Edison Mission Energy, the US-owned global power utility probably thought
they had it in the bag. Along with other foreign transnationals they
had won lucrative contracts to build new coal-fired power plants in
energy-hungry Thailand. They certainly had the Thai Government, the
US ambassador to Thailand, and stashes of foreign investment money
on their side. Not so complicit, though, were the people of Thailand
and their environmental groups. Thousands turned up to protest. The
plants, they said, would pollute the air and water, displace local
people and harm the economy. They wanted renewable energy instead.
Finally in March this year, after seven years of popular protests,
Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatrat announced that he was putting on
hold the construction of two large coal-fired plants at Ban Krut and
Bo Nok. In April the Government announced it was backing solar energy
and unveiled plans for what will be Southeast Asia’s largest
solar-power programme.
For more: www.cleanenergynow.org
www.greenpeacesoutheastasia.org

It was absurd.
Under the Clean Development Mechanism of the Kyoto Protocol, the
German NGO Prima Klima was to plant a forest in Argentina.
The idea was to reduce global warming by creating a ‘carbon
sink’. This would have provided an inexpensive way for a wealthy
country to achieve required emissions cuts, not by actually reducing
emissions but by planting trees to soak up CO2. But it would also
have involved clear-cutting 4,400 hectares of native forest – releasing
lots of CO2 – and substituting it with a monoculture of Oregon
pine. Several Argentinean NGOs and indigenous Mapuche and Tehuellche
groups protested in the courts – and won. In December 2000
the court prohibited any works related to Prima Klima’s forestry
project.
For more:
World Rainforest Movement at wrm@wrm.org.uy
www.climateark.org

The US penchant for litigation looks set to sting the Bush Administration. Last
December three major US environmental groups announced that they were suing the
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) for failing to curb global warming despite
its growing impact. The lawsuit brought by the Sierra Club, Greenpeace and the
International Centre for Technology Assessment (CTA) charges the EPA with violating
the 1977 Clean Air Act by failing to limit pollution caused by automobiles ‘that
may reasonably be anticipated to endanger public health and welfare’. The
CTA’s legal director Joseph Mendelson said: ‘It’s time for
the Bush Administration to get its head out of the sand. The EPA’s stalling
tactics are doing real damage in the fight against global warming.’ At
a local level too, activists and progressive councils are using the law. The
City Council of Oakland, California, has backed a suit brought by Friends of
the Earth, Greenpeace and the City of Boulder, Colorado, against two Government
export agencies charged with illegally funding fossil-fuel projects that have
contributed to climate change, increasing the risk of saltwater contamination,
floods and respiratory illness.
For
more: www.sierraclub.org
www.icta.org/legal/ghgsum.htm
www.greenpeaceusa.org/climate
www.enn.com/news/2003-02-1/
 |
Cars
that run on Vegetable oil! |
|
|

When supermarkets
in Britain started running
out of cheap cooking oil it took
a while to cotton on to what was
happening. Brits were not massively
upping consumption of their national dish of fish'n'chips - they were putting
the chip oil in their cars. For a while now some motorists have been using vegetable
oil to fuel their vehicles in Germany and the US. Not only is it less environmentally
damaging than ordinary fuel - it's also very much cheaper and isn't subject to
tax. And cheaper still if recycled oil leftover from restaurant fryers is used.
If letting your motor go veggie sounds tempting, you will need to have your car
converted - so check out the websites first or get hold of Joshua Tickell's book
From the Fryer to the Fuel Tank: the complete guide to using vegetable oil as
an alternative fuel. One word of warning: you have to like the smell.
For
more:
The Veggie Van Association at www.veggievan.org ; www.geocities.co/vegoilcar/qshowmuch.html

Not just for hippies, ecological building is taking off to meet a
whole range of different needs and tastes – from earth houses
and cave dwellings in remote valleys to stylish units in overcrowded
metropoli. In their book Another Kind of Space, Alan Dearling and
Graham Meltzer have brought together inspirational examples from
across the world. Straw bales for building material, solar cells
for power; ancient mixes with ultramodern with sustainability as
the common denominator.
For
more: Another Kind of Space: creating ecological dwellings
and environment is available from Enabler Publications.
Email:
adearling@aol.com

The Rickshaw Unions were out in force as the largest rally for Climate
Justice in history took to the streets of Delhi last October. Cycle
rickshaws are usually banned from the city centre of Delhi, an area
of big hotels, shops, government buildings and cars. In the words
of one puller: ‘The rich people drive around this district
of Delhi one person to a car – they are contributing to pollution.
We do not make pollution and yet we are banned from being allowed
to work in this district.’ When, during the rally, police tried
to stop rickshaws entering the centre, protesters sat down in solidarity
with the pullers. The rally released the Delhi Climate Justice Declaration
which states: ‘We affirm that climate change is a human-rights
issue – it affects our livelihoods, our health, our children
and our natural resources. We will build alliances across states
and borders to oppose climate-change-inducing patterns and advocate
for and practise sustainable development. We reject the market-based
principles that guide the current negotiations to solve the climate
crisis. Our World is Not for Sale.’
For
more: www.corpwatchindia.org

Around the world people are giving the two fingers to Big Oil. In
2001 over 100 protests were held simultaneously worldwide in an international
day of action against US oil giant ExxonMobil (Esso). Boycotts are
gaining momentum and protests are hitting profits – in February
this year 116 Esso stations were closed in a day of mass protest
by activists across Britain. In Amazonian Ecuador, indigenous people
say oil exploration is destroying their way of life and their attempts
to develop eco-tourism. The Argentinean oil company CGC had to sit
up and take note when eight of its oil workers were seized and held
by Achaur Indians as a protest against exploration for crude in their
lands. An earlier delegation of indigenous people (pictured right)
chose a more legal course when they took US oil corporation Texaco
to court, demanding a billion dollars for ‘causing widespread
devastation to their rainforest environment’.
For
more: www.stopesso.org
www.climateark.org