WIND TURBINES AND WARNING SHOTS

Environmental Panorama
International
December of 2007

 

03 December 2007 - Indonesia — Governments meet in Bali this week to agree an action plan to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to stop climate change from inflicting severe impacts. The Rainbow Warrior is in Indonesia to add urgency to our call for climate action. Our activists have received vastly different reactions – on the one hand, they joined in a festive celebration calling for clean energy now, and on the other hand hung a banner at a coal plant as security guards fired shots in the air.

Last Friday, in Jepara, Central Java, hundreds of people gathered together to create images of "human wind turbines" on the site of a proposed nuclear power and demand clean renewable energy. Calling for "Clean Energy Now", the crew of the Rainbow Warrior were joined by community members and activists from KRATON (the Anti-Nuclear People's Coalition) in a festive performance where hundreds of people emulated the rotating blades of a wind farm. Gavin Edwards, Head of the Climate & Energy campaign, was pleasantly surprised: "We expected 600 community members to show up. We'd asked people to dress in white, to make a nice vivid image. At the appointed time, a sea of white appeared over the hill - 1200 people!"

A festive spirit and pleasant surprises were nowhere to be found the following day, however, when security personnel from PLTU Tanjung Jati B coal power plant in Jepara, Central Java, fired five gunshots and drew knives as activists from the Rainbow Warrior climbed the coal plant's cooling tower and loading crane, hanging banners reading "Coal Kills Climate."

Both of the weekend's activities - although received extremely differently - were part of our campaign to drive home the message that governments need to shift to clean renewable energy, and not be distracted by the empty promise of nuclear power or fall back on the bad habit of continuing to build and fund coal power plants, the dirtiest of all fossil fuels. Let's hope that it's the pleasant surprises that will win out this week!

Vital UN climate negotiations start in Bali

Two weeks is long enough to get the job done - 02 December 2007 - Bali, Indonesia — It’s said that a week is a long time in politics. The burning question is whether two weeks is long enough for governments to finally wake up, smell the carbon and confront the biggest problem facing the world. Yes, says Greenpeace. Absolutely.

Here it is plain and simple: stop bickering. Put aside your differences. Come up with a crystal-clear mandate so negotiators can go full-bore over the next two years to agree deep cuts in global warming pollution. And make sure that the long-neglected issue of ending deforestation is firmly in the mix.

Real action for the climate

For years, governments have let us, their citizens, down by failing to get to grips with the problem. They’ve left us increasingly exposed to the biggest threat that civilisation has ever faced. Before things get totally out of hand, governments have to knuckle down to business in Bali and act on the basis of the alarming scientific findings about climate change that they themselves approved at the IPCC meeting only a few weeks ago. They agreed that climate change can be beaten using means already at our disposal or just around the corner. So let’s finally see some real action for the climate.

Without serious cuts in global warming pollution, the future will be more frightening and insecure than we can imagine. And it’s no longer the dim and distant future we’re talking about. We are into the realm of IMTO – “In My Term of Office”. One government – in Australia – has already been thrown out partly because it consistently stonewalled on climate.

Now major global corporations are at long last viewing action against climate change as a growth opportunity and calling for legally-binding commitments. It’s the secure framework they need to put big bucks into solutions, even if many companies have still to put their own house in order.

Two weeks is a short time for a political turn-round. But it can be done. Although not a single gram of carbon will be cut nor a single sapling saved as a direct result of Bali – for these are talks about talks – without agreement there governments may well have lost the opportunity of ever putting the brakes on climate change.

 
 

Source: Greenpeace International (http://www.greenpeace.org)
Press consultantship
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

Universo Ambiental  
 
 
 
 
     
VEJA
NOTÍCIAS AMBIENTAIS
DIVERSAS
Acesse notícias variadas e matérias exclusivas sobre diversos assuntos socioambientais.

 
 
 
 
Conheça
Conteúdo
Participe
     
Veja as perguntas frequentes sobre a Agência Ecologia e como você pode navegar pelo nosso conteúdo.
Veja o que você encontrará no acervo da Agência Ecologia. Acesse matérias, artigos e muito mais.
Veja como você pode participar da manutenção da Agência Ecologia e da produção de conteúdo socioambiental gratuito.
             
 
 

 

 

 

 
 
 
 
 
     
ACESSE O UNIVERSO AMBIENTAL
DE NOTÍCIAS
Veja o acervo de notícias e matérias especiais sobre diversos temas ambientais.

 
 
 
 
Compromissos
Fale Conosco
Pesquise
     
Conheça nosso compromisso com o jornalismo socioambiental independente. Veja as regras de utilização das informações.
Entre em contato com a Agência Ecologia. Tire suas dúvidas e saiba como você pode apoiar nosso trabalho.
A Agência Ecologia disponibiliza um banco de informações ambientais com mais de 45 mil páginas de conteúdo online gratuito.
             
 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
Agência Ecologia
     
DESTAQUES EXPLORE +
SIGA-NOS
 

 

 
Agência Ecologia
Biodiversidade Notícias Socioambientais
Florestas Universo Ambiental
Avifauna Sobre Nós
Oceano Busca na Plataforma
Heimdall Contato
Odin Thor
  Loki
   
 
Direitos reservados. Agência Ecologia 2024-2025. Agência Ambiental Pick-upau 1999-2025.