New Zealand climate camp report-back

15 Decem­ber 2009

15 Decem­ber 2009
NZ climate camp welcome tentPrepa­ra­tions for New Zealand’s first Cli­mate Camp are going well with peo­ple mov­ing onto the site yes­ter­day. Campers spent the day set­ting up some of the infra­struc­ture required for the camp includ­ing the kitchen and stor­age tents. As the day pro­gressed water lines could be seen snaking across the field, solar pan­els popped up next to tents and by the end of the day hot food was being pre­pared in the kitchen. The site is per­fect, large trees dot the field, a riv­er with swim­ming holes runs beside the camp and there is easy vehic­u­lar access.

NZ climate camp platformCli­mate camp offi­cial­ly kicks off tomor­row (Wednes­day) and will be going until the 21st. The camp will be a work­ing demon­stra­tion of sus­tain­able liv­ing with com­post­ing toi­lets and elec­tric­i­ty gen­er­at­ed on site. It will also host work­shops on dozens of sub­jects as well as pro­vid­ing space for peo­ple to organ­ise to take action against the root caus­es of cli­mate change. The 21st will see campers tak­ing to the streets in protests which will be organ­ised at camp. As details of these protests are organ­ised they will be dis­trib­uted wide­ly.

Feel free to bring any­thing you think might be use­ful – tools, bikes, koha to help pay for food and tents etc. The camp is being organ­ised and run by par­tic­i­pants so feel free to make it your own. If you want to run a work­shop or spend a few hours in the kitchen that would be great! Weath­er has been a mixed bag over the past day so a good tent and heaps of warm clothes in case you get wet would be a real­ly good idea. Food will be pro­vid­ed through­out the camp.

So if you have any spare time over the next week be it an after­noon or the entire camp pop on down to Moon­shine park in Upper Hut from today.

For more infor­ma­tion and reg­u­lar updates on how the camp is going please vis­it climatecamp.org.nz

For the days pho­tos please vis­it: http://www.flickr.com/photos/45638777@N08/

——
NZ Carbon Exchange conference disrupted
Activists dis­rupt pre­sen­ta­tion by head of the New Zealand Car­bon Exchange.
18 Decem­ber 2009

This action coin­cides with New Zealand’s first cli­mate camp in Upper Hut Welling­ton and pecedes mon­days day of direct action against false solu­tions planned for Welling­ton on mon­day.

Yes­ter­day mem­bers of Car­bon Progress Response (CPR) dis­rupt­ed a pre­sen­ta­tion by Stu­art Fraz­er mem­ber of the New Zealand Car­bon Exchange. The pro­test­ers dis­rupt­ed the meet­ing at three points hold­ing ban­ners say­ing “Our Cli­mate Not Your Busi­ness”, “Food Mar­kets Not Car­bon Mar­kets” as well as talk­ing about why car­bon trad­ing would not result in real action being tak­en to pre­vent cli­mate change. Dur­ing the pre­sen­ta­tion Stu­art Fraz­er talked of how we need to sta­bilise atmos­pher­ic CO2 lev­els at 450ppm and glob­al tem­per­a­tures at a 2 degrees Cel­sius rise. The pro­test­ers point­ed out that at these lev­els hun­dreds of mil­lions of the worlds poor will be affect­ed by drought and famine.

The action was tak­en in sol­i­dar­i­ty with the 100,000 pro­test­ers in Copen­hagen as well as the 300 civ­il soci­ety del­e­gates which walked out of the con­fer­ence.

The CPR activists involved in the dis­rup­tion explained their actions in this way “Car­bon trad­ing, also known as Cap and Trade, allows wealthy, indus­tri­al­ized coun­tries and com­pa­nies to keep pol­lut­ing at the same rates by trad­ing car­bon cred­its amongst them­selves. This allows busi­ness to con­tin­ue as usu­al and encour­ages the dis­ad­van­taged and poor to sell their liveli­hoods for the gain of the rich.”

After the first two groups of pro­test­ers were removed around a dozen pro­test­ers held ban­ners out­side as well as using a siren to empha­sis that we are fac­ing a cli­mate emer­gency. After the pre­sen­ta­tion had fin­ished an activist slipped back into the meet­ing and dis­rupt­ed it for a third time.

——
NZ climate camp march
21 Decem­ber 2009
About 150 peo­ple took to the streets ear­ly this morn­ing in Welling­ton as two ban­ners were hung overnight in promi­nent loca­tions. First stop was the Stock Exchange, to dis­rupt busi­ness as usu­al and tell the prof­i­teers of cli­mate change that our cli­mate is not their busi­ness. While peo­ple entered the build­ing a sam­ba band, rad­i­cal cheer­lead­ers and a kids block were out­side all main entrances. There was also a vocal bunch from a group claim­ing to be counter-protest­ing for the right to prof­it from exploit­ing the envi­ron­ment. Nine peo­ple were arrest­ed in a sit-in block­ade but lat­er released with no charge.

After 9 arrests the protest took over Lamp­ton Quay to go and sup­port two climbers occu­py­ing the out­side of the Min­istry for For­eign Affairs and Trade with a giant ban­ner denounc­ing Foter­ra for its part in New Zealand’s high emis­sions from agri­cul­ture. The action was tak­en to draw atten­tion to the fact that 51% of New Zealand’s cli­mate chang­ing emis­sions come from agri­cul­ture. The pro­test­ers who were ini­tial­ly at the stock exchange, marched down Lambton Quay to sup­port the two activists hang­ing off MFAT. The two climbers came down lat­er and were not arrest­ed. A Reclaim the Streets style protest con­tin­ued for over half and hour.

The nine from ear­li­er are com­ing out of the police sta­tion now, some or all with­out charge…

OUR CLIMATE IS NOT YOUR BUSINESS!!

http://climatecamp.org.nz/

Copenhagen failure sparks coal terminal blockade

Updates:

4:30pm:

The Koor­a­gang rail line has just reopened, 7.5 hours after the block­ade began

3:00pm:

Australian Copenhagen rail blockade banners 4Australian Copenhagen rail blockade banners 1Updates:

4:30pm:

The Koor­a­gang rail line has just reopened, 7.5 hours after the block­ade began

3:00pm:

Australian Copenhagen rail blockadePolice have removed the final pro­test­er blockad­ing a coal rail bridge in New­cas­tle, Aus­tralia, more than six hours after pro­test­ers shut down the coal deliv­ery line into the world’s biggest coal port.

There were twen­ty three arrests in total at the protest, includ­ing an 86 year old man, a Bud­dhist priest , and an elect­ed New­cas­tle city coun­cil­lor.

12:00pm:

Police have made their first arrests at a dra­mat­ic coal train block­ade on a bridge in New­cas­tle – the world’s biggest coal port.

Australian Copenhagen rail blockade tripodAustralian Copenhagen rail blockade climberThree hours into the block­ade, police have arrest­ed ten peo­ple who were sit­ting on the rail bridge and refus­ing to move. Pro­test­ers expect the block­ade to last for the remain­der of the day and per­haps into the night, with a fur­ther 15 peo­ple still block­ing the bridge in dif­fi­cult to remove posi­tions.

Australian Copenhagen rail lock-onsActivists shut down the rail line at 9am this morn­ing to protest the fail­ure of the UN cli­mate talks in Copen­hagen to pro­duce a just, effec­tive, and legal­ly bind­ing treaty.

9am, Sun­day 20th Decem­ber 2009, New­cas­tle Aus­tralia: Forty cli­mate activists have closed down the rail line into the world’s biggest coal port this morn­ing, protest­ing the fail­ure of the UN cli­mate talks in Copen­hagen to pro­duce a just, effec­tive, and legal­ly bind­ing treaty.

Twen­ty five of the diverse group – aged from 19 to 86 years and includ­ing a Bud­dhist priest, and an elect­ed local coun­cil­lor – are occu­py­ing a rail bridge in New­cas­tle, Aus­tralia, and refus­ing to leave. They have hung large ban­ners read­ing “Greed wrecked Copen­hagen: Now it’s up to us all”, and “You could have done some­thing great.”

“The US, Aus­tralia, and oth­er wealthy coun­tries wrecked the Copen­hagen cli­mate talks,” said Steve Phillips, spokesper­son for protest organ­is­ers Ris­ing Tide New­cas­tle.

“They refused to lift their pal­try green­house pol­lu­tion tar­gets to the lev­els required to avoid cat­a­stro­phe. They could have done some­thing great, but they failed. They let greed and self inter­est take prece­dence over the sur­vival of life on earth, and we are here today to con­demn them in the strongest pos­si­ble terms.”

Australian Copenhagen rail blockade banners 2“We put world lead­ers on notice that their con­tin­u­ing fail­ure to solve the cli­mate cri­sis will result in wide­spread direct action against the caus­es of cli­mate change, as we are see­ing here today. We’re tak­ing this action because we have had enough. We’ve seen too much grand­stand­ing, and pre­cious lit­tle action. We won’t con­tin­ue to watch as peo­ple die, as species go extinct because of cli­mate change, while emis­sions con­tin­ue to rise. Politi­cians are fail­ing to act against the caus­es of cli­mate change, so we have come here today to take action our­selves. New­cas­tle coal exports are Aus­trali­a’s sin­gle biggest con­tri­bu­tion to the cli­mate cri­sis.”

Australian Copenhagen rail blockade banners 3New­cas­tle City Coun­cil­lor Michael Osborne is among those occu­py­ing the rail bridge. He explained why: “The peo­ple of New­cas­tle and the Hunter expect­ed a fair, ambi­tious, and bind­ing treaty at Copen­hagen. They have been let down. Aus­tralia has failed to take lead­er­ship on this issue, so now peo­ple from the Hunter are tak­ing it them­selves. It is time we moved away from the fos­sil fuels that are caus­ing this cri­sis and embraced the renew­able indus­tries that can solve it.”

“Our elect­ed lead­ers are fail­ing to take action against the coal indus­try that is caus­ing the cli­mate cri­sis, so we are tak­ing that action our­selves,” con­clud­ed Steve Phillips.

Save Titnore Woods!

With the threat of devel­op­ment on Tit­nore Woods, one of the two remain­ing semi-ancient wood­lands left on the West Sus­sex coastal plain fast approach­ing, now is the time to rise up and resist the destruc­tion of our nat­ur­al envi­ron­ment by cor­po­rate greed.

With the threat of devel­op­ment on Tit­nore Woods, one of the two remain­ing semi-ancient wood­lands left on the West Sus­sex coastal plain fast approach­ing, now is the time to rise up and resist the destruc­tion of our nat­ur­al envi­ron­ment by cor­po­rate greed.

West Dur­ring­ton Con­sor­tium, which con­sists of Per­sim­mon Homes, Tay­lor Wimpy and Heron Homes could be giv­en the go ahead to build a 1250 home devel­op­ment and a road in the new year. Pre­vi­ous­ly 875 homes where to be built, so clear­ly their eyes are see­ing more pound signs as they envi­sion more clear­ance of the pre­cious land. The project is esti­mat­ed to cost over 3 bil­lion pounds to build and take 6 years to com­plete which is utter mad­ness when Wor­thing is report­ed to have over 1000 emp­ty build­ings! If plan­ning per­mis­sion is grant­ed West Dur­ring­ton will no longer home a semi- ancient wood­land with it’s rich diver­si­ty in rare species, flo­ra and fau­na or it’s sur­round­ing farm­land but a mas­sive hous­ing devel­op­ment, road, a giant Tesco and pos­si­bly 2 schools and a health cen­tre.

Already the destruc­tion is evi­dent when you vis­it Tit­nore. Just across the field from the protest site the eye sore that will be Tesco is well under way and is due to open in February/March 2010. West Sus­sex Coun­ty Coun­cil gave per­mis­sion on Decem­ber 9th 2009 to close the pub­lic foot­path reach­ing Tinore woods from Full­beck Avenue. No per­sons are allowed to use this right of way to vis­it the woods now as it is viewed as a pub­lic safe­ty haz­ard until the West Dur­ring­ton Con­sor­tium project is com­plet­ed. Also trees and bush­es have been cleared here, although none are of the semi ancient woods this is still a haunt­ing reminder that con­struc­tion is immi­nent.

On Thurs­day Jan­u­ary 28th 2010 at 6pm the West Dur­ring­ton Con­sor­tium will meet at Wor­thing Bor­ough Coun­cil’s Con­trol Com­mit­tee to push for per­mis­sion to begin devel­op­ment. If they win then it’s full steam ahead for the bull­doz­ers and a very sad day for the hard work­ing folk of Camp Tit­nore who have occu­pied the woods in resis­tance of the destruc­tion for the last 3 and a half years, and also for the local Wor­thing res­i­dents who strong­ly oppose the plans and wish to see their ancient wood­land left stand­ing.

To show that you oppose their plans to tear down an irre­place­able nat­ur­al space come and join the counter demo at 5.30pm out­side Assem­bly Hall, Stoke Abbott Road, Wor­thing on Jan­u­ary 28th 2010.
Please vis­it Camp Tit­nore. Enjoy its beau­ty, help to build new defences and walk­ways. Dona­tions of wood, nails, polyprop and cor­ru­gat­ed iron would be much appre­ci­at­ed.

Camp Tit­nore needs you!

See Tit­nore con­tact links for direc­tions and so on

Climate Camp Trafalgar- Ice Bear action & Copenhagen solidarity demo at Embassy & Copenhagen climate camp

As Copen­hagen refus­es entry to NGO’s and del­e­gates from around the world, Cli­mate Camp Trafal­gar enter anoth­er day of sol­i­dar­i­ty action. This time, the tar­get.…. The Lon­don Ice Bear.… He just did­n’t see it com­ing.

ice bear protestAs Copen­hagen refus­es entry to NGO’s and del­e­gates from around the world, Cli­mate Camp Trafal­gar enter anoth­er day of sol­i­dar­i­ty action. This time, the tar­get.…. The Lon­don Ice Bear.… He just did­n’t see it com­ing.

The team at Cli­mate Camp Trafal­gar square saw anoth­er day of actions this wednes­day 16th. This time tar­get­ing a (cor­po­rate, aka M&S, spon­sored http://plana.marksandspencer.com/we-are-doing/climate-change/stories/82/) ice sculp­ture.

The Lon­don Ice Bear ( http://www.wwf.org.uk/what_we_do/tackling_climate_change/the_london_ice_bear.cfm) has been attract­ing the atten­tion of passers by in Trafal­gar Square since fri­day the 11th of Decem­ber. WWF (who are back­ing the ice bear) state, on their web page, that “every­one is invit­ed to touch the ice sculp­ture. Artist Mark Coreth hopes that by touch­ing this sculp­ture audi­ences can become sculp­tors them­selves and make a direct con­nec­tion with the bear and its icy Arc­tic king­dom, now under threat from man-made cli­mate change.”

Here at Cli­mate Camp, we took this state­ment rather lit­er­al­ly. Though, obvi­ous­ly, we felt the need to direct the focus away from the rather sweep­ing state­ment of “man made” cli­mate change and give it a shove towards the more fit­ting state­ment of cor­po­rate fund­ed cli­mate chaos.

At around 4pm on Wednes­day the 15th of decem­ber, Cam­paign­ers took a ban­ner stat­ing “This isn’t just cli­mate change, this is RBS fund­ed cli­mate chaos” and a ket­tle full of hot water (also brand­ed with the RBS sym­bol) to the ice bear and pro­ceed­ed to melt the bear with the ‘hot water of cap­i­tal­ism’.

Artist and sculp­tor Mark Coreth was more than please to see his project “inter­act­ed” with in this way.

—-

On Thurs­day Decem­ber 17, approx­i­mate­ly 50 demon­stra­tors gath­ered out­side the Dan­ish Embassy in Sloane Street, Lon­don, to object to the Dan­ish police’s harsh treat­ment of demon­stra­tors at the COP Sum­mit in Copen­hagen.

After a spir­it­ed ral­ly, demon­stra­tors occu­pied the road in front of the embassy before lead­ing a roam­ing traf­fic block­ade up Sloane Street and onto Bromp­ton Road, before even­tu­al­ly halt­ing out­side Har­rods depart­ment store.

There were no arrests.

—-

A cli­mate camp to occu­py a vital loca­tion in Copen­hagen was announced. 100 peo­ple with 4 pop-up tents gath­ered in a cen­tral square and decid­ed to stay for two hours — full report and pho­tos

Mainshill Celebrates 6th Month of Resistance! Come celebrate with us over Christmas!

Main­shill Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp will cel­e­brate its 6th month of resis­tance against Scot­tish Coal and fat cat inter­ests this Fri­day the 18th of Decem­ber!

Main­shill Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp will cel­e­brate its 6th month of resis­tance against Scot­tish Coal and fat cat inter­ests this Fri­day the 18th of Decem­ber!

The win­ter is draw­ing in, but the tem­po­rary autonomous tree sit at Main­shill is warmer and cosier than ever! With a new log cab­in com­mu­nal and wood burn­ing stove there’s nowhere bet­ter to spend x‑mas than in the ice encrust­ed woods in the com­pa­ny of deer, robins, and oth­er wildlife whose habi­tat is slow­ly being defor­est­ed by Scot­tish Coal.

Join us this week­end to cel­e­brate 6 months of occu­pa­tion in resis­tance to a new open cast coal mine in an area already blight­ed by sev­er­al such devel­op­ments.

Direc­tions

Bus­es run to Dou­glas from Lanark and Hamil­ton. Both Lanark and Hamil­ton have train and bus sta­tions and are easy to get to from either Glas­gow Cen­tral Train Sta­tion or Buchan­non Street Bus Sta­tion. From South of the bor­der, going to Glas­gow is the eas­i­est way to get to Dou­glas. Bus­es from Lanark to Dou­glas are much more fre­quent!

Bus from Lanark:

The Ser­vice Num­ber 9 (William Stokes & Sons) runs from Lanark – Gle­spin, stop­ping in Dou­glas (ser­vice every 49mins past each hour). Ask to be dropped of out­side the camp – dri­vers are usu­al­ly hap­py to do this. Oth­er­wise, get off at the Egger­ton Bridge stop just before Dou­glas – you’ll see the camp on your left just after the M74 under­pass!

Bus from Hamil­ton:

The X50 (Hen­der­son Trav­el – http://www.henderson-travel.co.uk/) Hamil­ton-Gle­spin runs Hamil­ton, Inter­change – Les­ma­hagow, Church Hall – Rig­side – Dou­glas, leav­ing Hamil­ton at 17:05 (one ser­vice per day)

From Dou­glas:

The bus will stop before Dou­glas at Egger­ton Bridge and you will see the camp on your left after the M74 under­pass. If you miss this stop get off in Dou­glas and walk North East back up the A70 for 1km and the camp will be on your right just before the M74.

Hitch­ing:

If you hitch, the camp is right next to the M74 which runs from Glas­gow to Carlisle. Get dropped of at junc­tion 12 and walk South West down the A70 towards Dou­glas and the camp is a few hun­dred metres on your left. Hap­pen­don ser­vices are close to junc­tion 12 – if you end up there­walk South down the B7078, turn right onto the A70 towards Dou­glas, which takes you under the M74 and as above.

If you need a ride…

…from some­where close by call the site phone and we’ll try to sort you out.
Con­tact Us

Call the site phone on: 07806926040

Email us on: mainshill@riseup.net

Black Cat Occupied social centre evicted and Reoccupied!

Yes­ter­day saw the evic­tion of the Black Cat Cen­tre, a squat­ted social cen­tre that for 3 months became a gen­uine­ly well used and val­ued com­mu­ni­ty resource, involv­ing hun­dreds of local peo­ple in var­i­ous capac­i­ties. The evic­tion was met with a 17 strong sol­i­dar­i­ty demo, but no resis­tance from the inside as the evic­tion came slight­ly ear­li­er than expect­ed.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE -

Yes­ter­day saw the evic­tion of the Black Cat Cen­tre, a squat­ted social cen­tre that for 3 months became a gen­uine­ly well used and val­ued com­mu­ni­ty resource, involv­ing hun­dreds of local peo­ple in var­i­ous capac­i­ties. The evic­tion was met with a 17 strong sol­i­dar­i­ty demo, but no resis­tance from the inside as the evic­tion came slight­ly ear­li­er than expect­ed.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE -

Fol­low­ing the evic­tion of the Black cat Cen­tre yes­ter­day, the build­ing has been re-squat­ted. Local activists and res­i­dents, act­ing in sol­i­dar­i­ty with the recent­ly evict­ed Black Cat squat­ters last night squat­ted the build­ing again, and intend to con­tin­ue oper­at­ing it as The Black Cat Social Cen­tre. Speak­ing to Bath Activist Net­work last night, one of the new squat­ters, a res­i­dent of Old­field Park, said ‘The work that the orig­i­nal Black cat squat­ters put into the social cen­tre was so inspir­ing, and such a ben­e­fit to the com­mu­ni­ty that we felt that we had to act, and re-open the social cen­tre to the com­mu­ni­ty for as long as pos­si­ble’.

This lat­est devel­op­ment means that own­ers Cabot will have to re-insti­gate court pro­ceed­ings to evict the new squat­ters. The occu­piers last night said that, as with the last occu­piers, they were keen to enter into a rent pay­ing agree­ment with Cabot in order to keep the space in com­mu­ni­ty use for as long as pos­si­ble.

The new squat­ters intend to have the Black Cat, with all of its pre­vi­ous uses and events run­ning by Fri­day morn­ing.

For more infor­ma­tion, or for an inter­view with the new squat­ters, call 07794774938
bathactivistnet@yahoo.co.uk

Multiple Climate Protests Hit Cambridge — Darwin Speaks!

16.12.09: Out­raged Cam­bridge locals have launched mul­ti­ple protests to coin­cide with the Cli­mate Jus­tice Action mass protests in Copen­hagen. They demand cli­mate jus­tice and and end to false, car­bon trad­ing solu­tions.

Cambridge Capitalism is Crisis COP banner16.12.09: Out­raged Cam­bridge locals have launched mul­ti­ple protests to coin­cide with the Cli­mate Jus­tice Action mass protests in Copen­hagen. They demand cli­mate jus­tice and and end to false, car­bon trad­ing solu­tions.

This comes as Charles Dar­win has final­ly bro­ken his shame­ful cen­tu­ry of silence on cli­mate change, warn­ing the world — ‘Cli­mate Change = Extinc­tion’.

A large ban­ner has appeared on a promi­nent mar­ket square build­ing, stat­ing ‘Cap­i­tal­ism is Cri­sis. Cli­mate Jus­tice Now.’ Overnight unknown artists redec­o­rat­ed the large 800 years anniver­sary ban­ner out­side Kings Col­lege, allow­ing Dar­win to artic­u­late con­cern about cli­mate change. The cap­tion ‘800 trans­form­ing tomor­row’ was changed to ‘CO2 trans­form­ing tomor­row’, while Dar­win added ‘cli­mate change = extinc­tion.’

Cambridge RBS climate criminalsMean­while, out­raged local res­i­dents have today block­ad­ed both Cam­bridge branch­es of RBS. While now 85% owned by the British pub­lic, RBS invests heav­i­ly in pol­lut­ing indus­tries; until recent­ly brand­ing itself as ‘the oil and gas bank’.(1) RBS fund­ing has made pos­si­ble expen­sive and mas­sive­ly envi­ron­men­tal­ly dam­ag­ing projects such as the Cana­di­an tar sands in Alberta.(2) These protests come as thou­sands of peo­ple take to the streets in Copen­hagen, demand­ing cli­mate justice.(3)

Mar­ti­na Tay­lor, one of the pro­test­ers, said; “Our lead­ers in Copen­hagen are try­ing to solve cli­mate change through the same mar­ket based solu­tions that cre­at­ed the prob­lem, and allowed banks like RBS to make mas­sive prof­its at the expense of human and envi­ron­men­tal wel­fare. Car­bon trad­ing and off­set­ting just don’t work.”(4)

The pro­test­ers call for a tran­si­tion to a low car­bon econ­o­my: “sys­tem change, not cli­mate change!”

More pho­tos

Cam­bridge Action Net­work
http://www.cambridgeaction.net

Contractor’s van sabotaged at Mainshill

On Wednes­day 16th, con­trac­tors parked in front of Main­shill Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp returned to find their van sab­o­taged.

Mainshill van sabbedOn Wednes­day 16th, con­trac­tors parked in front of Main­shill Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp returned to find their van sab­o­taged.

The Rae­burn work­ers turned up at 2.30 with the estate man­ag­er and left their vehi­cles unat­tend­ed while they took soil sam­ples with­in the camp. In less than ten min­utes, though the work van win­dows were smashed and ‘out of main­shill’ and ‘no more coal’ sprayed on the sides. A buck­et of com­post was tipped over the bon­net. Unfor­tu­nate­ly, the estate man­ager’s 4x4 only got a small scratch.

The occu­pa­tion of Main­shill con­tin­ues, and we wel­come oth­ers who wish to join us in resist­ing open cast coal min­ing and the envi­ron­men­tal tox­i­fi­ca­tion it caus­es.

Reclaim Power! Action at COP15 — updated again

16 Decem­ber 2009
Indy­media action time­linelive radio stream.

Reclaim Power COP Assembly

16 Decem­ber 2009
Indy­media action time­linelive radio stream.

Today is the first day of the min­is­te­r­i­al phase of the COP15 sum­mit, that so far has made lit­tle progress. The Reclaim Pow­er! Action, aims to take over the sum­mit for this one day to turn it into a peo­ple assem­bly (call for action, lat­est press release). Sim­i­lar assem­blies have already been tak­ing place out­side the UN sum­mit for a week, as part of the Klimaforum09 peo­ple’s cli­mate sum­mit with an esti­mat­ed 25.000 peo­ple hav­ing tak­en part in dis­cus­sions.

Ear­ly in the morn­ing, mul­ti­ple march­es tried to make their way to the Bel­la Cen­tre where the COP15 is held. The group meet­ing at Orestad sta­tion (Green) was sur­round­ed by police and some were arrest­ed [pic], but oth­ers man­aged to move towards COP15. A sec­ond block (Blue), of more than 1000 peo­ple, made their way to the Bel­la Cen­ter whilst resisit­ing attempts from the police to break it [Video 1 | 2 | 3 | 4] [Pics 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5] The bike block was blocked by police and redi­rect­ed away. At the same time a group of pro­tes­tors man­aged to get into the area of the COP15-Sum­mit with a raft [pics]

Reclaim Power pepper spray

Police have been repeat­ed­ly attack­ing the crowds with baton charges and pep­per spray, as well as arrest­ing pro­test­ers through­out the morn­ing, and arrest­ing medics [pics]. Cor­po­rate media report 200 to 250 arrests [video] Fol­low­ing yes­ter­day’s arrest of Tadzio Muller after the Cli­mate Jus­tice Action press con­fer­ence, at  more spokes­peo­ple were vio­lent­ly snatched out of the crowd today. At 18:00 a CJA press con­fer­ence will address the arrests of 4 media spokes­peo­ple that aim to lim­it their free­dom of speech.

Mean­while at the COP15 Friends of the Earth, Avaaz and Via Campesina were refused entry despite acquir­ing a sec­ond accred­i­ta­tion. Del­e­gates staged a sit-in protest [pic, video], whilst 200 oth­ers from NGOs, indige­nous peo­ple and the Glob­al South marched out [Pics 1 | 2 | Videos 1 | 2] but police with batons and pep­per­spray pre­vent­ed them from reach­ing the Peo­ple’s Assem­bly. An hour lat­er a protest broke into the COP15 ple­nary with the slo­gan “Cli­mate Jus­tice Now!”, and the Indi­an del­e­ga­tion burned its badges [vid].

The Peo­ple’s Assem­bly took place at mid­day out­side the Bel­la Cen­tre [Pics 1], with­out those from inside the Bel­la Cen­tre — they were pre­vent­ed from get­ting out. After speech­es the assem­bly decid­ed to move towards the cen­tre [vid] of town, while the police have been snatch­ing peo­ple, and block­ing progress inter­mit­tent­ly. 

[ Reports from cor­po­rate media: 1 | 2 | Video of whole Reclaim Pow­er protest day ]

Time­lines Indy­media DK | Motkraft.dk (dk) | Motkraft.net (se, en) | Glob­al Project (it)

Resistance is Ripe: Agriculture Protest & Protesters Invade Climate Group Business Meeting

15th Decem­ber 2009

Climate Group protest15th Decem­ber 2009

The Resis­tance is Ripe Agri­cul­ture protest start­ed today at 12pm and has marched through the cen­tre of town under a ban­ner read­ing “Food Cli­mate Jus­tice, not Cli­mate Change” [pic]. Hun­dreds of peo­ple stopped out­side the Net­to super­mar­ket for speech­es about the impor­tance of food sov­er­eign­ty and the links between cli­mate change, agri­cul­ture and exploita­tion of peo­ple.

See Indy­media Time­line | Mod­kraft Time­line [en] | icop15 on Agri­cul­ture action

Pre-event press release:

To farm­ers around the world the false solu­tions that are pro­posed in this cli­mate sum­mit are as much a threat as drought, tor­na­does and new cli­mate pat­terns.

At this moment the Unit­ed Nations Frame­work Con­ven­tion on Cli­mate Change (UNFCCC) is dis­cussing how to include farm­land into CO2 emis­sion trad­ing. To high­light that this is a false solu­tion we will hit the street on the 15th of Decem­ber.

Bente Hes­sel­lund of the Dan­ish CJA: ‘In spite of the urgency of the cli­mate cri­sis the UNFCC process fails to ques­tion an eco­nom­ic mod­el that is based on infi­nite growth on a finite plan­et. Gov­ern­ments have done noth­ing to move beyond set­ting up mar­ket mech­a­nisms to com­bat the cli­mate cri­sis. These mech­a­nisms are not aimed at push­ing back the use of fos­sil fuels or green­house gas emis­sions in the indus­tri­al coun­tries. The pos­si­bil­i­ty of includ­ing agri­cul­tur­al land into CO2 emis­sion-trad­ing is one of the false solu­tions to cli­mate change. It can lead to farm­ers being forced into depen­den­cy of agro-indus­tri­al projects. Instead, agri­cul­ture needs to be removed from the prof­it-dri­ven mar­ket in order to devel­op a rad­i­cal­ly eco­log­i­cal food sys­tem that cools down the plan­et.’

To make clear that large scale indus­tri­al agri­cul­ture aggra­vates cli­mate change rather than solve the cli­mate prob­lem, Cli­mate Jus­tice Action (CJA) is organ­is­ing a demon­stra­tion in Copen­hagen on the 15th of Decem­ber. Our mot­to is “Food Sys­tem Change, not Cli­mate Change”. CJA is one of the net­works that active­ly mobilis­es the crit­i­cal voic­es around the Copen­hagen cli­mate sum­mit.

The agri­cul­ture man­i­fes­ta­tion will be tak­en to the streets of Copen­hagen, call­ing atten­tion to the pos­i­tive alter­na­tive that non-com­mer­cial, organ­ic agri­cul­ture for human needs offers. In a cre­ative man­ner, the atten­tion will be drawn to com­pa­nies that are respon­si­ble for the indus­tri­al food mod­el. Will it be a block­ade on the Mon­san­to premis­es or do the agri­cul­ture activist have some­thing else in store? Let your­self be tak­en by sur­prise on one of the many stops on their way through town.

To farm­ers around the world the false solu­tions that are pro­posed in this cli­mate sum­mit are as much a threat as drought, tor­na­does and new cli­mate pat­terns.

In the South, forests are burnt or cut down and small farm­ers are cleared off their land to make way for large scale indus­tri­al mono-cul­tures as soy and maize to sup­ply the Euro­pean inten­sive live­stock breed­ers. In fac­to­ry farms, mil­lions of ani­mals are fat­tened as fast as pos­si­ble, cre­at­ing vast amounts of dung and methane and con­sum­ing a great deal of ener­gy.

Stim­u­lat­ing agro­fu­els and bio-plas­tics to com­bat the cri­sis will only increase the pres­sure on the peo­ple cur­rent­ly liv­ing from the land. Already in the devel­op­ing coun­tries large areas of land are grabbed by multi­na­tion­als, small farm­ers and indige­nous peo­ple dri­ving off their ter­ri­to­ries.

‘Small scale, organ­ic agri­cul­ture remains the best way to com­bat hunger, mal­nu­tri­tion and the food and cli­mate cri­sis.’ argues activist Flip Vonk of Cli­mate Jus­tice Action (CJA) and part time farm hand on an organ­ic farm. ‘Native seeds offer the best oppor­tu­ni­ty for adap­ta­tion to cur­rent and future changes in the cli­mate. Sus­tain­able local food pro­duc­tion costs less ener­gy, makes us inde­pen­dent from import­ed ani­mal foods, cap­tures CO2 in the soil and improves bio­di­ver­si­ty.’

——-

Ear­li­er in the day activists protest­ed at an exclu­sive meet­ing between busi­ness and gov­ern­ment min­is­ters organ­ised by The Cli­mate Group, an inter­na­tion­al lob­by group who rep­re­sent busi­ness inter­ests — there were 17 arrests see report below [ video]

At around 4.45pm, police sud­den­ly arrived unan­nounced at the Can­dy Fac­to­ry (Boljse­fab­rikken) in the city’s north­west dis­trict. In this space, activists from the ‘Bike block’ have been build­ing bicy­cles for tomor­row’s ‘Reclaim Pow­er’ action. Peo­ple inside the Can­dy Fac­to­ry were told to leave the build­ing while it was being searched, and then they were even­tu­al­ly brought back inside, into the library, and their details were tak­en. An activist who was in the build­ing at the time describes the sit­u­a­tion:  “We all got placed in one room, after that the police start­ed to search the place. Peo­ple got reg­is­trat­ed before they were allowed to leave the place. They got some kind of iden­ti­fi­ca­tion-forms, where they not­ed name and address, but also length, hair col­or and which clothes peo­ple where wear­ing”. By 18.15 the search seemed to be over. The coach that police had brought left with one arrestee. Police then blocked off the build­ing with red and white tape and set up spot­lights onto the build­ing. By 19.45 reports came in of police trucks tak­ing away two bicy­cles as well as some com­put­ers [pho­tos | report]. Due to this raid, an indy­media ben­e­fit par­ty had to be can­celled.

Cli­mate Activists Invade Meet­ing of Senior Politi­cians in Copen­hagen

Sev­en­teen cli­mate activists invad­ed an exclu­sive meet­ing between busi­ness and gov­ern­ment min­is­ters at a Copen­hagen hotel this morn­ing. The meet­ing, called the “Cli­mate Lead­ers Sum­mit” was organ­ised by The Cli­mate Group, an inter­na­tion­al lob­by group who rep­re­sent busi­ness inter­ests in tack­ling cli­mate change.

The activists entered the invite-only meet­ing at the DGI Byen com­plex at 11.00am, with a ban­ner say­ing “Cli­mate Group: Lead­ing us into Cli­mate Chaos”. They invad­ed the foy­er and got to the entrance of the meet­ing room, where politi­cians includ­ing Sego­lene Roy­al of France, First Min­is­ter Alex Salmond of Scot­land, Pre­mier Mike Rann of South Aus­tralia, and Prince Albert of Mona­co [1] were address­ing busi­ness lead­ers and a wide
cross-sec­tion of the glob­al media. The activists dis­rupt­ed the meet­ing with loud chants of “Cli­mate Jus­tice not Cli­mate Prof­its” before being seized by secu­ri­ty guards and police and dragged out of the build­ing. The pro­test­ers were placed on the pave­ment out­side the entrance of the build­ing with their ban­ner. How­ev­er, they refused to remain silent and instead dis­played their ban­ner, chant­ed, sang, and read a pre­pared state­ment to the watch­ing media and mem­bers of the pub­lic. The state­ment [full text at the bot­tom of this press release] began:

“We’re here today because cli­mate change is not a busi­ness oppor­tu­ni­ty. It is already respon­si­ble for 300,000 deaths per year — it’s a glob­al emer­gency, not a chance to make mon­ey. The Cli­mate Group sup­ports car­bon trad­ing as the “solu­tion” to the cli­mate cri­sis, but car­bon mar­kets are noth­ing more than an excuse to con­tin­ue to pol­lute as usu­al, while also prof­it­ing from a whole new mar­ket in hot air.”

The Cli­mate Group meet­ing was tar­get­ed not just for the poli­cies being dis­cussed, but in protest at the unde­mo­c­ra­t­ic way in which these kind of events give priv­i­leged access to indus­try lob­by­ists. Accord­ing to one of the pro­test­ers, Sara Horne: “It’s not sur­pris­ing that del­e­gates from the Glob­al South have start­ed walk­ing out of the COP15 sum­mit, when the inter­ests of their peo­ple are being side­lined in favour of busi­ness
inter­ests at cosy back­room meet­ings like this one. The Cli­mate Group is push­ing an agen­da based on prof­its, dubi­ous tech­ni­cal fix­es and failed mar­ket ‘solu­tions’. We need real cli­mate solu­tions — food and ener­gy sov­er­eign­ty, local­i­sa­tion of pro­duc­tion and con­sump­tion and full recog­ni­tion of Indige­nous peo­ples’ and local com­mu­ni­ties’ rights. These solu­tions don’t make any prof­it for indus­try, how­ev­er, so you won’t hear them dis­cussed by the Cli­mate Group.”

The activists were then led away one by one by police and arrest­ed. The last pro­test­er was removed at around 12.00 noon.

ENDS

ACTIVISTS’ STATEMENT IN FULL:

“We’re here today because cli­mate change is not a busi­ness oppor­tu­ni­ty. It is already respon­si­ble for 300,000 deaths per year — it’s a glob­al emer­gency, not a chance to make mon­ey. The Cli­mate Group sup­ports car­bon trad­ing as the “solu­tion” to the cli­mate cri­sis, but car­bon mar­kets are noth­ing more than an excuse to con­tin­ue to pol­lute as usu­al, while also prof­it­ing from a whole new mar­ket in hot air.

We’re here as part of Cli­mate Jus­tice Action [2]. Like you, we have trav­elled to Copen­hagen because of a deeply-held belief that the world must act now to pre­vent run­away cli­mate change. Unlike you, we believe that the solu­tions to cli­mate change must be based on effec­tive­ness and glob­al jus­tice, not the needs of big busi­ness.

The Cli­mate Group presents itself as a net­work of organ­i­sa­tions who are seek­ing equi­table solu­tions to cli­mate change. Yet with mem­bers from the oil, avi­a­tion, and glob­al finance indus­tries [3], it is hard to believe it is free from vest­ed inter­ests. Rela­tion­ships with prof­it-seek­ing multi­na­tion­als are at the very heart of the organ­i­sa­tion.

We want to high­light the deep hypocrisy of this meet­ing. The Cli­mate Group claim that they want to “rec­on­cile devel­op­ment goals and cli­mate pro­tec­tion”, but car­bon trad­ing is sim­ply a way for the Glob­al North to retain its dom­i­nance and effec­tive­ly pri­va­tise the future of our plan­et. Sim­i­lar­ly, the exclu­siv­i­ty of this meet­ing is an excel­lent exam­ple of the way in which cli­mate nego­ti­a­tions favour the rich coun­tries who have caused the cli­mate cri­sis in the first place. Where are the cosy meet­ings with indige­nous peo­ples and South­ern farm­ers’ move­ments? Why are the voic­es of those most affect­ed by cli­mate change being exclud­ed, while busi­ness gets this kind of exclu­sive access? None of this can “rec­on­cile devel­op­ment goals and cli­mate pro­tec­tion”.

Mar­kets fun­da­men­tal­ly can­not solve cli­mate change. Their pur­pose is to max­imise prof­its, not reduce emis­sions. Putting busi­ness con­cerns, rather than social con­cerns, at the fore­front of solv­ing cli­mate change com­plete­ly ignores the fact that cor­po­ra­tions and eco­nom­ic growth have caused this prob­lem in the first place. There are real solu­tions to cli­mate change, but you won’t find them in this room.”

NOTES FOR EDITORS

1. The full list of atten­dees was: Steve Howard (CEO, The Cli­mate Group); Helen Clark (Admin­is­tra­tor of UNDP); Prince Albert II of Mona­co; Shai Agas­si (CEO of “Bet­ter Place); Alex Salmond (First Min­is­ter of Scot­land); Pres­i­dent Nasheed (Mal­dives); Pre­mier Jean Charest (Que­bec); Pre­mier Mike Rann (South Aus­tralia); Gov­er­nor Jose Sier­ra (San Pao­lo); Min­is­ter Christa Thoben (North Rhine-West­phalia); Pre­dis­ent Jean-Paul Huchon (Ile-de-France); Pres­i­dent Jose Mon­til­la (Cat­alo­nia); Gov­er­nor Jim Doyle (Wis­con­sin); Pre­mier Greg Selinger (Man­i­to­ba); First Min­is­ter Car­wyn Jones (Wales); Pre­mier Gor­don Camp­bell (British Colom­bia); Pre­mier Eva Aari­ak (Nunavut); Gov­er­nor Chris Gre­goire (Wash­ing­ton); Min­is­ter Kate Jones (Queens­land); Min­is­ter Erik Van Heljnin­gen (South Hol­land); Min­is­ter John Ger­ret­sen (Ontario); Min­is­ter Dr. Markus Soed­er (Bavaria).

2. http://www.climate-justice-action.org/
3. Mem­bers of The Cli­mate Group include BP, Tesco, Vir­gin Atlantic, HSBC and Bar­clays. See http://www.theclimategroup.org.