Radley Lakes saved

Fol­low­ing years of cam­paign­ing through legal chan­nels, and the squat­ting of a build­ing by the side of Thrupp Lake at the begin­ning of 2007, the Save Radley Lakes cam­paign is vic­to­ri­ous — hoorah! Use the search above for old sto­ries and pho­tos from the cam­paign — sto­ries about the recent vic­to­ry and future plans are below.

Thrupp Lake at sunsetFol­low­ing years of cam­paign­ing through legal chan­nels, and the squat­ting of a build­ing by the side of Thrupp Lake at the begin­ning of 2007, the Save Radley Lakes cam­paign is vic­to­ri­ous — hoorah! Use the search above for old sto­ries and pho­tos from the cam­paign — sto­ries about the recent vic­to­ry and future plans are below.

End of an Era

Yes­ter­day’s (17.12.08) announce­ment by RWE Npow­er brought to an end a 41 month cam­paign to save the last remain­ing Radley Lakes, Thrupp and Bull­field Lakes, from destruc­tion by being filled with waste pul­verised fuel ash (PFA) from the Did­cot A Pow­er Sta­tion.

It also brings to an end 23 years of fill­ing of old grav­el pits in Radley with pow­er sta­tion ash, which began in 1985, when the Pow­er Sta­tion was run by the nation­alised Cen­tral Elec­tric­i­ty Gen­er­at­ing Board and when the envi­ron­ment fig­ured less high­ly in pop­u­lar con­cerns. The choice back then was between land­fill with gen­er­al waste, com­mer­cial exploita­tion, or ash. Local peo­ple vot­ed for the ash, which is prob­a­bly what they would have got any­way.

The ash had been pumped into the grav­el pits as a slur­ry via an under­ground pipeline. Many grav­el pits were filled in this way over the inter­ven­ing years and peo­ple did not seem to mind, though eye­brows were being increas­ing­ly raised, and there were objec­tions to the fill­ing of Lakes H and I, which had become a spec­tac­u­lar haven for wild­fowl. In 2005, RWE npow­er sought per­mis­sion to fill the the two remain­ing grav­el pits. These were the old­est exca­va­tions, which had, over the half cen­tu­ry or so of their exis­tence, become restored into beau­ti­ful lakes and had been giv­en names by local peo­ple.

How the Lakes Were Saved (in a nut­shell)

The small­er Bull­field Lake was res­cued from this fate fol­low­ing protests back in 2005, but the much larg­er and more impor­tant Thrupp Lake has remained under threat ever since, as plan­ning, legal and oth­er bat­tles raged around it. As a last resort, local peo­ple even applied to have the area turned into a Town Green. This too failed, but it remains the sub­ject of a Judi­cial Review, which was due to be heard in the High Court in Feb­ru­ary 2009. In Feb­ru­ary 2007, hav­ing got all nec­es­sary plan­ning per­mis­sions and removed the pro­tes­tors who’d occu­pied the lake­side build­ing, npow­er went ahead with clear­ance work on the site, and many trees were destroyed. Work then had to stop until the Autumn, because of nest­ing birds. After car­ry­ing out some pre­lim­i­nary work in Octo­ber 2007, npow­er sud­den­ly ceased their activ­i­ties on the site.

Then, in Feb­ru­ary 2008, events took an unex­pect­ed turn: npow­er announced an inter­im reprieve for Thrupp Lake. A lit­tle lat­er, Waste Recy­cling Group (WRG) open­ly came for­ward with a pro­pos­al that would save Thrupp Lake for ever. It has tak­en until now to bring this to fruition. Plan­ning per­mis­sion was need­ed, tech­ni­cal prob­lems had to be resolved, a com­mer­cial agree­ment had to be reached; then there was the ques­tion of what to do with Thrupp Lake. Many del­i­cate nego­ti­a­tions, it seemed, were going on in the back­ground, cul­mi­nat­ing in yes­ter­day’s momen­tous announce­ment.

Tri­umph at Last!

To mark the occa­sion, the Pow­er Sta­tion oper­a­tors invit­ed press and pub­lic into the grounds of San­dles, the house on the shore Thrupp Lake. There, Mr John Rain­ford, the Pow­er Sta­tion man­ag­er, announced that, because the pow­er sta­tion had found bet­ter and more sus­tain­able ways of dis­pos­ing of its ash, there would be no need to destroy Thrupp Lake, not now, not ever. He made it clear that RWE npow­er was offer­ing The Lake to the local com­mu­ni­ty as a nature con­ser­va­tion area and that dis­cus­sions were under­way with the North­moor Trust to pro­vide for its man­age­ment. It was hoped that the house could be con­vert­ed into an edu­ca­tion­al cen­tre.

Rep­re­sen­ta­tives of the com­mu­ni­ty, Jen­ny Standen, chair­man of Radley Parish Coun­cil, and Basil Crow­ley, chair­man of Save Radley Lakes, expressed their sat­is­fac­tion and delight, thank­ing npow­er for their mag­na­nim­i­ty and look­ing for­ward to work­ing with them in restor­ing the area to cre­ate some­thing to be real­ly proud of. Both expressed grat­i­tude to all the peo­ple who had sup­port­ed the cam­paign and whose sup­port and tire­less efforts had helped bring this about.

With the late Decem­ber after­noon sun­shine cast­ing long shad­ows across the ves­tiges of San­dles’ lawn, a jubi­lant par­ty atmos­phere pre­vailed. Cham­pagne flowed, hands were shak­en, cam­eras clicked and, in a touch of sur­re­al­i­ty, a man in a frog suit played a solo trom­bone fan­fare at the lake­side to her­ald the lake’s sal­va­tion.Radley Lakes saved trombone fanfare

Where the Ash Will Go

The ash that was to have gone into Thrupp Lake will now go to Waste Recy­cling Group’s Sut­ton Courte­nay land­fill site next to the pow­er sta­tion where it will be used for engi­neer­ing, cap­ping and land­scap­ing of the land­fill oper­a­tions. Sur­plus ash will be stock­piled in a planned new stor­age facil­i­ty, which received plan­ning per­mis­sion back in July, and will main­tain WRG’s essen­tial sup­ply of ash after 2015 when the pow­er sta­tion will have closed. Because the pow­er sta­tion and the waste site are imme­di­ate­ly adja­cent, the ash can be trans­port­ed direct­ly across the fence and put into the stock­pile, which is not far from the pow­er sta­tion bound­ary. At no time will this ash be trans­port­ed on pub­lic roads, which means there will be no adverse impact on the res­i­dents of Sut­ton Courte­nay. Indeed, it will remove the need to import over half a mil­lion tonnes of sub­sti­tute mate­ri­als after 2015, which would have had an impact!

http://www.saveradleylakes.org.uk/
http://www.radleyvillage.org.uk/news/News0009.htm

Japanese Whaling Fleet Is On the Run

Fri­day, Decem­ber 19, 2008
The Sea Shep­herd Con­ser­va­tion Soci­ety ship Steve Irwin now has the entire Japan­ese whal­ing fleet on the run.

At 2345 G.M.T. the Steve Irwin inter­cept­ed the Japan­ese har­poon ves­sel Yushin Maru #2 inside the Aus­tralian Antarc­tic Eco­nom­ic Exclu­sion Zone at 64°26 South and 132° 40′ East.

Sea Shepherd give chaseFri­day, Decem­ber 19, 2008
The Sea Shep­herd Con­ser­va­tion Soci­ety ship Steve Irwin now has the entire Japan­ese whal­ing fleet on the run.

At 2345 G.M.T. the Steve Irwin inter­cept­ed the Japan­ese har­poon ves­sel Yushin Maru #2 inside the Aus­tralian Antarc­tic Eco­nom­ic Exclu­sion Zone at 64°26 South and 132° 40′ East.

The encounter took place in dense fog and in dan­ger­ous ice con­di­tions. The Steve Irwin launched a Delta boat with a crew to attack the Yushin Maru #2 with rot­ten but­ter bombs. Unfor­tu­nate­ly the wind increased to fifty knots with bliz­zard con­di­tions. Cap­tain Paul Wat­son called the small boat crew back for safe­ty rea­sons when they were halfway to their tar­get some three miles away.

The Yushin Maru #2 then head­ed due North to lead the Steve Irwin away from the whal­ing fleet. The decoy did not work. The Steve Irwin is now in pur­suit of the whal­ing fleet.

They have ceased whal­ing oper­a­tions and they are now run­ning from the Sea Shep­herd crew.

The Yushin Maru #2 was the same ves­sel that the Steve Irwin crew board­ed in Jan­u­ary 2007. This year the crew observed that the Yushin Maru #2 has set up large net­ting to be run along the side of the ship to pre­vent board­ing par­ties from going over the side. When the whalers real­ized that the Steve Irwin was onto them, they imme­di­ate­ly ran on deck to deploy the net­ting.

“It looks like Whale Wars, sea­son #2 is offi­cial­ly under­way,” said Cap­tain Paul Wat­son. “We’ve got them on the run. They are not in the Ross Sea where they said they would be. They are in Aus­tralian waters. The Sea Shep­herd Con­ser­va­tion Soci­ety is offi­cial­ly call­ing on Aus­tralian Envi­ron­ment Min­is­ter Peter Gar­rett and For­eign Min­is­ter Stephen Smith to order the Japan­ese fleet to com­ply with the orders of the Aus­tralian Fed­er­al Court and to cease and desist from killing to whales in Aus­tralian waters.”

COAL CARAVAN — route & dates update

The fab­u­lous cli­mate car­a­van lives on.

This time we will be the COAL CARAVAN, walk­ing and cycling between the sites for pro­posed open cast mines and new pow­er sta­tions in the Mid­lands, York­shire and North East.

The fab­u­lous cli­mate car­a­van lives on.

This time we will be the COAL CARAVAN, walk­ing and cycling between the sites for pro­posed open cast mines and new pow­er sta­tions in the Mid­lands, York­shire and North East.

On our route we’ll be talk­ing to local peo­ple, organ­is­ing bicy­cled pow­er films and events, hold­ing pub­lic dis­cus­sions and dis­plays, and link­ing groups from dif­fer­ent areas to help strength­en iso­lat­ed cam­paigns.

24 April 2009 Co2al Car­a­van launch par­ty, Sumac Cen­tre Not­ting­ham
25 April – set off to Ship­ley Glen
27/28 April – cycle to York­shire
29 April – Fair­bairn Ings
30 April — 2 May – cycle to North East
3 May – Anti-open­cast work­shops
4 May (Bank Hol­i­day Mon­day) – Grand Finale

The car­a­van itself will not involve direct action (although we may offer train­ing, if local groups so request). It will be open­ly organ­ised and if you would like to go on the list please email caravan@climatecamp.org.uk.

Stop the Weymouth Relief Road Update & Videos — wish list & overhanging branch tactic!

Lat­est news: a tech­ni­cal­i­ty has meant a tree top protest against a new £87m relief road scheme in Dorset has con­tin­ued despite a legal rul­ing.

The gov­ern­ment has giv­en the go-ahead for the Wey­mouth relief road and Dorset Coun­ty Coun­cil secured a land pos­ses­sion order to evict pro­tes­tors.

2 Mile Coppice in summer timeLat­est news: a tech­ni­cal­i­ty has meant a tree top protest against a new £87m relief road scheme in Dorset has con­tin­ued despite a legal rul­ing.

The gov­ern­ment has giv­en the go-ahead for the Wey­mouth relief road and Dorset Coun­ty Coun­cil secured a land pos­ses­sion order to evict pro­tes­tors.

But the demon­stra­tion, which began last Thurs­day, was con­tin­u­ing on Fri­day and has delayed work at Two Mile Cop­pice.

Pro­tes­tors have now occu­pied a tree branch over­hang­ing neigh­bour­ing land.

In the morn­ing, Dorset Coun­ty Coun­cil served a com­pul­so­ry pur­chase order on the land which meant the pro­tes­tors were legal­ly required to leave.

While the oak tree they are in is on land cov­ered by the notice, the branch they occu­py over­hangs adja­cent Wood­land Trust land.

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Tat list — What we need

And lat­est update (Sat­ur­day 20th Decem­ber):-

www.greenvoice.com — short­ly to be a web space for us

PLEASE CIRCULATE

update– we have an address of sorts, and dona­tions and xmas gifts would be great !”!!

Cash is ok to send as it is a secure post box, but phonecards for Orange are bet­ter than cash.
Also need AAA and AA bat­ter­ies — Dura­cell and Ener­gis­er or alka­line ONLY.
Rope — Green or blue polypro­pe­lene — 6mm or 10mm thick­ness.
Rope — Sta­t­ic climb­ing line — 10mm or larg­er.
Rope — Dynam­ic climb­ing line — any thick­ness
Rope — arborist lines — we have 2 tree sur­geons liv­ing with us and this rope is use­ful.

sec­ond hand rope is nor­mal­ly FREE from climb­ing cen­tres ‑indoor cen­tres often throw their ropes out every 6 ‑9 months — just call in and ask for it.

Tarps, plas­tic sheet­ing.

Tools — ham­mers, nails, saws, prun­ing saws, bill hooks.

2 way radios, nightvi­sion gog­gles, cat­a­pults (to get rope up), grap­pling hooks. Head torch­es — LED are best.

The Wood­land Trust still own the land that the road is being built on, but have waived their 14 days notice peri­od and told Dorset Coun­ty Coun­cil that it is ok to get on with cut­ting down the Ancient wood­land — basi­cal­ly they have thrown in the tow­el with­out even stand­ing up to argue or delay the destruc­tion on their land. The fact that the Wood­land Trust still own the land was record­ed in the Court case of the 18th decem­ber 2008 of Dorset
Coun­ty Coun­cil ’ v ’ Per­sons Unknown in Wey­mouth Coun­ty Court. Her Majesty’s Land Reg­istry in Ply­mouth also con­firmed it.

The peo­ple of Wey­mouth brought Two Mile Copse through pub­lic sub­scrip­tion. Local peo­ple dug deeply into their pock­ets and put their mon­ey into con­serv­ing the land for per­pe­tu­ri­ty, for us and all future gen­er­a­tions.

Dorset Coun­ty Coun­cil have so far not giv­en one pen­ny in com­pen­sa­tion, either to the Wood­land Trust, nor local peo­ple who raised the pub­lic mon­ey to pre­serve the wood in the first place.

—————————-

More update:-

Hi Ho!, HO!, Ho!

Liv­ing up 6 trees at wey­mouth — Two Mile Copse / Ted­dy Bear Woods. I helped fight against
this road back in 1996, and 2004 and we won it then.

BUT now they gone and done it and cut 70% of the trees.….

We have a 400 year old Oak in Ancient Wood­land that’s are pro­tect­ing and 4 Ash trees reach­ing 90 feet up into the sky. Also a tall and healthy young elm.

We have a tree house, a net, lots of walk­ways in the sky and an off route vis­i­tors site on the ground.

GET HELP + MEDIA now if u can.

regards

2 Mile Copse Protest Camp
c/o Lor­ton Barn
Lor­ton Lane
Lit­tle­Moor
Wey­mouth
DT3 5QH

Sor­ry we cur­rent­ly are in the process of arrang­ing a site mobile phone — num­ber to fol­low
short­ly

Links/more below & in pre­vi­ous sto­ry.

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Fol­low­ing from the Stop the Wey­mouth Relief Road bul­letin. Appar­ent­ly there is a chain­saw gang now oper­at­ing 1.5 miles fur­ther North from Lit­tle­moor, between Lit­tle­moor and Ridge­way. There are 3 pro­test­ers down there but they need more back up. I have been in con­tact with the pro­test­ers occu­py­ing the sight at Lit­tle­moor. They are in urgent need of more sup­port from locals to help on the ground and oth­ers to help build tree hous­es along the route, all help would be great­ly appre­ci­at­ed.

On site mobiles are 07792717821 / 07807952822

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Videos: 1 | 2

COUNCIL chiefs will go to court tomor­row in a bid to remove a grow­ing num­ber of pro­test­ers from the route of Weymouth’s planned relief road.

It comes as the stand-off inten­si­fied in Two Mile Cop­pice as eco-war­riors began mov­ing a fence and telling secu­ri­ty staff it encroached too far into the ancient wood­land.

But today Dorset Coun­ty Coun­cil is hop­ing to be grant­ed pos­ses­sion of the land by Wey­mouth Coun­ty Court.

The coun­cil is ask­ing the court to rule that the pro­test­ers must leave the prop­er­ty, and if they agree to that request, when they must leave.

The num­ber of pro­test­ers reached sev­en as a camp was set up beneath an oak tree that stands alone in the fenced off area of the woods.

Four pro­test­ers set up camp and roped off their own area below three more based up inside the tree.

One new arrival, known only as Andy, said: “We are here to stop the road as there are many rea­sons why the wood­land should not be chopped down.

“The oak tree we are in and beneath is hun­dreds of years old.

“We heard about the peo­ple here and want­ed to come to sup­port the action.

“We can help pro­vide food and what­ev­er else they need in the tree.

“If you let the coun­cil go ahead with the road it won’t be long before they want to chop more of this beau­ti­ful wood­land down for devel­op­ment.

“The road won’t actu­al­ly help pre­vent traf­fic con­ges­tion in the end any­way.”

A coun­cil spokesman con­firmed clear­ance work is con­tin­u­ing in the west­ern edge strip of Two Mile Cop­pice and said it is hoped this will be fin­ished before Christ­mas.

She said: “There is a coun­ty court hear­ing today where the coun­ty coun­cil will be ask­ing for an order for the tres­passers to hand over the land to the pos­ses­sion of the coun­cil.”

Nick Pep­per, 41, has camped in the woods since he came down from a tree which has now been chopped down.

Mr Pep­per, who pre­vi­ous­ly lived in Wey­mouth but now lives in Bris­tol, said: “As soon as we received the legal papers to evict the tree we thought we’d bet­ter have a legal­ly legit­i­mate sup­port camp.

“We are pro­tect­ed under the 1977 Crim­i­nal Law Act which stops us from being legal­ly evict­ed or ille­gal­ly assault­ed.

“We’ve actu­al­ly squat­ted in an area of land so we can pro­tect the peo­ple up the tree from intim­i­da­tion or ille­gal activ­i­ty.

“There needs to be open access so we can mon­i­tor what’s going on.”

Forest and climate activists shut down Gunns’ Triabunna mill woodchip mill, Tasmania

2008-12-16
Sev­en activists were charged with tres­pass today after shut­ting down Gunns’ Tri­abun­na mill for over sev­en hours this morn­ing. Fif­teen peo­ple occu­pied the wood­chip mill at 4:45am, with sev­en activists attach­ing them­selves to a con­vey­or belt and oth­er machin­ery.

FIFTEEN FOREST AND CLIMATE ACTIVISTS SHUT DOWN TRIABUNNA WOODCHIP MILL, TASMANIA2008-12-16
Sev­en activists were charged with tres­pass today after shut­ting down Gunns’ Tri­abun­na mill for over sev­en hours this morn­ing. Fif­teen peo­ple occu­pied the wood­chip mill at 4:45am, with sev­en activists attach­ing them­selves to a con­vey­or belt and oth­er machin­ery.

“The Car­bon Pol­lu­tion Reduc­tion Scheme White Paper makes it plain that the Fed­er­al ALP is not com­mit­ted to ‘seri­ous and cred­i­ble’ emis­sions reduc­tions. There is a fail­ure by pol­i­cy mak­ers to grasp that we are fac­ing a cli­mate emer­gency – the poli­cies pro­posed by the White Paper will result in the dis­ap­pear­ance of Tas­ma­ni­a’s unique alpine ecosys­tems, the col­lapse of the Bar­ri­er Reef, and the sali­na­tion of Kakadu,” Huon Val­ley Envi­ron­ment Cen­tre spokesper­son said.

“Tar­gets of a 5% reduc­tion by 2020 are piti­ful and inter­na­tion­al­ly humil­i­at­ing. The Aus­tralian Gov­ern­men­t’s increased assis­tance to large emit­ters pro­vides a clear demon­stra­tion that their pri­or­i­ties lie with heav­i­ly pol­lut­ing big busi­ness, and not with Aus­trali­a’s peo­ple and nat­ur­al envi­ron­ment,” War­rick Jor­dan said.

“In Tas­ma­nia, the log­ging, burn­ing and wood­chip­ping of old growth for­est releas­es mas­sive quan­ti­ties of car­bon. Gunns Lim­it­ed is the dri­ver of this gross­ly irre­spon­si­ble and moral­ly rep­re­hen­si­ble sit­u­a­tion,” Still Wild Still Threat­ened spokesper­son said.

“Gunns hides this immense cli­mate crime behind offi­cial car­bon account­ing fig­ures which exclude the log­ging of native for­est. Tas­ma­ni­a’s old growth forests are glob­al­ly sig­nif­i­cant as unique ecosys­tems and car­bon stores, and their pro­tec­tion can play a sig­nif­i­cant role in Aus­tralia tak­ing real cli­mate action,” SWST

“The Tas­man­ian Gov­ern­ment has pub­licly expressed a will to address cli­mate change. If the Bartlett gov­ern­ment is seri­ous about address­ing cli­mate change then it will leg­is­late an end to old growth log­ging” con­clud­ed SWST.

Scottish coal rail terminal shut down by local residents and Climate campaigners

15/12/2008: this morn­ing thir­ty cam­paign­ers from Coal Action Scot­land togeth­er with local res­i­dents peace­ful­ly block­ad­ed the entrance to the Scot­tish Coal-oper­at­ed Raven­struther coal rail ter­mi­nal in South Lanark­shire. Hav­ing stopped its reopen­ing after the week­end, this action is cur­rent­ly pre­vent­ing the deliv­ery of thou­sands of tonnes of coal to pow­er sta­tions across Scot­land. Pro­tes­tors intend to stay in place as long as pos­si­ble.

Lanarkshire coal action tripod15/12/2008: this morn­ing thir­ty cam­paign­ers from Coal Action Scot­land togeth­er with local res­i­dents peace­ful­ly block­ad­ed the entrance to the Scot­tish Coal-oper­at­ed Raven­struther coal rail ter­mi­nal in South Lanark­shire. Hav­ing stopped its reopen­ing after the week­end, this action is cur­rent­ly pre­vent­ing the deliv­ery of thou­sands of tonnes of coal to pow­er sta­tions across Scot­land. Pro­tes­tors intend to stay in place as long as pos­si­ble.

With Scotland’s CO2 emis­sions increas­ing sig­nif­i­cant­ly, con­tin­u­ing the con­sump­tion of coal will make it impos­si­ble for Scot­land to meet its 80% tar­get reduc­tion in CO2 emis­sions by 2050. Angus Mcloud said “The fact is that the gov­ern­ment will not meet its own tar­gets. This con­firms what cli­mate pro­tes­tors have believed all along – that the Scot­tish gov­ern­ment is pay­ing lip ser­vice to the dan­gers of cli­mate change.”

The action is aim­ing to dis­rupt the oper­a­tions of Scot­tish Coal and Scot­tish Pow­er in the region. The pro­tes­tors are act­ing to oppose the five open cast coal mines that deliv­er coal to the rail ter­mi­nal and in resis­tance to the thir­teen new open cast coal mines due to open in Scot­land.

Pro­tes­tors erect­ed and scaled a 15ft scaf­fold­ing tri­pod, block­ing trucks from enter­ing the ter­mi­nal. Oth­ers are locked by their necks to a con­vey­or belt and a bull­doz­er, pre­vent­ing coal stock­piles from being loaded onto trains.

Tilly Gif­ford who is at the site said: “In the face of dan­ger­ous run­away cli­mate change, increas­ing our depen­dence on coal – the most pol­lut­ing of the fos­sil fuels – is sim­ply unac­cept­able. We urgent­ly need to make the tran­si­tion to renew­able ener­gy and close exist­ing mines. We shouldn’t even be think­ing about new ones.”

The demon­stra­tion today is in sup­port of com­mu­ni­ties oppos­ing new open cast mines. Rebec­ca Macken­zie, a local res­i­dent said: “We’re here today to send a clear mes­sage that we don’t want parts of Scot­land such as South Lanark­shire to become the most heav­i­ly mined areas in Europe, as they will be if per­mis­sion is grant­ed for all the new open cast coal mines cur­rent­ly being pro­posed. If sites such as Main­shill near Dou­glas can’t be stopped through legal avenues, then action will have to be tak­en to make sure these last remain­ing areas of un-mined coun­try­side aren’t destroyed”.

Beth Whe­lan, the cam­paign­er perched on the scaf­fold­ing tri­pod, said: “Local author­i­ties, the Scot­tish gov­ern­ment and com­pa­nies such as Scot­tish Coal and Scot­tish Pow­er are ignor­ing the sci­en­tif­ic evi­dence on cli­mate change. We have to take respon­si­bil­i­ty for our cli­mate and our future, and stop the coal indus­try and its expan­sion. This is what we doing today: act­ing respon­si­bly”.

It is esti­mat­ed that 6,380 tonnes of coal were stopped from being trans­port­ed from the coal mines to pow­er sta­tions, equiv­a­lent to 11,675,400 kg CO2 (11,675.4 tonnes) released into the atmos­phere.

Coal Action Scot­land apol­o­gizes to any work­ers affect­ed by today’s demon­stra­tion, but in rec­og­niz­ing the des­per­ate need to stop burn­ing coal sees no oth­er choice but to tar­get the com­pa­nies respon­si­ble for min­ing it.

The action last­ed over 8 hours and result­ed in 6 arrests and not a sin­gle chunk of coal was trans­port­ed from the ter­mi­nal.

http://coalactionedinburgh.wordpress.com/

Kelsterbach protest against airport extension, camp news & upcoming events, frankfurt / germany

On Sun­day, 14.12. about 150 peo­ple demon­strat­ed in the for­est of Kel­ster­bach (near Frank­furt / Main) against the con­struc­tion of the new run­way north of the cur­rent air­port site.

No Night Flights (German)On Sun­day, 14.12. about 150 peo­ple demon­strat­ed in the for­est of Kel­ster­bach (near Frank­furt / Main) against the con­struc­tion of the new run­way north of the cur­rent air­port site.

To famil­iar­ize with the sur­round­ing of the for­est, which fra­port (the com­pa­ny which runs the air­port) wants to destroy and in view of the area which prob­a­bly will be cleared first, the demon­stra­tion moved trough the for­est towards the air­port grounds, along the cur­rent path to where the road Okriftel­er crossed the motor­way 3 and the fast-train tracks. Through­out the Kel­ster­bach­er for­est are the prepara­to­ry mea­sures (removal of muni­tions, sub-wood and ani­mals) large­ly com­plet­ed. Among the prepara­to­ry mea­sures include mark­ing work on the trees. These were from the demon­stra­tors numer­ous and var­ied with paint and spray cans sup­ple­ment­ed, so that the ori­en­ta­tion for forestry work­ers in the for­est in the future will be more dif­fi­cult.

At the bridge on the ICE route had already post­ed the cops and blocked the tran­si­tion towards sound­proof­ing wall of the air­port. Under the obser­va­tion of a police heli­copter there was a short ral­ly, while on the road Okriftel­er many new slo­gans against the expan­sion were paint­ed.

The for­est walk was a good step from the activist lethar­gy of the past few months!

Upcom­ing events:

4th Jan­u­ary 2009: The first colour­ful walk in the forests in the new year will again explore the area and make the extent of for­est destruc­tion clear. Meet­ing: 14 clock For­est Camp

From the 12th Jan­u­ary 2009: pos­si­ble grub­bing begin­ning, Day X
Day X is the day on which the site is fenced and / or with the clear­ing work is begun. Get on the alarm lists (soon under www.waldbesetzung.blogsport.de or in the for­est camp)!

14th Jan­u­ary 2009: demon­stra­tion togeth­er with pupils, stu­dents and oth­ers against the Hes­s­ian con­di­tions in Frank­furt. Check: www.14januar.de

Even between the years, there will be activ­i­ties around the camp and against the expan­sion type. Keep you updat­ed on www.waldbesetzung.blogsport.de or www.flughafen-bi.de

Pre­vi­ous sto­ries about the camp: 1 | 2

Stop the new Leeds Opencast

Join us on Sat­ur­day 10th Jan­u­ary 2009 to march around the pro­posed open cast coal mine site at New­ton Lane, near Fair­burn Ings nature reserve and Castle­ford.

YANC SAYS:

NO CO2AL HOLE

It’s time to say NO!

We don’t want a dirty open­cast coal site adding to cli­mate change

Join us on Sat­ur­day 10th Jan­u­ary 2009 to march around the pro­posed open cast coal mine site at New­ton Lane, near Fair­burn Ings nature reserve and Castle­ford.

YANC SAYS:

NO CO2AL HOLE

It’s time to say NO!

We don’t want a dirty open­cast coal site adding to cli­mate change

Join us on Sat­ur­day 10th Jan­u­ary 2009 to march around the pro­posed open cast coal mine site at New­ton Lane, near Fair­burn Ings nature reserve and Castle­ford. Meet at the White Horse in Led­ston at 12 noon for a 12:30 start. We will take a route on pub­lic rights of way around and through the pro­posed open cast site. The walk should take no more than an hour.

This protest event will be a joint ven­ture between YANC (York­shire Against New Coal) and RAGE (Res­i­dents Against Green­belt Expan­sion).

For a map of the area includ­ing loca­tion of Led­ston, see the RAGE web­site at: www.savefairburnings.org.uk

White Horse pub post­code is WF10 2AB. Add this post­code to mul­timap for direc­tions.

Mul­timap link: http://www.multimap.com/maps/?qs=WF10+2AB&countryCode=GB

We will have some ban­ners and plac­ards but please feel free to make and bring your own.

Media will be invit­ed.

If we are to tack­le cli­mate change, coal must be left in the ground. We need clean, green renew­able tech­nol­o­gy, ener­gy effi­cien­cy and decen­tralised ener­gy.

Your New Years Res­o­lu­tion? To stop cli­mate change!

For fur­ther infor­ma­tion see the YANC web­site: www.yanc.org.uk or find us on Face­book.

York­shire Against New Coal
events@yanc.org.uk

Titnore Woods battle goes on! Upcoming events & update

DETERMINED eco-pro­test­ers in Wor­thing are fac­ing up to the hard­est chal­lenge yet in their two and a half year occu­pa­tion of threat­ened wood­land.

Trees drawingDETERMINED eco-pro­test­ers in Wor­thing are fac­ing up to the hard­est chal­lenge yet in their two and a half year occu­pa­tion of threat­ened wood­land.

The freez­ing tem­per­a­tures and stormy con­di­tions mean life is cur­rent­ly no pic­nic for the hardy pro­test­ers camped out in Tit­nore Woods, West Dur­ring­ton, in a last-ditch bid to try and stop a new hous­ing estate and Tesco mega­s­tore from being built over green fields and ancient wood­land.

And grate­ful local sup­port­ers are organ­is­ing a pre-Christ­mas stall in the town cen­tre to bring fes­tive cheer to the tree-house dwellers, who moved onto the site back in May 2006.

They will be col­lect­ing pro­vi­sions for the pro­test­ers under the title “A Ham­per for a Camper” at Hold­er’s Cor­ner, Mon­tague Street, Wor­thing, on Sat­ur­day Decem­ber 20, from 11am.

It wasn’t an easy option when the team of eco-heroes sneaked onto the threat­ened ancient wood­land off Tit­nore Lane at the crack of dawn on a May bank hol­i­day and start­ed build­ing their tree homes before any­one knew what was hap­pen­ing.

Most peo­ple assumed they’d be kicked off again straight away, but the days turned to weeks turned to months turned to years and they’re still there!

The final plan­ning appli­ca­tion isn’t even through yet — they had to rethink part of it — and you can still object, writ­ing to the Wor­thing Bor­ough Coun­cil plan­ning depart­ment at Port­land House, Rich­mond Road, Wor­thing and quot­ing WB/04/00040/OUT.

But, sad­ly, Wor­thing cam­paign­ers against the devel­op­ment have already dis­cov­ered through years of cam­paign­ing, let­ter-writ­ing, peti­tion-rais­ing and large, peace­ful, demon­stra­tions that mon­ey and pow­er don’t lis­ten to the lit­tle peo­ple who know the dif­fer­ence between right and wrong.

We live in a world where even if police com­mit mur­der or theft they can get com­plete­ly off the hook.

We live in a world where politi­cians can lie through their teeth, start wars that kill hun­dreds of thou­sands of peo­ple, and get away with it. We live in a world that is being choked to death by the blind greed of cap­i­tal­ism and yet we are told there is no oth­er option.

The Tit­nore campers are part of that big­ger pic­ture — they have the guts to phys­i­cal­ly put them­selves on the line and say ENOUGH IS ENOUGH!

Please sup­port them in any way you can — food, sup­plies, a friend­ly vis­it.

There are tough times ahead and we all need to be there for each oth­er.

* 1990s road pro­test­er Jim Hin­dle will be giv­ing a talk at 8pm on Thurs­day Jan­u­ary 29 upstairs at The Rest in Bath Place, Wor­thing. All wel­come.

Santas Against Excessive Consumption, London UK, Xmas 08

Five brave coun­ter­cul­ture war­riors don San­ta Suits, sing anti-con­sumerist and anti-cap­i­tal­ist Xmas car­ols, and leaflet for more mind­ful atten­tion to love, gifts, and cat­a­stroph­ic cli­mate change – in Oxford Street, in the heart of the shop­ping dis­trict of Old Lon­don Town, on the busiest shop­ping day of the year: Sat 13 De

London consumption climate santas 2008Five brave coun­ter­cul­ture war­riors don San­ta Suits, sing anti-con­sumerist and anti-cap­i­tal­ist Xmas car­ols, and leaflet for more mind­ful atten­tion to love, gifts, and cat­a­stroph­ic cli­mate change – in Oxford Street, in the heart of the shop­ping dis­trict of Old Lon­don Town, on the busiest shop­ping day of the year: Sat 13 Dec 08.

Turn­ing mate­r­i­al wealth into pos­ses­sions makes you hap­py; shop­ping till you drop and retail ther­a­py are good for every­body; prov­ing you love some­body means giv­ing them an expen­sive present. The bullplop pro­mot­ed by Capital’s adver­tis­ing and mar­ket­ing psy­che-manip­u­la­tors has nev­er need­ed chal­leng­ing more than it does today, in the worst of the mad­ness of Xmas shop­ping mass-psy­chosis dur­ing a cash-strapped cred­it crunch reces­sion.

Our yule­tide ‘tra­di­tion’ at Lon­don Ris­ing Tide [1] involves a ‘San­tas Against Exces­sive Con­sump­tion’ [2] choral street action – mass dress­ing as San­ta Claus, social singing of anti-con­sumerist Xmas car­ols, and let­ting folks know by leaflet that there is an alter­na­tive to the dom­i­nant the-one-who-dies-with-the-most-toys-wins idio­cy of hyper­con­sumerism. Since the rain was heavy and steady, we sought shel­ter and per­for­mance space in the West One indoor shop­ping mall on Oxford Street, by Bond Street tube sta­tion. But anti-cap­i­tal­ist cho­ris­ters only damp­ened what lit­tle Xmas spir­it the secu­ri­ty boss had left – and he threat­ened to call the cops if we didn’t leave forth­with.

Thank­ful­ly, his remit seemed to run out at the doors to Oxford Street, which still left us with a suit­ably sized cov­ered area in which we could sing to our hearts con­tent, and com­pete with the McDon­alds McFly­er to see who could give away the most leaflets per unit time. The applause of shop­pers hap­py to be spared, if only tem­porar­i­ly, from the soul-rot­ting rounds of shop­ping for tat was much appre­ci­at­ed.

The lyrics of the songs you can hear us singing in the video (so you can sing along, or even stage your own San­tas Against Con­spic­u­ous Con­sump­tion street action) are as fol­lows.

___________________________________________________________________
1 (& 3). Jin­gle All The Way – to the tune of Jin­gle Bells

Cho­rus:
Prof­its here, prof­its there,
prof­its every­where
Christ­mas time is fun­ny
we smell mon­ey in the air
Adver­tise, glam­or­ize,
fool you with a flair.
Let’s make sure that Christ­mas
is a busi­nesslike affair.

You’re eat­ing up our lies and dash­ing to the stores
Then all our prices rise and how the mon­ey pours
If we don’t keep you drugged and watch­ing your TV
You might see the hypocrisy
then where would busi­ness be?

Cho­rus

We’ll tell you how to think and tell you what to try
What to eat and drink and how to live and die
And if our plan suc­ceeds, when Christ­mas-time is nigh
Instead of seek­ing love and peace you’ll hunt for gifts to buy

Cho­rus

___________________________________________________________________
2. Con­sumer Won­der­land – to the tune of Win­ter Won­der­land, lyrics by Eri­ca Avery

The TV’s on / are you watch­ing?
Anoth­er prod­uct / that they’re hawk­ing
one more thing you need
to make life com­plete
Wel­come to Con­sumer Won­der­land

In the stores / you will hear it
“Pricey gifts / show hol­i­day spir­it”
That’s what they call it
to get to your wal­let
Wel­come to Con­sumer Won­der­land

At the mall we can go out shop­ping
and buy lots of stuff we can’t afford
we’ll have lots of fun with our new toys
until we real­ize that we’re still bored

When you shop / ain’t it thrilling
until / you get the billing
the mon­ey you still owe the stuff broke long ago
Wel­come to Con­sumer Won­der­land

___________________________________________________________________
4. Oh Come All Ye Shop­pers – to the tune of Oh Come All Ye Faith­ful

Oh come all ye shop­pers
Bur­dened and despon­dent
Come all ye fol­low­ers of ma-a-mon
Come and buy things
Spark­ly and redun­dant

Oh come let us ignore it
Oh come let us deplore it
Oh come let us abhore it
Mon­ey and greed.

Ring tills with prof­it
Ring in exploita­tion
Ring all ye reg­is­ters of cap­i­tal­ism
Glo­ry to prof­it
At it’s high­est

Oh come let us ignore it
Oh come let us deplore it
Oh come let us abhore it
Mon­ey and greed.

___________________________________________________________________

For cap­i­tal­ists, giv­ing means buy­ing tat from them first. For anti-cap­i­tal­ists, a gift econ­o­my can under­mine the mar­ket eco­nom­ics that poi­son our envi­ron­ment, our cul­ture and our minds – for exam­ple, see ‘Cre­at­ing Our Future World One Gift At A Time’ – http://tinyurl.com/gift-economy

Foot­notes

[1] Lon­don Ris­ing Tide – http://www.londonrisingtide.org.uk

[2] The Ris­ing Tide “tra­di­tion” of ‘San­tas Against Exces­sive Con­sump­tion’:
▪ ‘San­tas Against Exces­sive Con­sump­tion hit Lon­don, 16.12.06’ – http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2006/12/358481.html
▪ ‘San­tas Against Exces­sive Con­sump­tion invade Oxford Street’ – http://www.londonrisingtide.org.uk/node/33
▪ ‘Sub­ver­sive Singing San­tas Spread Sea­son­al San­i­ty in Lon­don and Nor­wich’ – http://risingtide.org.uk/node/247

[2] Car­ol resources:
▪ Christ­mas Car­ols – http://www.buynothingchristmas.org/resources/carols.html
▪ Our Entire 11-song Song­sheet – http://www.earthfirst.org.uk/actionreports/node/17929

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