Camp for Climate Action — protest round-up

Wednes­day 2nd Sep­tem­ber 2009

Activists Invade Con­struc­tion Com­pa­ny HQ

Wednes­day 2nd Sep­tem­ber 2009
Don't Build Kingsnorth banner at Laing O'Rourke
Activists Invade Con­struc­tion Com­pa­ny HQ

Activists from Don’t Build Kingsnorth have today invad­ed the Dart­ford offices of con­struc­tion giant Laing O’Rourke. The protest is against the com­pa­ny’s bid to build Britain’s first coal fired pow­er plant in 30 Years at Kingsnorth in Kent.

A large group of activists entered the offices, hand­ed out leaflets and talked to staff. Mean­while, anoth­er team scaled the build­ing and hung a ban­ner read­ing “Don’t Build Kingsnorth”.

Laing O’Rourke is among six com­pa­nies bid­ding to build the con­tro­ver­sial pow­er sta­tion which would, if built, emit more car­bon diox­ide than the entire coun­try of Ghana[1].

One of the activists, Pietro Tes­ta (35) said, “In their pub­lic­i­ty Laing O’Rourke claim that their peo­ple want to respond to unprece­dent­ed envi­ron­men­tal chal­lenges. We’re here today to hold Laing O’Rourke to account and to tell them clear­ly that build­ing Kingsnorth would direct­ly con­tribute to an unprece­dent­ed envi­ron­men­tal cat­a­stro­phe.”

Anoth­er activist, Han­nah Chisolm (21) added, “Coal is the dirt­i­est form of fos­sil fuel. Cli­mate change is already killing 300,000 peo­ple a year[2]. Build­ing anoth­er coal pow­er sta­tion is clear­ly insan­i­ty. We were inspired by Thames Val­ley Cli­mate Action’s action at the offices of anoth­er Kingsnorth bid­der, BAM Nut­tall ear­li­er in the year. Any firm bid­ding to build Kingsnorth needs to know the extent of the oppo­si­tion they will face.”

“A year ago I went to the Cli­mate Camp[3], which was held out­side Kingsnorth. Today’s protest shows that, even though the loca­tion of the Cli­mate Camp has changed, Kingsnorth remains a tar­get for Cli­mate Change cam­paign­ers.”

Con­tact: 07950 457 344 for inter­views and pho­tos

ENDS

Notes to edi­tors

1. Car­bon Diox­ide Infor­ma­tion Analy­sis Cen­ter: http://cdiac.ornl.gov/
2. Glob­al Human­i­tar­i­an Forum: http://www.ghf-geneva.org/
3. Cli­mate Camp: http://climatecamp.org.uk/

Leaflet hand­ed out to staff

—–

2.9.09
This morn­ing cli­mate activists entered the Dept of Ener­gy and Cli­mate Change [pic], protest­ed out­side [pic] and blocked the door with a canoe [twit­pics 1|2|3|4]

—–

Cli­mate Activists Hit Big Busi­ness and Banks

Tues­day 1st Sep­tem­ber 2009

Today over 300 activists from the Cli­mate Camp took action against the root caus­es of cli­mate change.

RBS push and shoveRBS blockadeRBS trading floor occupied
20 activists block­ad­ed the head­quar­ters of RBS in the City of Lon­don from 8.15am [1]. Sev­en activists glued them­selves to each oth­er in the trad­ing floor inside the offices, and were removed by the police at 1.30pm. One has been arrest­ed. 70 pro­test­ers arrived at 10am and rushed a sec­ond entrance, forc­ing RBS to close the build­ing. As of 4pm, the activists were show­ing no signs of leav­ing. [RBS-spe­cif­ic press release]
[Videos 1 | 2 | 3]

Edelman naked truth7 naked pro­test­ers demon­strat­ed at the offices of Edel­man PR, expos­ing the naked truth behind E.ON’s green­wash cam­paign around new coal-fired pow­er sta­tions in the UK. [2] The super­glued pro­test­ers were removed at 1pm. [Edel­man-spe­cif­ic press release] [Edel­man protest video]

At 11am activists from Alber­ta, Cana­da, accom­pa­nied by 300 par­tic­i­pants from the cli­mate camp, marched from Trafal­gar square to the Nation­al Por­trait Gallery, the Cana­di­an embassy, and the head offices of BP and Shell. [3] Activists climbed onto the bal­cony of the Shell build­ing in Water­loo and dis­lodged the ‘S’ from the main sign to reveal the word ‘Hell’. [BP protest video] [Shell protest video]

Mad­die Alin­s­ka said: “This shows that peo­ple realise that it is becom­ing nec­es­sary to take action because bankers, cor­po­ra­tions and politi­cians are unwill­ing and unable to meet the great­est chal­lenge human­i­ty has ever faced. We are see­ing first hand how every­body has the right and respon­si­bil­i­ty to take action on cli­mate change.”

Many of the peo­ple who took part in the actions were first time pro­test­ers who took part in Direct Action train­ing at the Camp for Cli­mate Action. [4]

Tra­cy Singh com­ment­ed: “It’s the first time I’ve tak­en to the streets like this. Cli­mate Camp has giv­en me the skills and the con­fi­dence to get involved. I’ve got­ten so tired of wait­ing for gov­ern­ments and busi­ness­es to do some­thing – it’s about time we took mat­ters into our own hands.”

Notes for Edi­tors

1. RBS is 70% owned by the UK gov­ern­ment, but is nonethe­less con­tin­u­ing to invest in car­bon-inten­sive indus­tries, includ­ing mil­lions in E.ON since being nation­alised.
2. Edel­man PR have been han­dling E.ON’s account since 2008. E.ON own both Kingsnorth pow­er sta­tion in Kent, and the Rat­cliffe-on-Soar plant in Not­ting­hamshire, the 3rd biggest coal sta­tion in the UK.
3. Shell are heav­i­ly com­mit­ted to the min­ing of Tar Sands in Cana­da, which is caus­ing the death and dis­rup­tion of Alberta’s indige­nous com­mu­ni­ties. BP have tak­en a sig­nif­i­cant stake in the oper­a­tions since 2007. The Nation­al Por­trait Gallery is spon­sored by BP.
4. The Camp for Cli­mate Action has tar­get­ed Drax (2006), Heathrow (2007), Kingsnorth (2008) and was held in Lon­don this year August 28th – Sep­tem­ber 2nd.

—–


Con­grat­u­lat­ing eOn for win­ning the Great Cli­mate Swoop vote — videos 1 | 2

—–
Sep­tem­ber 1, 2009
An affin­i­ty group of anar­chists who had been par­tic­i­pat­ing in Cli­mate Camp and had been con­cerned about the tone and low impact of some of the main­stream camp actions decid­ed to vis­it the Dai­ly Mail head office in the hope of hav­ing a few words. The imme­di­ate trig­ger for this was the poor write up the Camp had received in that week’s paper which stereo­typed those at camp as ‘young, posh idiots’, although all the activists involved had many oth­er moti­va­tions for this action. Most of all, as work­ing-class peo­ple with a sense of basic human sol­i­dar­i­ty, all those present detest­ed the Mail for its sex­ist and racist over­tones and long record of con­sis­tent­ly scape­goat­ing and demon­is­ing mar­gin­alised social groups such as immi­grants, queers, trans­peo­ple, the unem­ployed, youth stig­ma­tised as “chavs”, as well as spe­cif­ic instances like the incred­i­bly inac­cu­rate hack job of an arti­cle about anar­chists in the run-up to the G20.

The group locat­ed the Mail’s head office on Der­ry Street in leafy Kens­ing­ton, masked up and attempt­ed to enter the build­ing, fly­ing a red and black flag and shout­ing anti-cap­i­tal­ist and anti-Dai­ly Mail chants. The group approached a door clear­ly marked ‘Vis­i­tors’, but were made to feel rather unwel­come by the reac­tion of sev­er­al secu­ri­ty guards — both uni­formed and plain clothed — who imme­di­ate­ly locked the revolv­ing door and attacked and threat­ened the ‘vis­i­tors’. Pub­lic reac­tion was warm, with some passers-by pho­tograph­ing and film­ing the action and shout­ing their oppo­si­tion both to the Mail and the sever­i­ty of the reac­tion.

There was a dis­pro­por­tion­ate over-reac­tion by armed police, cul­mi­nat­ing in a very vis­i­ble get-togeth­er on the scenic banks of the lake in Hyde Park — sev­er­al police vehi­cles, sev­er­al anar­chists, and sev­er­al swans were in atten­dance. Although the group did­n’t get to have the lit­tle chat they’d intend­ed with the Mail jour­nal­ists, those involved spoke of feel­ing invig­o­rat­ed and empow­ered by the action and its recep­tion — intim­i­dat­ing heav­i­ly armed men just by singing and ask­ing ques­tions, for instance, was a new expe­ri­ence for many of them. And we bet the hacks shit them­selves a lit­tle bit too.

—–

Autonomous Anar­chists for Earth Lib­er­a­tion
1.9.2009
Last night Autonomous Anar­chists took action against some of Lon­don’s biggest cli­mate crim­i­nals.

last nights tar­gets were..

*E.ON — Chains around their door han­dles and expand­ing foam in their locks.
*World Coal Insti­tute — Is now bear­ing a new and more appro­pri­ate slo­gan ‘Stop Cli­mate Change Now’.
*D1 Oils PLC — Expand­ing foam in the locks and also now reads ‘Stop Cli­mate Change Now’.

A hand­ful of Star­bucks also got the expand­ing foam treat­ment, just for good mea­sure. (no cap­i­tal­ist cof­fee for the bankers while they’re wait­ing for their locks to be replaced!)

The actions were in sol­i­dar­i­ty with the Cli­mate Camp activists tak­ing direct action on cli­mate crim­i­nals around Lon­don today, we hope you enjoy your ‘ram­bling raf­fle of resis­tance’!

.….

1st Sep­tem­ber 2009

direct action against cli­mate crim­i­nals

Last night between mid­night and 2am a group of autonomous anar­chists tar­get­ted 4 build­ings across cen­tral Lon­don for their con­tin­ued involve­ment with crimes against a plan­et meant to be shared by all of us, not auc­tioned off for prof­it.

The world coal insti­tute had its door han­dles chained togeth­er and expand­ing foam piped into its locks, the activists then went on to tar­get E.ON (the com­pa­ny behind cli­mate camp tar­get Kingsnorth pow­er sta­tion) with more expand­ing foam and graf­fi­ti read­ing “stop cli­mate change now A”, an iden­ti­cal attack was then aimed at D1 Oils PLC and one more at a Star­bucks cof­fee out­let (recent­ly slat­ed in the media for keep­ing their taps run­ning 24 hours a day)

Whilst their has been spec­u­la­tion about this being mis­in­for­ma­tion I assure you these attacks DID hap­pen, whilst the graf­fi­ti may well have been scrubbed off this morn­ing the activists did their best to make sure that no one would be able to enter the build­ings and cause even more atroc­i­ties today.

—–

Mes­sages left at Blue NG Bath HQ
Fri­day 4th Sep­tem­ber 2009
It seems that peo­ple have tak­en it upon them­selves to remind Bio­fu­els com­pa­ny Blue NG that Bio­fu­els are caus­ing major eco­log­i­cal and social cat­a­stro­phe through­out the globe.

On my way to work this morn­ing, I noticed that the offices of Bio­fu­els com­pa­ny Blue NG had been redec­o­rat­ed with chalk mes­sages high­light­ing the social and envi­ron­men­tal effects of Bio­fu­el. The mes­sages also showed sup­port for the deci­sion of Southall coun­cil­lors and res­i­dents to reject the build­ing of a Blue NG bio­fu­els refin­ery on their doorstep.

Mes­sages includ­ed -
* Plan­et — 10, Blue NG — 0 (a ref­er­ence to the num­ber of coun­cil­lors who vot­ed against the plant)
* Green­wash won’t bio­fool us

and loads more

—–

Cli­mate Camp Strike Twice

Mon­day 31st August 2009

Cli­mate Campers are head­ing out into Lon­don after sev­er­al days of learn­ing about cli­mate change and tak­ing action at the Black­heath Camp. Activists are launch­ing a ‘clean up oper­a­tion’ of the Trea­sury at 11am today, and a flash mob at Lon­don City Air­port at 12 noon.

Armed with boil­er suits and clean­ing equip­ment, the pro­test­ers will expose the Treasury’s con­tin­ued dirty prac­tice of using tax­pay­ers’ mon­ey to fund fos­sil fuel extraction(1) in spite of the Government’s claim to be a glob­al leader in the fight against cli­mate change. The pro­test­ers will announce their pres­ence on this ‘anti-bank hol­i­day’ by drop­ping a ban­ner pro­claim­ing ‘Cli­mate Change Doesn’t Take Hol­i­days’.
[Clean­ing the Trea­sury video]

Pro­test­er Nimsha Doshi says “We’ve had enough of false solu­tions and false promis­es. We’re here to expose the Gov­ern­men­t’s role as a cli­mate crim­i­nal, and the polit­i­cal sys­tem’s fail­ure to fight against cli­mate change”.

At Lon­don City Air­port, the campers are protest­ing against the recent­ly approved 50% expan­sion of the air­port. Local res­i­dents were out­raged this July as Newham Coun­cil, sup­port­ed by May­or Boris John­son, agreed to allow an extra 50,000 plane jour­neys from the air­port, bring­ing City’s annu­al flight total to 120,000.(2)
[Flash­mob report]

Cli­mate Camper Anna Marko­va said: ‘We will be there to protest against cor­po­ra­tions dri­ving the cli­mate change agen­da. They have pushed through the expan­sion of Lon­don City Air­port against the wish­es of the local com­mu­ni­ty. This Decem­ber the same big busi­ness­es will be fly­ing from here to pro­mote false solu­tions, like car­bon trad­ing, at the UN Cli­mate Con­fer­ence at Copen­hagen. We can’t afford to let busi­ness­es dri­ve us into cli­mate cri­sis.’

‘Lon­don City Air­port and Newham Coun­cil have coop­er­at­ed to mis­in­form and deceive the res­i­dents of South East Lon­don. The expan­sion means improv­ing trans­port for the rich at the cost of fur­ther wors­en­ing air qual­i­ty and noise pol­lu­tion in the area, and erod­ing the health and well­be­ing of local com­mu­ni­ties.’

Cli­mate Camper Tara Williams said, ‘After a few days of work­shops and train­ing at the Camp, I’m get­ting ready to take direct action. Many of us who have nev­er tak­en part in direct action before are now por­ing over maps and plan­ning the next protests. With Euro­pean Cli­mate Exchange and Bar­clays tar­get­ed ear­li­er in the week, it’s now 4 down, 18 to go…’ (3)

Ends

For com­ment or images, please phone 0793 209 6677, 07040900905 or 07772861099.#
Notes to Edi­tors

1. The Gov­ern­ment now has a major­i­ty stake in the Roy­al Bank of Scot­land, who fund car­bon-inten­sive indus­tries such as tar sands extrac­tion in Cana­da.
2. The avi­a­tion indus­try is the fastest grow­ing CO2 emis­sions source in the UK. Near­ly 30 air­port expan­sion projects are planned in the UK at the moment. The Gov­ern­ment plans to off­set these emis­sions through the EU Car­bon Trad­ing scheme, which will put the bur­den on devel­op­ing coun­tries instead of actu­al­ly low­er­ing emis­sions.
3. Cli­mate Camp released a tar­get list of 22 ‘cli­mate crim­i­nals’ ear­li­er in the week, con­tain­ing the head offices of some of the country’s most pol­lut­ing cor­po­ra­tions, and depart­ments respon­si­ble for fail­ing cli­mate poli­cies.

—–

Cli­mate pro­test­ers scale Car­bon Exchange — 27th August 2009

—–

Logging protests spread in Borneo as nomads block roads

24 August 2009
Protests by the Penan tribe in Bor­neo have esca­lat­ed, with twelve vil­lages com­ing togeth­er to mount new road block­ades against the log­ging and plan­ta­tion com­pa­nies that are destroy­ing their rain­for­est.

Penan blockade24 August 2009
Protests by the Penan tribe in Bor­neo have esca­lat­ed, with twelve vil­lages com­ing togeth­er to mount new road block­ades against the log­ging and plan­ta­tion com­pa­nies that are destroy­ing their rain­for­est.

Jour­nal­ists cov­er­ing at the block­ades were inter­cept­ed by police with machine­guns and tak­en away for ques­tion­ing.

Hun­dreds of Penan have blocked roads at three new loca­tions in the inte­ri­or of Sarawak, in the Malaysian part of the island of Bor­neo. The pro­tes­tors are demand­ing an end to log­ging and plan­ta­tions on their land with­out their con­sent, and recog­ni­tion of their land own­er­ship rights.

BBC TV pre­sen­ter Bruce Par­ry vis­it­ed the Penan for his hit series, ‘Tribe’. One Penan told him, ‘It’s not true that we Penan do not want progress. Not the ‘progress’ where log­ging com­pa­nies move on to the land. What we want is real progress. What we need is land rights first of all.’

The new protests come only weeks after block­ades by two near­by Penan vil­lages. The destruc­tion of their for­est robs the hunter-gath­er­er Penan of the ani­mals and plants they eat and pol­lutes the rivers they fish in. With­out the for­est, many Penan have dif­fi­cul­ty feed­ing their fam­i­lies.

The Penan have been strug­gling for more than twen­ty years against the log­ging com­pa­nies that oper­ate on their land with full gov­ern­ment back­ing. In areas where the valu­able trees have been cut down, the com­pa­nies are clear­ing the for­est com­plete­ly to make way for oil palm plan­ta­tions.

The block­ades are aimed at forc­ing the Malaysian tim­ber com­pa­nies Sam­ling, Inter­hill, Rim­bunan Hijau and KTS to end their activ­i­ties on the Penan’s land with­out the tribe’s con­sent. One of the ear­li­er block­ades, mount­ed in June at the set­tle­ment of Ba Marong, result­ed in the with­draw­al of a KTS sub­sidiary from the area – but the Penan fear that the log­gers may return.

In anoth­er Penan area, the noto­ri­ous com­pa­ny Sam­ling is advanc­ing on an area of the tribe’s for­est that has nev­er been logged before. Observers say that the road built by the com­pa­ny is like­ly to reach the remote Ba Jawi area with­in weeks.

Survival’s direc­tor Stephen Cor­ry said today, ‘The log­ging and plan­ta­tion com­pa­nies are pre­vent­ing the Penan from being able to feed their chil­dren. It’s no won­der they’re tak­ing to the bar­ri­cades. Penan in some areas are cur­rent­ly receiv­ing food aid – before the log­gers arrived, they would nev­er have need­ed such hand-outs. The Malaysian gov­ern­ment must rec­og­nize that this land is theirs and stops sanc­tion­ing its destruc­tion.’

National and Global Calls for Tasmania’s Forests, World Heritage not Woodchips

MEDIA RELEASE 01.09.09
NATIONAL AND GLOBAL CALLS FOR TASMANIA’S FORESTS, WORLD HERITAGE NOT WOODCHIPS.

Con­ser­va­tion­ists around the nation and globe are protest­ing today against the con­tin­u­ing log­ging and the wood chip­ping of world her­itage val­ued old growth forests of Tas­ma­nia.

Not Woodchips Tasmania banner hangMEDIA RELEASE 01.09.09
NATIONAL AND GLOBAL CALLS FOR TASMANIA’S FORESTS, WORLD HERITAGE NOT WOODCHIPS.

Con­ser­va­tion­ists around the nation and globe are protest­ing today against the con­tin­u­ing log­ging and the wood chip­ping of world her­itage val­ued old growth forests of Tas­ma­nia.

Ban­ners read­ing “TASMANIA’S ANCIENT FORESTS, WORLD HERITAGE NOT WOODCHIPS” and “THE WHOLE WORLD IS WATCHING” are being dis­played across the coun­try.

In Hobart 4 activists are dis­play­ing this mes­sage hang­ing from ropes off the roof of Par­lia­ment house.

In Mel­bourne the mes­sage has been paint­ed onto silos on Lan­ridge St. in Colling­wood.

In Can­ber­ra, the mes­sage is being dis­played on ban­ners unfurled from the roof of Fed­er­al Par­lia­ment house.

In Ade­laide a ban­ner dis­play­ing the mes­sage is hang­ing from build­ings in the CBD.

In New­cas­tle con­ser­va­tion­ists have con­struct­ed an 84 metre tree. Only trees greater than 84 metres qual­i­fy for pro­tec­tion as “giants”. Ancient trees that do not reach the 84 metre marked are felled and wood chipped.

Actions across the nation today are sup­port­ed by inter­na­tion­al actions in Scot­land, Ire­land, Switzer­land, Italy and oth­er sol­i­dar­i­ty actions are expect­ed to roll on through­out the day.

“The Fed­er­al and Tas­man­ian State Gov­ern­ments are con­tin­u­ing well into the 21st cen­tu­ry to dec­i­mate the very last unpro­tect­ed areas of world her­itage bor­dered old growth for­est. These last stands of old growth have been delib­er­ate­ly left out of the World Her­itage Area to facil­i­tate their destruc­tion.” Said spokesper­son Ed Hill.

“Despite a unan­i­mous IUCN (Inter­na­tion­al Union for Con­ser­va­tion and Nature) deci­sion of 21 coun­tries to extend exist­ing world her­itage bor­ders to include ancient forests locat­ed in the Upper Flo­ren­tine, Styx, Low­er Weld Val­ley and Mid­dle Huon, These forests are cur­rent­ly sub­ject to indus­tri­al scale clear felling.” Said spokesper­son Ed Hill.

“The nation wants an end to the envi­ron­men­tal mad­ness that is tak­ing place in Tasmania’s forests. The out­right van­dal­ism of old growth forests is a cli­mate dis­as­ter that is hap­pen­ing right now.” Said Mr Hill.

“ A recent report* by Pro­fes­sor Bren­dan Mack­ey and Aus­tralian ANU sci­en­tists states Tasmania’s tem­per­ate old growth forests store far more car­bon then was pre­vi­ous­ly thought. The study found that tem­per­ate forests store more car­bon than trop­i­cal forests and that Tasmania’s ancient forests are some of the most car­bon rich forests in the world.”

“The pro­tec­tion of Tasmania’s ancient forests is a sim­ple and effec­tive strat­e­gy to help reduce the effects of cat­a­stroph­ic cli­mate change and needs to be seri­ous­ly con­sid­ered by State and Fed­er­al Gov­ern­ments. The sci­ence on forests and cli­mate change is loud and clear yet the Fed­er­al Gov­ern­ment con­tin­ues to twid­dle their thumbs in the face of dan­ger­ous cli­mate change as old growth forests are cleared dai­ly.” Said Mr Hill.

Algonquins set for peaceful, indefinite blockade

The Algo­nquins of Bar­riere lake have announced plans to set up an indef­i­nite road­block on their land—beginning today, Sep­tem­ber 1, 2009.

Algonquins - Honour Your WordThe Algo­nquins of Bar­riere lake have announced plans to set up an indef­i­nite road­block on their land—beginning today, Sep­tem­ber 1, 2009.

In a press state­ment (below), the north­ern Que­bec First Nation says the road­block, aimed at pre­vent­ing log­ging on their tra­di­tion­al lands, will con­tin­ue “until Que­bec imple­ments agree­ments cov­er­ing forestry on Bar­riere Lake’s lands, and the Que­bec and Cana­di­an government’s rec­og­nize the First Nation’s legit­i­mate lead­er­ship.”

For more infor­ma­tion, con­tact Chief Jean Mau­rice Matchewan at 819–435- 2136 – or, if the line is busy, 514–398-7432

Algo­nquins peace­ful­ly block log­ging until agree­ments and lead­er­ship respect­ed?

For Imme­di­ate Release
Sep­tem­ber 1, 2009

Algo­nquins place bod­ies in front of log­ging machines: pre­vent log­ging until Que­bec and Cana­da respect agree­ments and lead­er­ship

Kitiganik/Rapid Lake, Algo­nquin Ter­ri­to­ry /- This after­noon mem­bers of the Algo­nquins of Bar­riere Lake will peace­ful­ly block the machines of Abitibi-Bowa­ter forestry work­ers, pre­vent­ing log­ging in their ter­ri­to­ry until Que­bec imple­ments agree­ments cov­er­ing forestry on Bar­riere Lake’s lands, and the Que­bec and Cana­di­an government’s rec­og­nize the First Nation’s legit­i­mate lead­er­ship.

“Our com­mu­ni­ty has decid­ed there will be no forestry activ­i­ties or any new devel­op­ments in our Tri­lat­er­al Agree­ment Ter­ri­to­ry until the sta­tus of our lead­er­ship and the agree­ments we signed are resolved to our community’s sat­is­fac­tion,” says Jean Mau­rice Matchewan, Cus­tom­ary Chief of Bar­riere Lake. “The Que­bec gov­ern­ment has act­ed in bad faith, giv­ing com­pa­nies the go-ahead to log while they ignore their legal oblig­a­tions, leav­ing us with no choice but to stop forestry oper­a­tions until Que­bec com­plies with the agree­ment. We have wait­ed more than 3 years for Que­bec to imple­ment it.”

Matchewan received no response to a let­ter he sent to Man­ag­er Paul Grondin of Abitibi-Bowater’s Mani­wa­ki mill on August 25, request­ing that the com­pa­ny sus­pend log­ging oper­a­tions until the gov­ern­ments fol­low through on their oblig­a­tions.

“Our plan is to peace­ful­ly put our bod­ies in front of their machines until we get some results. We expect they may use the police, because we are used to such tac­tics. This is our ter­ri­to­ry and they can’t push us off our lands,” says Matchewan.

Cana­da and Que­bec have refused to acknowl­edge the results of a June 24, 2009 lead­er­ship selec­tion process that res­e­lect­ed Jean Mau­rice Matchewan as the legit­i­mate Cus­tom­ary Chief of Bar­riere Lake. Nation­al Chief Shawn Atleo of the Assem­bly of First Nations, how­ev­er, met with Chief Matchewan on August 19, to dis­cuss the Tri­lat­er­al agree­ment and oth­er com­mu­ni­ty con­cerns. The
Algo­nquin Nation Sec­re­tari­at, a Trib­al Coun­cil rep­re­sent­ing three Algo­nquin com­mu­ni­ties includ­ing Bar­riere Lake, also recent­ly reit­er­at­ed their sup­port for Chief Matchewan.

“Instead of act­ing hon­ourably and coop­er­at­ing with our Cus­tom­ary Coun­cil to imple­ment these signed agree­ments, the fed­er­al and provin­cial gov­ern­ments have been work­ing in uni­son to try and install a minor­i­ty fac­tion whom they can use to sign off on the cut­ting of our for­est,” says Matchewan.

Bar­riere Lake wants Cana­da and Que­bec to uphold signed agree­ments dat­ing back to the 1991 Tri­lat­er­al Agree­ment, a land­mark sus­tain­able devel­op­ment and resource co-man­age­ment agree­ment praised by the Unit­ed Nations and the Roy­al Com­mis­sion on Abo­rig­i­nal Peo­ples. Cana­da has been in breach of the agree­ment since 2001. Que­bec signed a com­ple­men­tary Bilat­er­al Agree­ment in
1998, but has stalled despite the 2006 rec­om­men­da­tions of two for­mer Que­bec Cab­i­net Min­is­ters, Que­bec spe­cial rep­re­sen­ta­tive John Ciac­cia and Bar­riere Lake spe­cial rep­re­sen­ta­tive Clif­ford Lin­coln, that the agree­ment be imple­ment­ed. The agree­ment is intend­ed to allow log­ging to con­tin­ue while pro­tect­ing the Algonquin’s’ tra­di­tion­al way of life and giv­ing them a $1.5 mil­lion share of the $100 mil­lion in resource rev­enue that comes out of their ter­ri­to­ry every year.

Mainshill Solidarity Camp Update: two and a half months on & 1st newsletter

Over two and a half months ago the Main­shill Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp was set up on the site of a new open cast coal mine at Main­shill Wood, in sup­port of the local com­mu­ni­ties efforts to oppose the project and Scot­tish Coal’s plans, and in defi­ance of plan­ning approval grant­ed by South Lanark­shire Coun­cil

Its the fort that countsOver two and a half months ago the Main­shill Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp was set up on the site of a new open cast coal mine at Main­shill Wood, in sup­port of the local com­mu­ni­ties efforts to oppose the project and Scot­tish Coal’s plans, and in defi­ance of plan­ning approval grant­ed by South Lanark­shire Coun­cil.

A lot has hap­pened dur­ing the past few months: Scot­tish Coal and Strath­clyde Police bust­ed through bar­ri­cades with a JCB and removed machin­ery, the Camp for Cli­mate Action in Scot­land set up in the field next to the camp, actions have hap­pened, and final­ly an issue has been made of coal expan­sion in Scot­land. Amaz­ing work and research has been done into the health impacts of open cast coal min­ing for sur­round­ing com­mu­ni­ties (see http://coalhealthstudy.org/) – an issue that Scot­tish Coal, Lord Home (the land own­er) and South Lanark­shire Coun­cil can no longer silence.

So why have a group of peo­ple decid­ed to live on the site of a rel­a­tive­ly small open cast coal mine, that is most­ly plan­ta­tion for­est and sur­round­ed by only a few small com­mu­ni­ties, and why is this so impor­tant? Because it is places such as Dou­glas that direct action, root­ed in com­mu­ni­ty strug­gle, can be at its most effec­tive. At Main­shill, the fight is against feu­dal land own­er­ship and a fat-cat Lord, a cor­rupt Coun­cil that has removed local demo­c­ra­t­ic process­es, a mul­ti-mil­lion pound min­ing com­pa­ny that stops at noth­ing for prof­it and gov­ern­ment pol­i­cy that pri­ori­tis­es cheap coal over com­mu­ni­ty health and the envi­ron­ment.

Now the cam­paign is firm­ly estab­lished and is win­ning a lot of ground, pres­sure and momen­tum must be kept up and the strug­gle must be brought to oth­er com­mu­ni­ties fac­ing sim­i­lar injus­tices as Dou­glas.
The camp will defend this lib­er­at­ed space and stand in sol­i­dar­i­ty with com­mu­ni­ties until the Wood is saved!

How you can help:
— Vis­it and stay at the camp! Even if its just for a day we’d love to have you
— Dona­tions – both finan­cial and any­thing from our wish­list here are much appre­ci­at­ed
— Spread the word – help dis­trib­ute fly­ers, send emails and tell peo­ple about the strug­gle
— Take action – cen­tral Scot­land is lit­tered with coal infra­struc­ture, cor­po­rate HQs, open cast mines and pow­er sta­tions

http://mainshill.noflag.org.uk/
http://coalactionscotland.noflag.org.uk/

—-
Mainshill header
Main­shill Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp Newslet­ter no. 1 out now!

The sto­ry so far, uncov­ered health impacts from open cast­ing, the Camp for Cli­mate Action, assault­ed by a coun­cilor, and oth­er coal strug­gles at Hunter­ston and Cous­land – the Main­shill Sol­i­dar­i­ty Camp & Coal Action Newslet­ter is now out!

Down­load the pdf here: http://coalactionscotland.noflag.org.uk/?p=669

Please copy and dis­trib­ute far and wide. We hope to make this a reg­u­lar pub­li­ca­tion and wel­come sub­mis­sions – please email * mainshill@riseup.net * with any arti­cles, sto­ries or pho­tos.

German anti-nuclear protests heat up ahead of 21 September election

About one thou­sand Cas­tor cas­kets full of nuclear waste are pro­duced by just one atom­ic pow­er sta­tion dur­ing its oper­a­tive life with­out there being a final repos­i­to­ry for it any­where.

That’s a point the Ger­man anti-nuclear activist group Cam­pact is mak­ing with demon­stra­tions in 12 cities of the coun­try, which goes to the polls on 27 Sep­tem­ber.

About one thou­sand Cas­tor cas­kets full of nuclear waste are pro­duced by just one atom­ic pow­er sta­tion dur­ing its oper­a­tive life with­out there being a final repos­i­to­ry for it any­where.

That’s a point the Ger­man anti-nuclear activist group Cam­pact is mak­ing with demon­stra­tions in 12 cities of the coun­try, which goes to the polls on 27 Sep­tem­ber.

The con­ser­v­a­tives of Chan­cel­lor Angela Merkel, keen back­ers of nuclear pow­er, are tipped to win by a large mar­gin.

Last Fri­day Com­pact put on its spec­tac­u­lar show in Berlin, the cap­i­tal, on Sat­ur­day they were in Ham­burg, the sec­ond-largest city.

Part of the action is a huge life­like mock-up of a Cas­tor cas­ket, the kind of recep­ta­cle in which waste is trans­port­ed and stored.

Mean­while 30 farm trac­tors from the Gor­leben waste dump area are rolling towards Berlin, to be joined by 100 more lat­er, for a demo on 5 Sep­tem­ber expect­ed to draw tens of thou­sands of pro­test­ers. More than 1,000 peo­ple and 120 trac­tors sent them on their jour­ney of hun­dreds of kilo­me­tres. At this writ­ing they had passed through Lueneb­urg, Uelzen and Braun­schweig.

A left­wing news­pa­per, “taz”, reports that nuclear pow­er com­pa­nies are giv­ing their appren­tices time off work to attend a pro-nuclear demon­stra­tion at the Bib­lis pow­er sta­tion, one of whose two blocks is to be shut down by the end of this year. It is sit­u­at­ed in a heav­i­ly indus­tri­alised and pop­u­lat­ed cen­tral Ger­man area encom­pass­ing Frankfurt/Main, Darm­stadt and Mannheim. The pow­er com­pa­nies deny that they’re pres­sur­ing the trainees, but one source in the RWE com­pa­ny said there’s a clear order to take part. If all do, that would make 10,000 pro-nuclear demon­stra­tors.

Mean­while the Fed­er­al Radi­a­tion pro­tec­tion agency reports that a lump of 20,000 tonnes is like­ly to drop 40 to 45 metres out of the ceil­ing of a for­mer salt mine in Morsleben which is one of sev­er­al dodgy nuclear waste dumps in Ger­many.

The agency says there’s even a pos­si­bil­i­ty that the entire ceil­ing could col­lapse. Peo­ple in the area would be able to feel it, glass­es would wob­ble. Brine is run­ning in the mine and has even formed sta­lagtites.

Morsleben used to be the nuclear dump of the for­mer com­mu­nist East Ger­many and Ms Merkel, then envi­ron­ment min­is­ter, allowed dump­ing to con­tin­ue there despite warn­ings by sci­en­tists that it was unsafe. It was final­ly stopped by a court order, ini­ti­at­ed by Green­peace.Anti-nuclear demonstration in central Hamburg

Lammas Ecovillage, Wales gets Planning Approval (finally!)

Today the Lam­mas group won plan­ning per­mis­sion for their ecov­il­lage project.

Today the Lam­mas group won plan­ning per­mis­sion for their ecov­il­lage project.

Lam­mas is a new set­tle­ment of 9 eco-small­hold­ings, a camp­site and a com­mu­ni­ty hub build­ing, to start con­struc­tion this autumn. It will be sit­ed on 76 acres of mixed pas­ture and wood­land next to the vil­lage of Gland­wr, Pem­brokeshire. The site is on land cur­rent­ly belong­ing to Pont-y-gafel farm, next to the vil­lage of Gland­wr, North Pem­brokeshire. The site is cur­rent­ly used as farm­land.

After their first appli­ca­tion was turned down for insuf­fi­cient detail, Lam­mas put in an amend­ed appli­ca­tion on March 17th 2008. The first appli­ca­tion had filled an entire wheel­bar­row (the sec­ond con­tain­u­ing 150 illus­tra­tions and 1200 pages of text would have requ­uired 2 bar­rows — so it was sub­mit­ted elec­tron­i­cal­ly!) How­ev­er, their sec­ond appli­ca­tion was again turned down in Sep­tem­ber 2008. Fur­ther frus­tra­tion was expe­ri­enced when the Welsh Assem­bly refused them the right to appeal on the grounds that the appli­ca­tion was invalid on some tech­ni­cal­i­ty. How­ev­er, appeal they did, and the appeal into the refusal of the revised plan­ning appli­ca­tion was heard ear­li­er this sum­mer. The inspec­tor, intrigued and unvon­ven­tion­al­ly, chose not to allow lam­ma’s expert wit­ness­es to present their full cas­es in favour, pre­fer­ring to open the debate about the appli­ca­tion to the whole floor so that all voic­es in favour and against the appli­ca­tion were heard. Insp­tec­tor took a few weeks to reach his deci­sion in con­sid­er­ing the whole appli­ca­tion.

Despite the launch of a pio­neer­ing low-impact pol­i­cy by Pem­brokeshire Coun­ty Coun­cil in 2006 and years of metic­u­lous ground­work, con­scien­cious ded­i­ca­tion and patient delib­er­a­tion, the long exact­ing process sought for approval of the project has tak­en over 2 years since the ini­tial appli­ca­tion was first sub­mit­ted. Empha­sis­ing the imbal­ance of the cur­rent plan­ning sys­tem which does­n’t take account of cli­mate change, Paul Wim­bush of the Lam­mas project even sug­gest­ed that it would have been eas­i­er to have applied for plan­ning per­mis­sion to build a pow­er sta­tion! That it has suc­ceed­ed is due to a tremen­dous dri­ve to suc­ceed born of an inspi­ra­tional vision of low impact/low car­bon liv­ing for the 21st cen­tu­ry.

Lam­mas was con­ceived as the first large-scale low impact project that would work with the plan­ning sys­tem, (ie: to apply for plan­ning per­mis­sion in advance of the con­struc­tion and estab­lish­ment of the project, or in oth­er word, not ret­ro­spec­tive­ly). The Lam­mas Ecov­il­lage will be com­plete­ly inde­pen­dent of all mains ser­vices. All water will be sourced from the site using a com­bi­na­tion of an exist­ing spring for drink­ing water and rain­wa­ter har­vest­ing from rooftops. All elec­tric­i­ty will be pro­duced on site using renew­ables. For­tu­nate­ly there is an exist­ing water tur­bine sys­tem on site which Lam­mas plans to ren­o­vate. All organ­ic waste will be com­post­ed on site using a com­bi­na­tion of com­post toi­lets, wormeries and com­post heaps. Fuel, in the form of cop­piced wil­low and ele­phant grass, will be grown on site.

The project will be man­aged by Lam­mas Low Impact Ini­tia­tives Ltd, a coop­er­a­tive reg­is­tered under the Indus­tri­al and Prov­i­dent Soci­ety Act. A com­pre­hen­sive man­age­ment plan has been com­piled which sets out how the project will be estab­lished and run.

The small­hold­ings will essen­tial­ly be agri­cul­tur­al lease­holds which are con­di­tion­al­ly tied to require­ments as set out in the man­age­ment plan. Thus the objec­tives of the project will be assured in the long term. The require­ments will cov­er issues such as liveli­hood, trans­port, ser­vices and mon­i­tor­ing.

The peo­ple select­ed for the first phase of the project have devel­oped well researched plans for their liveli­hoods. In addi­tion to sourc­ing fuel, water, elec­tric­i­ty and food from the site, the 9 house­holds will also run small-scale farm busi­ness­es pro­duc­ing a wide range of qual­i­ty goods includ­ing hazel­nuts, smoked ham, soft fruit, wood­land crafts, veg­eta­bles and cooked foods. The pro­duce will be mar­ket­ed through a vari­ety of out­lets includ­ing local shops and a Lam­mas mar­ket stall.

Com­mon Land
Some areas of the project will be man­aged in com­mon. There is an area of exist­ing broadleaf wood­land on site which will be con­served for its wildlife val­ue. The exist­ing conifer wood­land will be man­aged and har­vest­ed as a resource for build­ing. There will also be shared graz­ing and fuel crop areas as well as a millpond and vil­lage green.

In hind­sight
As Larch Max­ey has writ­ten: “Lam­mas soft­ly-soft­ly approach, seek­ing to work with the plan­ning sys­tem, has led to huge delays while prospec­tive res­i­dents liv­ing local­ly [have poured] sav­ings into inad­e­quate acco­mo­da­tion. Oppor­tu­ni­ties to har­ness peo­ple’s ener­gy have been lost. Whilst it remains invalu­able to have the Low-Impact Devel­op­ment move­ment broad­ened by projects seek­ing plan­ning per­mis­sion before mov­ing on, the plan­ning sys­tem is ill equipped for the speed and scale of the chal­langes we face. Until it is equipped, peo­ple must con­tin­ue to take direct action towards the sus­tain­abil­i­ty tran­si­tion in every way they can {includ­ing} build­ing low impact lives”.

More Info:
Ref: http://www.lammas.org.uk/ecovillage/news.htm Llamas Village Group

Land and Forest Occpation started in Lapland (Finland)

On the 26th of August an inter­na­tion­al occu­pa­tion­camp has been start­ed in Finnish Lap­land, due to the plan­ning of ura­ni­um min­ing and the plan­ning of a new nuclear plant. Locals and par­tic­i­pants from the cli­mate camp fin­land, decid­ed to com­bine pow­ers and try to pre­serve the lap­pish nature and way of life.

Forest in FinlandOn the 26th of August an inter­na­tion­al occu­pa­tion­camp has been start­ed in Finnish Lap­land, due to the plan­ning of ura­ni­um min­ing and the plan­ning of a new nuclear plant. Locals and par­tic­i­pants from the cli­mate camp fin­land, decid­ed to com­bine pow­ers and try to pre­serve the lap­pish nature and way of life.

lat­est news from the camp, Ran­ua ( FL)

August 31th, 2009
On August 26th a base­camp has been estab­lished for the Ran­ua Res­cue Are­va Min­ing Mon­i­tors. Dur­ing the Lap­land Nuclear Cli­mate Camp in July we learned from locals that Are­va has already began their ura­ni­um prospect­ing in Ran­ua, Lap­land. We have come here to mon­i­tor Are­va’s activ­i­ties and help sup­port the resis­tance to ura­ni­um min­ing here, and every­where.
We have found a beau­ti­ful loca­tion for the camp, near a lake, with­in an old for­est, on the edge of Are­va’s mas­sive prospect­ing claim area. We need thought­ful, respect­ful peo­ple, skills, sup­plies, sup­port, laugh­ter, and ded­i­ca­tion!
You can check the http://www.nuclearfreefinland.org site, and the blog on http://www.ranuarescue.blogspot.com.
Soon we will be send­ing pho­tos and direc­tions to get here, we will also set up a sched­ule for when peo­ple are most need­ed, what is need­ed, and what events will be hap­pen­ing.
When you want to come to the camp, con­tact in advance (camp (at) nuclearfreefinland.org) and tell of your arrival time in Ran­ua. From there you can phone the camp work phone num­ber +358 40 365 2041.[1]

——————————————————————–

So every­body who has some spare time on their hands is very wel­come to come.

Anoth­er Web­site: http://www.greenkids.de/europas-atomerbe/index.php/Ranua_Uranium_Exploration_Action

Climate protesters scale Carbon Exchange

27th August 2009
Cli­mate change pro­test­ers have scaled a build­ing in the City to high­light their oppo­si­tion to car­bon trad­ing.

Climate CasinoClimate casino - playing with police27th August 2009
Cli­mate change pro­test­ers have scaled a build­ing in the City to high­light their oppo­si­tion to car­bon trad­ing.

Activists tar­get­ed the Car­bon Exchange in Bish­ops­gate at about 0900 BST and unfurled a ban­ner claim­ing car­bon trad­ing to be a “false solu­tion”.

A Met­ro­pol­i­tan Police spokesman said about 20 activists were at the site and that offi­cers were “in atten­dance”.

Hun­dreds of pro­test­ers have gath­ered in Lon­don as part of Cli­mate Camp — a week of “edu­ca­tion on green issues”.

The site for the camp — Dart­mouth Field in Black­heath, south-east Lon­don — was kept secret until the last moment and details were sent to activists by text.

Activists had repeat­ed­ly refused to reveal the final loca­tion, say­ing they did not trust the police.

It fol­lowed accu­sa­tions that the Met­ro­pol­i­tan Police were heavy-hand­ed in polic­ing the G20 protests.

The site was cho­sen because it is with­in view of the City and near the Riv­er Thames, organ­is­ers said.

A Cli­mate Change spokes­woman said: “Some peo­ple are mak­ing huge prof­its from car­bon trad­ing, and politi­cians are telling us it’s cut­ting car­bon emis­sions but it’s not.

“Car­bon trad­ing is a false solu­tion that is doing noth­ing to tack­le cli­mate change. So busi­ness­es, bankers and gov­ern­ments are just gam­bling with our plan­et.”

The four key themes of the annu­al camp are edu­ca­tion, direct action, sus­tain­able liv­ing, and build­ing a move­ment to tack­le cli­mate change.

Ch Supt Helen Ball, of the Met­ro­pol­i­tan Police, said: “As yet we don’t know what camp par­tic­i­pants intend to do in the days ahead.

“I’d like to repeat our request that they talk to us about any protests they are plan­ning so we can ensure a pro­por­tion­ate polic­ing response and min­imise any fur­ther impact on Lon­don­ers.”

The campers have wind tur­bines on site and say they are com­post­ing their food and toi­let waste.

Flood plains

Cam­paign­ers say that about 3,000 activists are expect­ed to vis­it the camp over the com­ing week.

They will be invit­ed to work­shops on a range of sub­jects, from cli­mate change, bio­fu­els and the fight against Heathrow air­port, to yoga, wood­en pen­cil-mak­ing and ped­al-pow­ered sound sys­tems.

Organ­is­ers said this year’s venue sym­bol­ised the finan­cial and cor­po­rate cen­tres of pow­er, and was with­in the flood plains of the Riv­er Thames, which they warned was at risk of burst­ing its banks as cli­mate change esca­lat­ed.

The heath was the set­ting for the Peas­an­t’s Revol­tu­ion, which saw thou­sands of pro­test­ers demon­strate against tax­es more than 700 years ago.

The site host­ed Jack Cade’s Ken­tish rebel­lion against King Hen­ry VI in 1450, which was fol­lowed by the Bat­tle of Dept­ford Bridge in 1497 dur­ing which Cor­nish rebels camped at the site.

Irish climate camp & actions round-up

Peat pow­er worse than coal for CO2 emis­sions

Cli­mate Camp is up and run­ning at Shan­non­bridge, Co.Offaly — start­ed Sat­ur­day 15th August and goes on till Sun­day 23rd August.

Peat pow­er worse than coal for CO2 emis­sions

Cli­mate Camp is up and run­ning at Shan­non­bridge, Co.Offaly — start­ed Sat­ur­day 15th August and goes on till Sun­day 23rd August.

It’s about what we can do in the face of chang­ing cli­mate that will affect us all. Peat bogs are a liv­ing car­bon sink — greater even than forestry. Burn­ing peat releas­es more CO2 into the atmos­phere than burn­ing coal. The peat-fired pow­er­sta­tion beside the camp should have been shut down long ago — since our gov­ern­ment and Bord na Mona still fail to see the urgency of reduc­ing emis­sions, cli­mate camp will be stag­ing a major protest on Sat­ur­day 22nd August — this will be a day of action and fun, includ­ing street the­atre, art, etc, which will hope­ful­ly bring media atten­tion to this impor­tant issue.

Mean­while, the camp has lots of great work­shops every day this week about sus­tain­able liv­ing, peat bogs, forestry, cycling, renew­able ener­gy, etc, etc. Come along to my Trees and You work­shop on Wednes­day ! I will be talk­ing about trees as car­bon sinks, as vital ele­ments of bio­di­ver­si­ty, as added val­ue to farms and gar­dens, wood­land gar­dens, agro­forestry, CELT native tree nurs­ery, CELT Week­end in the Woods (19 / 20 Sep­tem­ber) (anoth­er event not to be missed !) .….….….….….……

So get your­self along to CLIMATE CAMP and be a part of it !

http://www.climatecamp.ie

Camp trail­er

Newslet­ter, includ­ing next organ­is­ing gath­er­ing
—–

Cli­mate Campers take Direct Action on Bog Restora­tion
August 23, 2009

Hun­dreds par­tic­i­pat­ed in Cli­mate Camp at Shan­non­bridge, which was held under the shad­ow of the peat burn­ing pow­er­sta­tion.
The Cli­mate Camp organ­ised three events to cre­ate bet­ter aware­ness around the indus­tri­al use of peat in pow­er­sta­tions.

Fian­na Fáil’s Gar­ret Tubridy unknow­ing­ly con­tributed to the eco-con­scious Cli­mate Camp at Shan­non­bridge. Recent local elec­tion posters were reused as part of the men’s toi­let facil­i­ties. Users did not have to look at his face. Gavin Harte gave a talk on com­mu­ni­cat­ing the media mes­sage with plen­ty of work­shops on drum­ming, Ross­port, per­ma­cul­ture, the end­less dream­catch­ers and there were more ban­ners being made than you could shake a stick at. It was great for kids and par­ents alike.

Lentil Dis­or­der pro­vid­ed the veg­gie food for the hun­gry mass­es with an oats cri­sis on the Sat­ur­day morn­ing. Choco­late flap­jacks sat­ed the appetites of ear­ly ris­ers.

Locals were bemused watch­ing the parade which left the camp short­ly after mid­day. The bar­men from both locals — Killeen’s and Luk­er’s pubs — waved at some of their new cus­tomers. Anoth­er local said noth­ing like this had ever hap­pened in Shan­non­bridge before. Paraders from the camp had dressed up as zom­bies and the dark forces of dan­ger­ous car­bon emis­sions with a sym­bol­ic chim­ney stack. Bif­fo of course led the zom­bies through the vil­lage! Campers had made ban­ners, plac­ards, dream catch­ers and an eclec­tic sound sys­tem boomed, ‘Black Bet­ty, Bam Alam’ and Mar­ley.

Kayak­ers got onto the lit­tle island in the mid­dle of the Shan­non hold­ing aloft a ban­ner ‘Sponge Bog Stops Floods’, as the parade reached the bridge timed nice­ly with cyclists return­ing from anoth­er direct action from the bog.

A few dif­fer­ent direct actions were planned and no one told me nuthin’.

Climate Justice Now banner
There are three peat pow­er­sta­tions in Ire­land, Lanes­boro and Eden­der­ry, where agile activists dropped ban­ners from, and Shan­non­bridge where there was a parade and some scuf­fles broke out when the parade could­n’t go up to the pow­er­sta­tion.
peat protest placardGive Peat a Chance placard
Look at ClimateCamp.ie for more infor­ma­tion about the issues.

—–

Cli­mate Campers take Direct Action on Bog Restora­tion
Filling in peat trenches
No time to waste — pre­serv­ing Irish peat­lands is essen­tial

Cli­mate campers of all ages at Shan­non­bridge took a direct action this morn­ing August 18th, on a near­by bog by fill­ing in trench­es that are used to drain the bog for cut­ting. The peace­ful demon­stra­tions last­ed 2 hours with police curi­ous­ly onlook­ing at the hard work­ing activists.
Peat train line trespass
This morn­ing at 11.30am six­ty odd Cli­mate Campers of all ages strolled 2km from the camp beside the Shan­non­bridge Peat Burn­ing Pow­er Plant towards one of the Bord na Móna man-made brown deserts out­side of the town. Equipped with some sacks, shov­els, pil­low cas­es, wheel­bar­rows, ban­ners and good cheer, they start­ed fill­ing in the trench­es made to drain the bogs with milled peat which was des­tined for burn­ing at the pow­er plant. The direct action con­tin­ued for about 2 hours fill­ing in a sig­nif­i­cant part of the trench. Local police watched as the cli­mate campers, includ­ing many chil­dren, dili­gent­ly set about their task and some engaged the police in con­ver­sa­tion explain­ing to them the rea­sons for their actions.

This is the first step that’s need­ed to restore our bogs” said Mol­ly Walsh, spokesper­son for Cli­mate Camp Ire­land. “Peo­ple don’t realise that when bogs are drained and dried, they release ample amounts of car­bon diox­ide, even before the peat is burnt. Degrad­ed peat­lands release 0.97 mil­lion tonnes of C02 annu­al­ly in Ire­land.” she added.
peat banners
Colour­ful ban­ners and plac­ards were unveiled on the bog say­ing “Cli­mate Change Costs Lives” and “The bog is our rain­for­est”. One ban­ner was mount­ed on a piece of peat-cut­ting machin­ery which said “Don’t Burn our Bogs”. Some of the activists board­ed a bog train, while oth­ers pushed them along, sym­bol­is­ing that human­i­ty is on the wag­on towards cli­mate chaos unless we halt these cli­mate chaos caus­ing activ­i­ties imme­di­ate­ly.

Come join us at the camp for more actions and work­shops! Cli­mate Camp Ire­land con­tin­ues at Shan­non­bridge until August 22nd with the main day of action. We call on every­one to come join us on a day of peace­ful civ­il dis­obe­di­ence to stop peat burn­ing at the Shan­non­bridge Pow­er Sta­tion.

—–

Cli­mate Camp shuts down two peat burn­ing pow­er sta­tions
22nd August 2009

The Cli­mate Camp cul­mi­nat­ed in Shan­non­bridge with a day of action. The unsus­tain­abil­i­ty of the peat burn­ing was suc­cess­ful­ly high­light­ed with actions at all three peat burn­ing pow­er plants. Activists suceed­ed in shut­ting down the two plants at Shan­non­bridge and Lanes­bor­ough. The Shan­non­bridge plant has been shut all week since the camp start­ed, and the Lanes­bor­ough plant was shut down by activists today.

This morn­ing a group of Cli­mate Camp activists car­ried out a peace­ful direct action at Lanes­bor­ough peat burn­ing pow­er plant. Some activists locked them­selves to the gates while anoth­er group entered the plant and car­ried out a ban­ner drop on one of the build­ings which read “Give Peat a Chance.” The pow­er plan­t’s chim­ney stack stopped bel­low­ing its car­bon emis­sions for most of the work­ing day. Two activists were arrest­ed.

Ger­ald Glynn, a spokesper­son for Cli­mate Camp said, “We took this peace­ful direct action to high­light the urgency of cli­mate jus­tice issues. Our bogs are our rain­forests and we need to pro­tect them. We can’t wait for our gov­ern­ments to act. Let’s give peat a chance now.”

At mid­day anoth­er group of Cli­mate Campers tar­get­ted a third pow­er plant in Eden­der­ry, owned by Bord na Mona. Five women dropped a ban­ner from the pow­er sta­tion’s con­vey­or belt which read “Cli­mate Jus­tice Now”. The work­ers at the plant came out and took an inter­est in the action. “Bord na Mon­a’s sus­tain­abil­i­ty talk is noth­ing but that, talk, they are still extract­ing and burn­ing the dirt­i­est fos­sil fuel. We are send­ing out a strong mes­sage of sol­i­dar­i­ty with com­mu­ni­ties in the Glob­al South suf­fer­ing from the impacts of cli­mate change.” said Jer­rieann Sul­li­van, a spokesper­son for the group.

A live­ly colour­ful parade began at 12pm in Shan­non­bridge and made its way through the town, across the riv­er and back towards the pow­er plant. Many cre­ative ban­ners were car­ried by Cli­mate Campers of all ages with slo­gans such as “Cli­mate Change Costs Lives” and “Bogs are our rain­forests”. Peo­ple were dressed up as zom­bies and bog mon­sters as they parad­ed, chant­ed, danced and sang through the town while locals looked on with amused inter­est. Anoth­er group merged with the parade after tak­ing more direct action fill­ing in trench­es which drain the bogs to start restor­ing our peat­lands. A Cli­mate Camp riv­er crew also unveiled a ban­ner say­ing “Sponge bog stops floods” to many cheers from the main parade.

“300,000 peo­ple are dying annu­al­ly world­wide as a result of cli­mate change, not to men­tion loss­es in wildlife and bio­di­ver­si­ty.” said Nan­cy Ser­ra­no, spokesper­son for Cli­mate Camp. “Peo­ple in the mid­lands deserve bet­ter com­mu­ni­ty-ori­ent­ed sus­tain­able jobs. We need to think long-term and we need to start now.” she added.

ENDS

www.climatecamp.ieFor inter­view or fur­ther infor­ma­tion con­tact the cli­mate camp media phone 085 7851241
or for spe­cif­ic infor­ma­tion on the action in Lanes­bor­ough — 085 1386675

http://www.flickr.com/photos/climatecampireland

—–
Daily Shannonbridge blockade
Dai­ly peace­ful block­ade of Shan­non­bridge pow­er sta­tion