries leaving the works whilst they remained there. This however also meant our small groups of blockading and locking-on teams couldn’t get to the lorries to lock on. Lorries were later being moved in convoy, with a police escort of vans and motorcycles at the front and back of the convoy. This continued from the peat works and along the A18 to the motorway. Police vans were continually parked up along the long road leading from the peat works to the main road, so a cross country ambush was not possible. The lack of hedge cover and flat open land also worked against us. After crawling around and getting cover in ditches by the sides of roads all day groups decided to head back to site. People on the moors were eventually stopped by the police, three were arrested for breaking bail conditions (they were outside the two mile exclusion zone) they were eventually released without charge once we had shown the police how to map read.

Also see http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/1894469.stm

On Wednesday, day 3, we had another cunning plan to blockade the lorries further away from the peat works. We planned to blockade and lock on to the convoy as they stopped at a roundabout on the A18 – the new exit route for the lorries. This would have prevented the lorries from leaving and getting on to the motorway. The normal exit route was not being used as it passed too near to our campsite! Groups of people left the site and travelled to train stations, getting to the location of the planned blockade. Other small groups went to the designated protest area or onto the moor as a decoy. There were so many police that whilst little groups streched our resources, the police were able to effectively monitor all of the groups and available train stations to find out where we were going. They once again held up the lorries at the peat works, so that no convoys left whilst we were at the roundabout. We hung around for a while to make sure they were not exiting our way, then headed headed back to the campsite.

Easter peat blockade 4

On Thursday we realised in the morning meeting that the number of people on site had dwindled, lots of people had bail conditions and there wasn’t enough people to defend and tat down the site as well as doing an effective action. We decided to tat down. This was done whilst being watched by five police vans, who “had noticed a lot of activity and were wondering what was going on?” Any tat vehicles leaving the site were pulled over and followed by motorcycle cops all day – even when they were being lured into areas for a ‘remember the miners strike kicking’. When we finally left the camp in a convoy of 5 vehicles they followed us again and pulled us over, when we finally set off again they continued with a 6 police car escort, all the way and into Sheffield. This was getting so ridiculous we pulled over and told them to go away, which they then did! Police used a massive amount of their resources and surveillance and continued harrassment. The helicopters were out each night beaming the search light onto the campsite and moors – ever wondered why there is a mirror on site – well it can be useful for reflecting back their headlights and spotlights back against them – particularly effective against the helicopter!

All in all the week was considered to be a success. Despite only being able to block the road for 3 and half hours on the Monday, we seriously disrupted Scott’s operation throughout the week. When we are not there a lorry normally leaves the peat works every four minutes during that week. We managed to reduce it to about 20 every 6 hours. We achieved a lot of local support for defending the peat moors and gave more people a chance to see the ecological destruction that is peat mining. We also gained support against the police for their use of force on Monday, and their over policing on resources. Whilst most of South Yorkshire police were sitting opposite our campsite it took police in Sheffield 45 minutes to get to a shooting of a bus driver – and they claim they have justice with courage! Ha!ha!

Many more people will now be back for both advertised and impromptu actions.

Our next action will be a Mass Trespass on the moors on Sat 11th May. It will be a chance to disrupt work and protest against the enclosure of common land that allows this ecological destruction to happen, it will also be in rememberance of Benny Rothman, from the Kinder Scout Mass Trespass who died recently.

Meeting 12 noon, Tyrham Hall Hotel, A614 south of Hatfield Woodhouse. For more details see http://www.peatalert.org.uk/campaign/masstrespass.htm .

People will be going out and filling ditches, disrupting work between now and then and slashing the peat bags at Garden Centres. Why not join in!

Manchester peat campaign launched

Butterfly

Manchester is the home of several peat moors, all under threat from extractors profiting from the destruction of some of the most precious areas in the UK. But together we can stop them, and save our moors!

WILDLIFE UNDER THREAT

Peat moors are home to a vast range of plants, insects, butterflies, and birds. Often they are officially recognised conservation areas and have been proven to help prevent climate change. However, due to extensive ‘mining’ of the peat, mainly for use in home gardening, these precious habitats are dwindling. We must fight to protect these unique havens of wildlife, before corporate lobbying destroys our moors forever.

MANCHESTER’S FORGOTTEN PEAT MOORS

Manchester is not often thought of as an area rich in biodiversity, but within the bounds of Greater Manchester, there are several peat moors, or mosses under threat. From large sites like Irlam Moss, run by Scotts and Peel Holdings, to smaller sites like Saltersley Moss in the nearby Wilmslow. Extraction is already underway, but the damage done is reversible if we act quickly.

MANCHESTER IS FIGHTING BACK

We have decided to do something about this destruction of our natural heritage by forming a local peat campaign. We will focus on a wide, inclusive campaign against peat extraction on Saltersley Moss and more targeted campaigning on other Manchester-area mosses. If you would like to get involved, please contact us.

For more details, contact Manchester Peat Campaign on Manchester Earth First! on 0161-226 6814

http://www.earthfirst.org.uk/manchester/peat/

New deal for peatbogs? Limited victory so battle continues…

A deal was announced today (27th February 2002) between Scotts and English Nature, to restore major peatbogs as ecological sites.

The deal is undoubtedly very good news, but it is certainly not the end of the story. The main pointsof the deal are given below.

* Thorne Moor, South Yorkshire, and Wedholme Flow, Cumbria to be restored to raised bog habitats. This will be started immediately; no more peat will be extracted from the site.
* Hatfield Moor, South Yorkshire, to be continued to be mined for peat for a further two years, although only on half the site – the other half will also now be restored.
* For this, English Nature will pay Scotts £17 million as compensation. Scotts will take on much of the responsibility for carrying out the restoration.

Clearly this is very welcome, but the fight is far from over. Some of the problems that remain are:

* Carrying on extracting peat for another two years could make a crucial difference to the chances of a raised bog habitat re-evolving on Hatfield Moor. The depth of the peat is getting startlingly low on many parts of the site, and below a certain depth the ecological value of the system that will regenerate will be significantly reduced.
* In many places the bottom of the peat has been breached, and the sand layer has been dug into. This introduces excessive nutrients into the water table, which means the peat may not support many important plants. Continued digging will almost certainly exacerbate this.
* Scotts bear much of the responsibility for carrying out the ecological restoration work. However, given their track record of destroying ecological systems, what are the assurances that they will not put profitability before doing a good job?
* Scotts will continue to operate their other peatland sites in the UK. In particular, Carnwath Moss in Scotland is a designated SSSI, and they have said that they will continue extraction there for the foreseeable future.
* There are many other peat companies who also still mine peat from valuable wildlife sites. In particular Wm. Sinclair Ltd, who make J. Arthur Bowers brand compost, continue to mine at Bolton Fell in Cumbria, and have pledged to legally challenge government plans to designate it a Special Area for Conservation (this status would mean they would have to stop extracting peat). They also mine at Whim bog, an SSSI in Scotland.
* With the closure of UK peat mines, the problem may well just be shifted overseas. Imported peat will form a grater proportion of the market, with new bogs being destroyed in Ireland or the Baltic States.

So let’s be encouraged by the latest news, but not stop until the peat industry is no more!