Eontipoff’s Blog











The battle against coal continues. This time a coal rail terminal in South Lanarkshire is shut down.

In a statement, Coal Action Scotland appologised to workers but said that in the face of climate change they saw no alternatvie to targeting the companies involved in extraction of, what is after all, the most polluting fuel known to mankind.

Coal Action Scotland is part of the UK-wide Coal Action Network of individuals opposing the developments of a new generation of coal powered energy generation.

Media:



One issue picked up by the media and now, looking like a handle for BAA to grab on to is class. Some members of plane stupid are from privaliged backgrounds, and that interests journalists for some reason. I`m not sure that this would be the worst thing in the world in normal times but in a receesion it really isnt what you want. It’s easy to drive a wedge between those supposedly with the luxury of protest and those who need cheap air fairs and a strong economy.

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From the Guardian (link)

Plane Stupid’s activists train in protest techniques, such as padlocking themselves to things, so as she sat on the ground near Stansted’s runway, Rosie Slay was not overly concerned for her safety, despite the bicycle D-lock attaching her to a fence by the throat. Safety is always a big consideration during the group’s actions, she says.

The police had arrived shortly after the protesters, and were removing them one by one from their makeshift barricade, cutting some loose with bolt cutters. It still took more than two hours, to the demonstrators’ delight, though Slay didn’t delay the officers for as long as she had hoped – the police found the key to her lock on the grass.

Five days after the daring 3am action that shut down one of London’s airports, cancelled 52 flights, disrupted thousands of passengers, amassed huge international publicity and prevented the equivalent damage, by Greenpeace’s estimate, of 2,162 tonnes of CO2, the young activists of Plane Stupid have been reflecting on what they consider as the enormous success of their intervention.

“We were really, really happy as we were getting arrested,” says Slay, 20, a student originally from Hackney, east London. “We had people on the phones talking to the media and as we got more and more information about the amount of coverage, we were really elated.”

Coverage of Monday’s protest, and the curiously polite radicals who staged it, has focused on their backgrounds as “toffee-nosed youngsters”, a collection of supposedly spoiled rich kids with more time than insight.

Still essentially a student movement, there is no question that like most university campuses, Plane Stupid is more white and more middle class than the national demographic.

But the most striking common characteristic of those who took part in the protest is their unwavering conviction, which is compelling.

Josh Moos, who like Slay is a student at Sussex University, is at 21 almost an elder statesman of the group, having been involved with the campaign since shortly after it was set up three years ago. He used to be “an armchair environmentalist”, he says, but “I realised from further reading that climate change is the most pressing issue of our time. All further issues are of course important but they all become subjugated to the issue of climate change.”

His unofficial role during the runway occupation was to reassure the newer campaigners. The group also provides training in techniques for resisting arrest, media skills and advice on how to deal with your parents.

In total, 54 people were arrested on the taxiway at Stansted, along with a further three as they attempted to leave. Dan Glass, one of the group’s leading figures in Scotland, came south to participate with 14 other “affiliates” in Monday’s action, but only two chose to get arrested on the runway. The rest preferred to keep their noses clean in anticipation of potential future protests at Glasgow and Edinburgh airports.

Last summer Glass, 25, hit the headlines after supergluing himself to Gordon Brown. He rejects the middle class tag, particularly when applied to those living in the poor Glasgow suburbs campaigning against the expansion of the city’s airport: “Fifteen percent of the population never even fly, and many of them live in Clydebank, where they are really affected by Glasgow airport. In Scotland the demographic of people involved includes a lot of people who are really economically marginalised,” he says.

While some have characterised the action as that of “militant environmentalists”, the group argues that what is seen today as dangerously radical will one day be accepted. “We are definitely on the radical end of the spectrum and that is where we wish to be,” says Moos. “Visionaries are initially seen as radical before the mainstream catches up with them and accepts their policies.”



With the continuing gulf between govornment goals on climate change and govornment actions the time for direct action has come–things are hotting up in the UK.



After participating and a direct action against aviation organised by Plane Stupid I ended up in a police cell being charged with agrevated tresspass. Then I returned home to find that eight police officers had searched my room and the comunal areas of the house. Apparently they left at 2:50am!

In my absence they decided to take my printer, my mobile phone, all of the leaflets on my wall, my notes for a report i`m writing, my camcorder, all my credit cards, my membership of Kew gardens and a few other things. If my laptop where in my room it sure as hell wouldnt be here for me to post this with.

The action at Stansted was inevitably going to lead to arrests and we where prepared for that: this was my first time in a police cell. The experiance in custody was actually pretty good, and it was great fun listening to the Jeremy Vine show on bbc radio 2 (the uk’s most popular radio station) which lated around 20 minutes and was overall a very good discussion of why we risked personal arrest and upsetting the public. I must say right now I feel like i have been robbed. What does a camcorder or a printer have to do with a direct action against Stansted: preciesly nothing.

However, i shouldnt dwell to much on what the police where doing while I was out the building as I was doing something far more important. It’s great not to have to look back rosy eyed on the sixties and the civil rights movement. We have something of similar importance, arguably greater, and this fight against catastrophic climate change is happening now. Such movements are never recognised as the moral forces that they are untill after the change they are pushing for has been achieved. The militant Suffragettes where not politically acceptable at the time and where widel derided but now you will be hard pushed to find someone willing to criticise them. Well, that thought helps when sitting in police cells or in a room with half it’s contents gone.

Video:

Stories:

Politics.co.uk Analysis
Independent
Guardian
Al Jazera
BBC
Environmental News Service



{November 18, 2008}   Action Against Agrofuels

On Thursday 16th October, activists frorm Action Against Agrofuel disrupted the European Biofuels Expo and Conference 2008, the largest agrofuels expo in Europe. A group of activists disguised as delegates entered the expo hall, climbed the wall and dropped banners on the main entrance, The aim of the protest was to highlight the link between agrofuels expansion and deforestation and world hunger. As well as making exascerbating climate change through rainforest destruction, population displacement and associated human right abuses. The expansion of agrofuels has a led to a major increase in the price of the world main staple foods such as maize, rice and wheat.



Four people have chained themselves to the main conveyor belt at Bayswater power station this morning to stop coal feeding into Australia’s largest coal fired power station. They are joined by more than thirty other protestors who are occupying the stations coal stock-piles.

Protestors, from climate action group Rising Tide Newcastle, are locked onto machinery, stopping the conveyor belts that carry coal to Bayswater’s furnaces in protest against the Federal Government’s failure to stop Australia’s greenhouse pollution rising.

Spokesperson, Georgina Woods, said,

“Australia’s greenhouse pollution is still increasing and our addiction to coal-fired power is the main cause. We are here because every day we hesitate, we are killing the Great Barrier Reef.”

In 2006/07, Bayswater Power Station created approximately 14 million tonnes of carbon dioxide pollution, making it equal greatest single source of greenhouse pollution in the country and among the top 100 polluting power stations in the world.

The Federal Government is expected to announce medium term greenhouse emission reduction targets at the end of the month, but protestors say that 2020 is too late, and want a commitment that 2010 will be Australia’s “peak emissions” year.

The Bayswater power station near Muswellbrook in the Upper Hunter and the adjacent Liddell power station together supply around 40% of NSW’s electricity.

The protestors say power stations like Bayswater will need to be shut down over the next few years: “Where is the plan to phase out facilities like these? Why are we twiddling our thumbs?”

“The nation and the world are watching and we will not get another chance. The people that are here today are parents and grandparents, professionals and tradespeople. We are demanding a commitment from the Government today: Australia’s greenhouse emissions must start dropping from 2010, we must do whatever it takes to save the Barrier Reef from wipe-out and the world from devastating runaway climate change.”

The fight for the climate is far from over; the need for people to protest our failure to reverse greenhouse pollution is greater than ever.

Further comment: Georgina Woods 0438 223 771



{October 14, 2008}   Climate Rush = Awesome

Yesterday it was 100 years to the day after the suffragettes rushed parliament and demanded universal suffrage. Yesterday a woman dominated group of protesters gathered to hear women speakers from the Green Party and the Women’s Institute among others, before attempting to rush parliament.

There where several novel aspects to this event. It wasn’t either a simple protest or a purely direct action event. There was a definite predominance of women and a significant presence of children. It was certainly the first time that many people there have taken part in any sort of confrontation with police and many feel that it was an inspirational event that will help to build up the direct action movement against coal, aviation and all the other government sanctioned projects that are destroying peoples lives.

It was awesome to have a speaker from the Women’s Institute, and so many women and children at the doors of parliament. There is a potential with this kind of grouping that just doesn’t exist with a typical protest crowd. And i don’t think these people are going away anytime soon.



From the clinton global initiative via Itsgettinghotinhere:

Al Gore on Civil Disobedience

“This is a crisis that is happening NOW. Scientists around the world are practically screaming from the rooftops to stop it.

“If you’re a young person, I believe we’ve reached a point of civil disobedience” …to do things like take down coal plants.”



Normal people really can change the world. 100 years ago the Suffragettes went to Parliament and demanded that their society change. They held a mass rally outside Parliament to which thousands came, before a number of them rushed into Parliament and got everyone’s attention. We invite you all to celebrate the 100th anniversary of this world changing event. We invite you to celebrate when women got radical. Enjoy a rally and speeches in Parliament Square. Enjoy social change.


This was one of my favourite stories of recent weeks. The Australian Climate Camp managed to obstruct the ralway line into one of the worlds largest coal ports in the world.

An article in solidarity with the protest from US youth blog Itsgettinghotinhere.



et cetera