Monthly Archives: March 2015

Algeria: fracking and the Ain Salah uprising





The city of Ain Salah lies about 750 miles south of Algiers in the Sahara Desert.

Its location as a desert oasis relies on a sensitive aquifer system that stretches from Southern Algeria to Tunesia and Libya, and overlaps with at least four intensive shale gas fields.

Fracking commenced in the area in 2013, and a mass movement against the practice has rapidly unfolded.

This new turn against resource extraction and exploitation has emerged elsewhere in recent months, such as Burkina Faso, as the global push to extract resources ranging from gold to agricultural commodities to fossil fuels has led to widespread dispossession in Africa since the onset of the financial crisis in 2008.

It carries with it the revolutionary sentiment the drove Algeria to independence from France, leading a tidal wave of liberation movements throughout Africa.

Since New Years Eve, four days after fracking operations were announced near the city, Ain Salah has effectively stopped functioning in a conventional way. Commerce and administration has moved between business as usual and an extensive occupation / sit-in of the main square, along with several rallies.

Video and photographic evidence has been released exposing harmful pollution and contaminated water supplies, causing an uproar and sense that fracking must be stopped.

Halliburton, Total

The companies primarily involved in exploiting shale gas in Algeria include Halliburton and France’s major oil company, Total.

After settling a major bribery case in Nigeria in 2010, Halliburton, the leading oilfield services company in the world, began looking to Africa for increased gas exploitation in 2012. As fracking began to slow in the US, they made a major play for Algeria, which has the second highest proven gas reserves in Africa.

For its part, Total grabbed oil lands in Libya after the NATO invasion that toppled the government of Muammar Qaddafi in 2011, but the collapse of national infrastructure that ensued has significantly hindered the once-strong oil industry.

In December 2013, the National Oil Corporation announced its intensions to bolster the economy by allowing oversees corporations like Total to commence fracking operations.

The outbreak of violence in Libya had severe repercussions in Mali to the south, as armed militants swept into the country and added a surge to the Tuareg separatist uprising the next year. With hundreds of thousands displaced in the ensuing calamity, increased unrest combined with severe drought and the recent Ebola outbreak to create difficult economic conditions.

In an ironic turn, Halliburton was forced to cut 1,000 employees last December, it claimed, due to the turmoil in West Africa caused in no small part by French intervention on behalf of Total’s access to natural resources.

Now the two companies are making plays for Algeria’s gas reserves. The combined total assets of Halliburton and Total comes close to 40% of Algeria’s GDP, and the President of Algeria, the aging Abdelaziz Bouteflika, has not put up any opposition to their extraction efforts.

In his fourth term, Bouteflika, the longest-serving president in Algeria’s history, has weathered substantial protests in 2010 and 2012 calling for his ouster, and today he meets with a movement that extends from Ain Salah to Algiers calling for another way of looking at public control over natural resources.

Back to liberation

This different approach was manifested on February 24, when nearly the entire city of Ain Salah, some 40,000 people, took to the square, which has been renamed Place Somoud, or Resistance Square, to celebrate the 44th Anniversary of the nationalization of hydrocarbons by former-President Boumediene.

But the new approach is not simply in favor of extraction by a state-owned oil company. It’s also playing fast and loose with the aquifer that sustains Ain Salah and its precious oasis – and it’s the threat of groundwater pollution from fracking that most worries people as it imperils their very existence.

And the struggle is not simply about Ain Salah: February 24 saw mass demonstrations touch off from the town of Ouragla to Algiers. These protests challenged Algiers’s ban against protests that has been in place since the end of the terrible Civil War that claimed upwards of 150,000 lives between 1991 and 2002.

Bouteflika is seen by many as a hero who helped put a stop to the war, but now his regime is challenged by the progression of popular opposition to industrial extraction. There is concern that unrest might cause an opening for another civil war (one that Halliburton and Total could attempt to exploit), prompting harsh police reactions.

As police officers pre-empted the protest in Algeria on February 24, arresting some 50 demonstrators while national festivities were held to commemorate the day, Bouteflika’s advisor, M. Boughazi took to national TV to read a 20-minute declaration that included the admonition, “Shale gas is a gift from God, and it is our duty to exploit it.”

Police attacks, arests, insults provoke violent reaction

In the midst of the tensions that loomed over the rest of the week, protests turned violent. When a group of activists arrived at the Halliburton base in Ain Salah to protest, they were met with racist provocations by the police, who continued retaliation measures by conducting forceful arrests.

Protestors reacted to the oppressive measures by rallying at the Gendarme station, and police responded with large quantities of tear gas and rubber bullets. The police violence persisted into Resistance Square, where the rally site was destroyed and tents burned, and over the next few days, hundreds of people were arrested and numerous injuries incurred among the mostly-peaceful protestors.

Finally, as police attempted to seal off the city and lay siege to the city, protestors began throwing stones. Police retreated, and an uprising was in effect; a police barracks, a residence of the mayor, and several police vehicles were set ablaze. The army was called in, and a tense order once again held.

This is the second time serious unrest has been caused in Ain Salah over gas companies – the first having occurred in 2002, due to widespread unemployment and the stringent demands of foreign gas companies.

The economic issue stands side-by-side with the environmental one, as civil society searches for better ways of living sustainably outside of the control of corrupt foreign multinationals and a distant government.

Fracking and resistance against an effective gas grab in Algeria has become an issue for the opposition to utilize in its attempt to develop another kind of politics in the country. However, the opposition, itself, remains fractured and disorganized.

The real issues confronting Algeria are tied to the low petrodollar and the increasing inaccessibility of oil and gas reserves without unconventional practices like fracking, but the gas companies are notoriously unable to carry the weight of unemployment in places like Ain Salah.

So, like many places in the world confronted with the curse of extractive industries, Algeria must find a unique way out of the global land grab.

And now the anti-fracking movement has brought some momentum to thinking broader, long-term solutions in keeping with the revolutionary tradition of decolonization and autogestion.

 


 

Alexander Reid Ross is a contributing moderator of the Earth First! Newswire. He is the editor of Grabbing Back: Essays Against the Global Land Grab (AK Press 2014) and a contributor to Life During Wartime (AK Press 2013). His most recent book Against the Fascist Creep is forthcoming through AK Press.

This article originally appeared on CounterPunch

 






Patriarchy is killing our planet – women alone can save her





Last Sunday was International Women’s Day, but despite the celebration and recognition of women throughout the day across the world’s media, little attention was paid to how the systemic marginalization of women is integral to what I call the ‘crisis of civilization.’

Efforts by the UN and other agencies to highlight the centrality of women to the fight against climate change are laudable, but they simply don’t go far enough in addressing the extent to which male-dominated global institutions and structures are directly responsible for the disempowerment of women.

One crisis, or many?

The global crises we face today are legion, but their disparate nature is illusory.

When we look deeper, these seemingly different crises of climate change, energy volatility, food scarcity, economic breakdown, and violent conflict, are not in fact separate issues. Rather, they are inherently interconnected symptoms of a deeper global malaise.

Fundamentally, all these crises stem from the problem that our global system is, increasingly, in breach of the natural limits of our environment.

The world’s rich, industrialized class are over-accumulating and over-consuming planetary resources and raw materials; in the process burning massive quantities of evermore expensive and dirty fossil fuels; dumping unprecedented amounts of waste and carbon into the environment in a way that is destabilizing eco-systems; and ironically, thereby escalating the costs of living and undermining our capacity to continue such vast levels of over-consumption.

This is widening global inequalities, generating more poverty and deprivation, while straining the capacity of states to continue delivering public services. This in turn aggravates civil unrest, and in some cases, fuels the outbreak of civil and international war.

Our conventional view of these crises as separate is in itself a symptom of an epistemological crisis, rooted in our fragmented view of life and nature.

Because energy, the economy and the environment are not separate. They are merely conceptual abstractions we’ve created to understand issues that are completely and utterly intertwined.

Our fragmentary and reductionist worldview plays a large role in this. Not only are our sciences so specialized that we lack holistic big picture frameworks for joining the dots between physics, biology, society, the biophysical environment, the economy, culture and so many other issues; this inability to see the whole for the parts means we are not just hampered in our understanding of the world, we are hampered in our ability to respond to the crises now accelerating.

With respect to the ‘crisis of civilization’, this fragmented reductionism means that we see ourselves not as embedded in the natural world, but as overlords of nature. So under the doctrine of neo-classical, now neoliberal economics, we have deified the empirically-refuted illusory accolade of ‘endless material growth’, despite its being, literally, physically impossible.

We have subordinated the entirety of the natural world, including virtually all living and non-living entities on the planet, to the unquestionable dictates of the ‘market.’ This has led to the commodification of everything, and the projection of a self-perpetuating culture of mass consumerism reinforcing our addiction to endless growth, as well as our blindness to the suicidal trajectory it is generating.

This divorce between human beings and the natural order is reflected in the internal dynamics of the global system: the growing disparity between rich and poor; the widening hostility between Muslim and non-Muslim; the deepening divisions between white and non-white; and of course, the persistent power inequalities between men and women.

In all these cases, we see that our relentless plunder of our own planetary life-support systems, correlates with our unnerving tendency to divide, exclude and ‘Otherize’, often in ways that are so insidious we find it difficult, even painful, to acknowledge these processes. But to this day, one of the most ever-present yet still unacknowledged processes is patriarchy.

Climate change is gendered

Natural disasters resulting from climate change are on the rise. The number of disasters between 2000 and 2009 had tripled compared to between 1980 and 1989, most of which was due to climate events. Yet most victims of such disasters are invariably women.

On average, natural disasters consistently kill more women than men, in some cases with 90% female fatalities. According to UN figures women face a risk of death from natural disasters that is 14 times higher than for men.

Women also suffer disproportionately more from the aftermath of such disasters, increasing the threat of sexual assault, preventing girls attending school, and so on. There can be many reasons for the greater vulnerability: less economic opportunities, less access to technologies like mobile phones (meaning less likelihood of receiving timely warnings), less freedom of movement due to cultural issues, and so on.

Thus, one of the main reasons that climate change disproportionately affects women is because women are already marginalized. This means that the impacts of climate change in terms of extreme weather, water scarcity, and crop failures, hits women the most.

Poverty is gendered

One of the clearest manifestations of the systemic disempowerment of women is poverty. Nearly one billion people live below the poverty line, defined by the World Bank as an income of $1.25 a day.

By this standard, the annual income of the world’s richest 50 people is around the same as the total income of the bottom one billion. Of the poorest one billion, according to the UN Development Program (1995), 70% are women.

Due to limited data sets and paucity of ongoing research, it’s not entirely clear how far that percentage stacks up more recently. But it is indisputable that women are largely far worse off economically than men in the less developed world.

The truth is that poverty levels are much higher than conventionally estimated. In his 2013 report to the secretary general of the OECD, for instance, University of Gottingen economist Stephen Klasen found that the dollar a day standard was “reaching the limits of its usefulness and relevance.

This is partly because of the increasing number of poor people in middle-income countries – where per capita consumption and national poverty lines are substantially above USD 1.25 per day.”

In a recent oped, World Bank chief economist Kaushik Basu conceded that “many criticize as shockingly low” the Bank’s definition of poverty. Yet the Bank has done nothing to amend its dubious definition. This omission allows the Bank to trumpet claims that millions of people, moving above the $1.25 standard, can now be defined as having escaped poverty, even though in reality they remain impoverished.

Basu also condemns the persistence of poverty as a “collective failure”. These appear to be strong words, but they obscure the fact that by blaming ‘everyone’, he in the end blames no one. In reality, this ‘failure’ can be attributed very specifically to the staunchly neoliberal policies of the Bank itself.

Neoliberal policies have involved slashing state spending on health, education and other public services; opening up countries to rapid privatization and foreign investment; and consequently, accelerating government and public debt. Invariably, the impact has been to retard real growth, according to a UN report, and “reduce progress for almost all the social indicators that are available to measure health and educational outcomes.”

Valentine Moghadam, gender equality chief in UNESCO’s human rights division, argues that “the poverty-inducing nature of neoliberal restructuring has been especially severe on women.” It is “incontestable” that women face a “disadvantaged position” in which “women among the poor suffer doubly from the denial of their human rights – first on account of gender inequality, second on account of poverty.”

Indeed, despite working harder than men – making up 70% of the world’s working hours – women only earn 10% of the world’s income, and approximately half of what men earn.

Women’s economic disadvantage often means they are socially more vulnerable, and therefore more easily subject to exploitative working conditions, and other gender-based forms of violence. All this means that as climate change exacerbates the conditions conducive to poverty, women are most on the receiving end.

Food and water is gendered

Far from being mere passive victims, though, women remain utterly pivotal to the possibilities of positive social change in such circumstances, due to their critical role in natural resource management.

As primary collectors of fuel and water for their families, and primary carers in terms of using energy to prepare food, rear their children and care for the ill, women are at the forefront of sustaining the health, prosperity and well-being of communities.

Numerous studies show that climate change will lead to increased droughts, erosion of coastal systems, ocean acidification, destruction of biodiversity, sea level rise, and shifting seasons in coming decades. As a consequence, global warming will intensify water stress and undermine food systems for billions of people, mostly in less developed countries.

This means that women, who play such a key role in food and water provision, are being affected the most by the food and water crises that are worsening due to climate change.

Overall, women earn between 30 and 80% of what men earn annually. Of the world’s 743 million illiterate adults, two thirds are women. Women comprise about half of the agricultural labor force in less developed countries, but only own about 10 to 20% of the land. It’s also usually women who travel long distances everday, frequently alone, to fetch water. In doing so, they are also more vulnerable to health problems and being attacked.

All in all, climate change is making women poorer, eroding their economic opportunities, debilitating their access to food and water, and making them more vulnerable to exploitation. This inevitably erodes the integrity, cohesion and sustainability of families and communities.

Violence is gendered

One of the other major impacts of climate change, of course, is its capacity to accelerate instability and conflict as governments, hell-bent on business-as-usual, face growing resources stresses that they are unable to cope with.

Many studies prove a definite correlation between the acceleration of recent climate change, and the frequency of violent conflict.

But the biggest victims of conflict are women and children, whether in terms of the systematic use of sexual violence as a tactic of war, or by being targeted in indiscriminate attacks on civilians. Violence against women tends to spike during conflicts and civil unrest. “It is now more dangerous to be a woman than to be a soldier in conflict”, said Major General Patrick Carnmaert, a former UN Peacekeeping Operation commander.

Yet climate change does not exacerbate conflict by itself. In 2010, a study of conflict in Africa by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) pointed out that the way climate change impacts society depends on local politics, economy, and culture.

The primary reason that African countries are so deeply vulnerable to civil unrest and violent conflict, the PNAS study shows, is the extent to which their social fabrics have been unravelling under the impact of neoliberal capitalist reforms imposed by the IMF and World Bank, among other factors.

Far from leading to ‘development’, efforts to integrate Africa into the circuits of predatory global finance have largely devastated their societies, ramping up infant mortality rates, widening inequalities, and entrenching regional states with unsustainable debt.

Neoliberal restructuring has created a new economy of war in the less developed world, dislocating communities, and fueling ethnic and tribal antagonisms. The resulting social breakdown permits a resurgence of extremisms as people latch on to custom, identities and myth in the search for certainty.

That in turn, once again, tends to hit the most vulnerable first, especially women and children, in the form of culturally-sanctioned crimes such as honor killings, female genital mutilation, forced marriages, and so on.

Secret World Bank documents leaked some years ago show that financial institutions are fully aware of this largely destabilizing impact of neoliberal restructuring. A Bank country assistance strategy for Ecuador from 2000, for instance, correctly predicted that proposed reforms would spark “social unrest”.

This was part of a wider pattern. As Joseph Stiglitz, former chief economist of the World Bank, put it, the neoliberal package of privatization and liberalization led all too frequently to what he called “the IMF riot”.

Unchecked global capitalism is thus deepening the very impoverishment and social dislocation that fuels the conflict and disorder from which women suffer the most.

Rape is good for business

Into this mix, the role of the global small arms trade is pivotal. Sarah Masters, women’s network coordinator of the International Action Network on Small Arms, points out that without the massive proliferation of light weapons and small arms, the abuse and rape of women “on such a large scale in much of the world’s conflicts” would simply not be possible.

Small arms enable not just rape and other forms of sexual abuse, but also abductions, forced slavery, and forced prostitution.

But the arms trade offers rich pickings for the Western-dominated military-industrial complex. The world’s top small arms exporters include the United States, Italy, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Russia, France, Belgium, Spain, among others. The value of the small arms trade totals around $8.5 billion annually.

This is a mere fraction of the arms trade more generally, where the top companies generate about $395 billion a year. Major interventions in Iraq and Afghanistan significantly boosted such defense contractor profits.

Overall, US firms account for nearly 60% of all sales by the top 100 companies, with Lockheed Martin and Boeing in first and second place, followed in third place by Britain’s BAE Systems.

But while defense firms rake in cash, the impact on the ground has been devastating: this is the vicious cycle of neoliberal capitalism. World Bank and IMF reforms dislocate societies and accelerate conflict while opening up countries to foreign investors, while arms companies swoop in to make a killing selling weapons to all sides in the maelstrom. Meanwhile, rape and abuse of women becomes endemic.

From countries subjected to Western intervention and occupation like Iraq, Afghanistan, and Palestine, to less developed regions like Africa, violence against women has become entrenched and endemic throughout all spheres of life.

Under the US-backed regime in Iraq, for instance, women bear the brunt of increasing gender-based violence, inadequate infrastructure, political exclusion, and poverty. But against all odds, it is Iraqi women who are at the forefront of rights activism through civil society organisations and social movements.

What makes this worse is that violence against women is also endemic outside of conflict. The World Health Organization (WHO) found in 2013 that 35% of women worldwide have experienced physical or sexual violence from either someone they know, or a stranger. One in three women worldwide who have been in a relationship have been subjected to physical or sexual violence from their own partner.

Lest one assume this is predominantly a backward ‘third world’ phenomenon, a recent EU-wide study showed that one in three women over the age of 15 across Europe had suffered some form of physical or sexual abuse. The figures are similar for the United States, with one in three women having experienced domestic violence, and one in five having been raped.

Power is gendered

Given this overwhelming asymmetrical violence perpetrated by men against women, it is no surprise that women worldwide are also overrepresented in several key mental health issues. Depression, for instance, is twice as common among women than men.

Generally, more women appear to suffer from other common disorders such as anxiety and ‘somatic complaints’ – physical symptoms with no medical explanation. Men, on the other hand, are three times more likely to have antisocial personality disorder.

Epidemiological studies from across the English-speaking West show that this pattern is more exacerbated in the leading ‘selfish capitalist’ states. Not only are rates of mental illness at record levels in these countries compared to elsewhere, but women, once again, are suffering in greater numbers.

Women in these countries are 75% more likely to experience depression, and 60% more likely to experience an anxiety disorder than men; while men experience substance abuse disorders two and a half times more frequently than women.

According to clinical psychologist Prof. Daniel Freeman of Oxford University, “There is a pattern within – women tend to suffer more from what we call ‘internal’ problems like depression or sleep problems. They take out problems on themselves, as it were, where men have externalising problems, where they take things out on their environment, such as alcohol and anger problems.”

It is often women who stand in the firing line of such distinctively male mental health problems.

This gender differentiation in mental health is clearly reflective of the fundamental power disparity between men and women, aggravated along ethnic and class lines. Whichever facet of the crisis of civilization we inspect, women are overwhelmingly on the receiving end of the worst impacts.

This suggests that patriarchy itself is a function of a deep-seated and self-reinforcing psychological malaise that, like a cancer, has infected the totality of industrial civilization.

Calls for greater gender equality to address this are all well and good. But for the most part, the initiatives they lead to, while perhaps well-intentioned, often fail to acknowledge the systemic roots of this inequality in global – not just local -political, economic and cultural structures of patriarchy.

Women are systematically marginalized from key positions of power and decision-making processes across every spectrum of society, in every part of the world, rich or poor. They are discriminated against, institutionally and directly, in politics, in employment, in the arts, in media and in culture.

This is not merely to the detriment of women: the economic marginalization of women costs the global economy trillions of dollars a year, a massive blow to the integrity of all those structures.

Yet the vast majority of the world’s resources are owned and controlled by a tiny minority of the world’s population, in the form of an interlocking ‘revolving door’ nexus of corporate, banking, government, defense, industrial, media and other sectors.

It is that nexus, this top 90 group of transnational corporate monoliths – including among them the world’s most powerful oil, gas and coal companies – that bears responsibility for two-thirds of the human-induced greenhouse gas emissions.

And who runs those corporations? For the last decade, the number of women on US corporate boards has remained static at around 17%. Even where countries are doing better, it is not by much. Sweden and Finland, for instance, are at around 27%.

Overall, decades of diversification have pretty much got us nowhere with corporate boards being 88% white and 85% male. Looking closer at the top Fortune 500 companies, only 4% of CEOs are women, and all of those are white.

As these giant companies attempt to maximize their profits at any human or environmental cost, they are exploiting intensifying resource stress to accelerate investments in lucrative land grabs for farming, mineral commodities, and fraudulent carbon-offset schemes.

In less developed regions like Africa, as Oxfam reports, this is “having an immediate impact on women’s land-use options, on their livelihoods, on food availability and the cost of living, and, ultimately, on women’s access to land for food production. These are only the economic impacts. Women’s knowledge, socio-cultural relationship with the land, and stewardship of nature are also under threat.”

Confronting planetary misogyny

The systemic marginalization and repression of women is not an accidental feature of our civilizational crisis. It is an integral and fundamental pillar of the pervasive injustice of the global system. The global epidemic of violence toward women is inherently bound up with our male-dominated system of violence toward the natural world as a whole.

The rapist, the abuser, is no different from an insatiable tyrant, a slave to his sadistic appetites, unconcerned by the pain inflicted in the process of satiating them.

Just as violence against women is about power, self-gratification through dominance and control, extreme egoism and narcissism, and ultimately a lack of empathy bordering on psychopathology, so ultimately is our systemic violence against nature.

Throughout the course of our exploitative plundering of planetary resources in the pursuit of endless material growth, the global system continues its asymmetric war on women, just as it annihilates species, destroys eco-systems, and exhausts resources for the profit and power of a tiny minority.

The gender divide is not just a mirror image of humanity’s external dislocation from nature: it is both a symptom and driver of that dislocation.

But it is not working. Contemporary global capitalism might be making some people richer, but it is making more people poorer and unhappier, in a context of accelerating uncertainty and conflict. And by the end of this century at least, we face the prospect, according to the consensus of our best scientific minds, of a largely uninhabitable planet if we continue business-as-usual.

The global system is failing, and the mass murder, abuse and murder of women by men is central to that failure: misogyny is an integral function of planetary destruction.

If we want to save the planet, patriarchy must die. That means recognizing and taking responsibility for the fact that patriarchy is integral to the structures of power we take for granted, across East and West.

There’s no no time to waste. If misogyny wins, the planet dies.

 


 

Dr. Nafeez Ahmed is an investigative journalist, bestselling author, and international security scholar. He is a regular contributor to The Ecologist where he writes about the geopolitics of interconnected environmental, energy and economic crises. He has also written for the Guardian, The Independent, Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, The Scotsman, Foreign Policy, Prospect, New Statesman, Vice, Le Monde diplomatique, among many others. His new novel of the near future is ZERO POINT.

Follow him on Twitter @nafeezahmed and Facebook.

Website: www.nafeezahmed.com

 

 






Bees victory in pesticide battle – Bayer libel action dismissed





German chemical giant Bayer has failed in its attempt to sue Friends of the Earth Germany (BUND) over its claims that two of its pesitcide formulations harm bees.

A judge in Dusseldorf has ruled that BUND had a right to voice its concerns about Bayer’s ‘Calypso‘ and ‘Lizetan’ pesticide formulations, sold to consumers as “not toxic to bees”. Both contain the neonicotinoid Thiacloprid which is associated with harm to bees.

“We are delighted with this achievement”, said BUND’s pesticide expert Tomas Brückmann. “This is a victory for the bees and freedom.”

Just before last Christmas Bayer took out a restraining order against BUND at the District Court in Dusseldorf, preventing the group from publishing its view that the product was harmful to bees, under threat of a €250,000 fine or a detention of up to two years. Now that order has been overturned.

A spokesman for Bayer said the company “regrets the decision”, adding that the products “had officially been classified as ‘not harmful for bees’ and were labeled as such in accordance with binding legal regulations” after thorough testing both by Bayer and Federal Office of Consumer Protection and Food Safety (BVL)

Scientific evidence shows Thiaclopid harms bees

But according to BUND, there is “scientific evidence of impaired learning ability” to bees from Thiacloprid, as well as to “the ability to communicate and pollen foraging activity of bees”.

It also believes that by printing a “not toxic to bees” logo on products containing Thiacloprid, following the emergence of contrary evidence, there arose “the suspicion of a deliberate deception of the consumer by Bayer.”

A scientific paper by Professor Randolf Menzel used in evidence by BUND, says: “Sublethal doses of neonicotinoids interfere selectively with the homing flight component based on this cognitive map memory, reducing the probability of successful returns to the hive. Chronic exposure to the neonicotinoid Thiacloprid reduces the attractiveness of a feeding site and the rate of recruitment.”

Following its legal defeat, says Brückmann, Bayer Crop Sciences should immediately withdraw the offending bee-hazardous pesticides from the market.

“We call on all markets to stop the sale of Thiacloprid pesticides”, he continued. “In addition, the EU should withdraw the authorization of the Thiacloprid and the Federal Office of Consumer Protection and Food Safety (BVL) withdraw product approvals for all Thiacloprid products.”

A paper published in the Journal PLOS ONE confirms that Thiacloprid, along with the neonicotinoids Imidacloprid and Clothianidin, affects bees’ navigational ability and behaviour, making it harder for them to find their way back to their hives.

It also shows that exposure to Thiacloprid can increase the likelihood of honeybees dying if they are already infected with diseases. A further study found that the toxicity of Thiacloprid to honey bees is increased over 1,000 fold when mixed with fungicides.

These bee-toxic pesticides must also be banned in the UK!

Back in London, Friends of the Earth bees campaigner Dave Timms said: “Bayer has been shown up as a corporate bully, trying to silence campaigners who are standing up for bees. 

“The ruling is a victory for Friends of the Earth Germany, freedom of speech and for the many thousands of people who have taken action to protect bees across Europe. 

Thiacloprid is used on various crops in the UK including oil seed rape (canola) and apples, and it is sold direct to the public in garden bug-killing products. Friends of the Earth is now asking the European Commission to take a precautionary approach by suspending all uses of Thiacloprid and to review its safety.

As in Germany, Bayer’s Thiacloprid products sold in the UK are described as “Bee Safe” or having “no risk to bees”. These include Calypso and Biscaya.

“Now we want to see action from the European Commission to ensure that any pesticides with evidence of harm to bees are taken off our shelves and out of our fields for good”, said Timms. In addition FoE will be contacting retailers asking them to stop selling products containing Thiacloprid.

In 2013 three other neonicotinoid pesticides (imidacloprid, thiamethoxam and clothianidin) were subject to a temporary ban in the EU. This followed a review of evidence by the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) which found they each posed a “high acute risk” to honey bees.

“Although Thiacloprid is not subject to that ban there is evidence that it can make bees more likely to die from common diseases and can impair their navigational abilities, making it harder for them to return to their hives”, Timms added.

Not just bees – the entire food chain is at risk!

Last year a group of 29 independent scientists on the Global Taskforce on Systemic Pesticides concluded that the widespread use of neonicotinoid pesticides is affecting earthworms, birds and bees and the quality of water and soils.

They examined over 1,000 peer reviewed papers before reaching this conclusion. They also found that the compounds which neonicotinoids break down into are often as, or more, toxic than the active ingredients.

In another legal action, Bayer and Sygenta are suing the European Commission to lift its temporary ban on the three neonicotinoids. “The Commission must stand form against these bully-buy tactics”, said Timms.

And Bayer is not ruling out an appeal against BUND’s legal victory. A spokesman said: “The court considered the allegations of BUND to be a free expression of opinion, which deserved special protection. Bayer CropScience will wait for the written grounds for the judgment and subsequently consider potential further steps.”

 


 

Oliver Tickell edits The Ecologist.

 






Dear Bryony – don’t dump your nuclear waste on us!





Dear Baroness Worthington,

I watched on in horror as you championed the removal of local authority’s right to decide over the disposal of nuclear waste in their communities.

I didn’t know who you were at the time, and your position of the matter left me thinking perhaps you were a stakeholder in some nuclear power supply chain company.

I was dismayed to learn that you used to be a key member of Friends of the Earth. Further research shows that you have a background in environmentalism and appear on the surface to be concerned with climate change.

So I ask myself, why would someone with your background be a champion of nuclear power? And why would you champion the disposal of nuclear waste underground at levels where groundwater circulates?

And why would you want this done without allowing the full scrutiny of councillors and planning officers? Why would you prefer to remove power from locally elected representatives and place decisions in the hands of one person, creating a potentially corruptible situation?

Nuclear power is not low carbon!

Nuclear power is not a low carbon energy source. There is a wide range of data on the carbon footprint of nuclear waste, much of which is industry rhetoric. Benjamin Sovacool’s review found the average carbon footprint of nuclear power to be 66 gCO2/KWh, breaching the Committee on Climate Change’s recommended limits. Keith Barnham’s article in The Ecologist has more detail:

The fact is the carbon cost of decommissioning and waste handling is difficult to estimate – and if Sellafield’s soaraway clean-up budget is anything to go by, carbon costs as well as financial ones could spiral.

Building geological disposal facilities to handle waste would not necessarily reduce these costs. Vitrification and construction are not low carbon pursuits. What would the carbon cost of a water contamination event be? The human cost would be far greater.

Then there is the issue of uranium mining, a carbon-costly enterprise. As this finite source depletes, ever lower quality of uranium ore will be sought, further increasing the energy required to extract the uranium, and raising the carbon price tag.

Fast breeder reactors technologies that could avoid some of the uranium ore issues have been tried, at enormous cost – and repeatedly failed due to intractable technological hurdles and monstrous expense, while their purported advantages in reducing long-lived nuclear waste have been hugely over-hyped.

Moreover despite bullish promises by the nuclear industry and its cheerleaders, for example over Hitachi’s Prism design, they do not exist – and probably never will.

As for the ‘molten salt’ thorium reactor technology you espouse, it is fraught with most of the same issues as any other nuclear fission technology.

And thanks to serious and possibly unsolvable technological difficulties, it’s a very long way of becoming a practical reality. Any large scale deployment is at least half a century away – by which time low cost renewables will surely dominate the world’s power supply, and it will be completely redundant.

Finite investment funds must go into renewables!

The amount of subsidies the government wishes to funnel into the greedy jaws of nuclear power is quite frightening, locking us into ridiculous contracts for decades and guaranteeing fuel poverty in the future.

Who knows what the energy market will look like in ten, twenty years? Yet energy consumers may be having to pay inflation-proofed subsidies for Hinkley Point C – if it’s ever built – to 2060 and beyond!

If renewable technology received the proper support – and that includes people like you ceasing to defend the nuclear industry that is threatening to grab almost all the UK’s ‘low carbon’ energy funding –  we could be online to meet our carbon targets.

Cheerleading for new builds that take years to get off the ground, even if you do believe they are low carbon – in the face evidence that clearly suggests otherwise – could delay action on climate change that should be happening right now, but is being deliberately starved of funds.

What if those nuclear energy subsidies were instead promised to the solar, wind, tidal, anaerobic digestion and retrofitting industries? Wouldn’t that be a far better way to tackle climate change?

There’s nothing ‘natural’ about fission products!

But back to radioactive waste, which is a sticky issue. We have to deal with what we have, but most environmentalists and humanitarians agree that adding to that pile is madness. Why would someone with your credentials think otherwise?

You have risen to a position of great power. You stood in the Moses room as someone who is known for their actions in protecting the environment, and damned it by championing nuclear power and nuclear waste dumping and stressing that it was a nationally significant issue that extends beyond the lifetimes of the people living in the area.

You spoke about a pendulum of nuclear regulation and how radiation is ‘natural’. Background radiation is natural. Mining ores, processing, enriching etc, is most definitely not natural. Even less so are the myriad fission products emitted by nuclear power plants, concentrated in spent nuclear fuel, and discharged during fuel reprocessing – and comparing the two through insinuation is both wrong and immoral.

How is reducing regulation ever a good move for protecting public health and safety?

You may be thinking right now that I am part of a public that is somewhat hysterical about radiation and its effects. I have a PhD in cancer biology and have studied the response of cells to irradiation.

I’m not frightened of a bit of background radiation, but I do have grave concerns about burying highly radioactive nuclear waste underground where it has to stay isolated for hundreds of thousands of years, without any of it ending up in our water supplies.

The one thing we know for certain about deep hydrogeology is that we don’t know all that much about it. How can you guarantee the safety of our water supplies, and those of our children and their descendants? I suggest you read the ‘Rock Solid?‘ review produced by GeneWatch on behalf of Greenpeace on geological disposal if you have not done so already.

I also very concerned about climate change, and quite aside from the radioactive waste issue, I am opposed to nuclear new builds due to their carbon emission consequences.

I would urge you to rethink your position on nuclear new builds and geological disposal on both pragmatic and ethical grounds.

 


 

Note: Baroness (Bryony) Worthington, a Labour peer, spoke in the House of Lords debate on the Infrastructure Planning (Radioactive Waste Geological Disposal Facilities) Order 2015.

Dr Becky Martin earned her PhD at the Institute of Genetics, University of Nottingham and went on to work at the University of Oxford studying DNA repair gene expression in bladder cancer for three years. She is now a full time mother and environmental campaigner, and blogs here. Together with several other mothers she co-founded the group No Geo Nuke Dumping @NoNukeDumping. 

 

 






Even Better than Gold: The Value of Protected Areas

A look into the Itaimbézinho canyon, Aparados da Serra National Park, Brazil

The implementation of protected areas (PAs) is considered the backbone strategy of efforts towards the conservation of biodiversity and natural resources. Currently, the global network of PAs covers approximately 18.8% of the planet (15.4% of terrestrial and inland water and 3.4% of marine and coastal areas, see Fig. 1), safeguarding millions of species and providing a series of important ecosystem services such as water regulation, carbon neutralization, food, climate change mitigation and adaptation, as well as cultural and aesthetic services. Although many countries have committed themselves to increment the coverage of PAs in the upcoming years through international agreements, such as the Convention on Biological Diversity (which aims to assure that by 2020, at least 17% of terrestrial and inland water and 10% of coastal and marine areas are covered by PAs), they never been so threatened as now! A current, and overlooked, practice known as protected area downgrading, downsizing, and degazettement (PADDD) has become widespread in many countries, threatening and dismantling PAs everywhere due to economic interests such as mining, new power plant projects, etc.  (for more information and a global map see here; Also, a while ago, I wrote a post about PADDD in Brazil here). Thus, estimating the economic relevance of PAs and bringing this information to political and socioeconomic discussions has become an urgent task.

Protected areas of the World. Extracted from: Juffe-Bignoli et. al. (2014).

Protected areas of the World. Extracted from: Juffe-Bignoli et. al. (2014).

In a pioneering study, Andrew Balmford and colleagues have attempted to estimate annual numbers associated with PA visitation and their local and global economic impact. They compiled data from more than 500 terrestrial PAs from 51 countries and built regional and global models to estimate, among other things, the number of visitors, direct expenditure by visitors (calculated from expenditures with fees, travel, accommodation, etc.), consumer surplus (defined as the difference between what visitors would be prepared to pay for a visit and what they actually spend) and the effect of some explanatory variables, such as PA size, remoteness and national income, that might affect visitation rates. Based on these explanatory variables they could predict visit rates for roughly 100,000 PAs.

Their results demonstrate that PAs receive approximately 8 billion visits/yr. Visitation rates are predicted to be higher in Europe, where PAs would receive a combined total of 3.8 billion visits/yr, and lower in Africa (69 million visit/yr). Associations with individual explanatory variables varied regionally in their effect, but as one might expect, national income is a common factor affecting visitation rates in every region. PAs generate approximately US $600 billion/yr in direct expenditure and US $250 billion/yr in consumer surplus. An older estimative shows that less than U$10 billion/yr is spent in protecting and managing PAs, so if this number still roughly valid, for each dollar spent in maintaining them, we would profit ~ U$60, which makes it a hell of a good deal! It is important to note that, although this study seems to be the most comprehensive representation of the global economic significance of tourism associated with PAs, the authors themselves recognize that this number is likely to be an underestimate, so the direct economic return of investing in PAs might be much higher than that!

Now, consider that the economic value of PAs is much, much, higher if we take into account the value of other ecosystem services. A recent study published by Costanza et al. 2014 shows that the global annual economic value of services provided by natural ecosystems is ~U$125 trillion. The same study shows that in less than 15 yrs, changes in land use has promoted an annual loss of U$4.3–20.2 trillion in ecosystem services. Although I could not find a global indicator of the economic participation of PAs as providers of ecosystem services, it seems an obvious conclusion that in a time where natural landscapes are being altered, destroyed and fragmented at very fast rates, PAs will have an even greater importance in protecting the natural and economic wealth of the planet.

So even under the economic development argument, one is left to wonder how governments, politicians and some other sectors of society can consider PAs a “waste of land” and endorse practices such as PADDD?! I don’t really have an answer to this question, but studies like Balmford et al. will surely help conservation biologists to make their discipline more effective and guide society to take batter informed decisions.

 

References

Costanza, R., et al. 2014. Changes in the global value of ecosystem services. Global Environmental Change 26: 152-158. DOI: 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2014.04.002

Juffe-Bignoli, D., et. al. 2014. Protected Planet Report 2014. UNEP-WCMC. Available at <http://www.unep-wcmc.org/resources-and-data/protected-planet-report-2014>

Mascia, M. & Pailler, S. 2011. Protected area downgrading, downsizing, and degazettement (PADDD) and its conservation implications. Conservation Letters 4(1): 9–20. DOI: 10.1111/j.1755-263X.2010.00147.x

March 11, 2015

Dear Bryony – don’t dump your nuclear waste on us!





Dear Baroness Worthington,

I watched on in horror as you championed the removal of local authority’s right to decide over the disposal of nuclear waste in their communities.

I didn’t know who you were at the time, and your position of the matter left me thinking perhaps you were a stakeholder in some nuclear power supply chain company.

I was dismayed to learn that you used to be a key member of Friends of the Earth. Further research shows that you have a background in environmentalism and appear on the surface to be concerned with climate change.

So I ask myself, why would someone with your background be a champion of nuclear power? And why would you champion the disposal of nuclear waste underground at levels where groundwater circulates?

And why would you want this done without allowing the full scrutiny of councillors and planning officers? Why would you prefer to remove power from locally elected representatives and place decisions in the hands of one person, creating a potentially corruptible situation?

Nuclear power is not low carbon!

Nuclear power is not a low carbon energy source. There is a wide range of data on the carbon footprint of nuclear waste, much of which is industry rhetoric. Benjamin Sovacool’s review found the average carbon footprint of nuclear power to be 66 gCO2/KWh, breaching the Committee on Climate Change’s recommended limits. Keith Barnham’s article in The Ecologist has more detail:

The fact is the carbon cost of decommissioning and waste handling is difficult to estimate – and if Sellafield’s soaraway clean-up budget is anything to go by, carbon costs as well as financial ones could spiral.

Building geological disposal facilities to handle waste would not necessarily reduce these costs. Vitrification and construction are not low carbon pursuits. What would the carbon cost of a water contamination event be? The human cost would be far greater.

Then there is the issue of uranium mining, a carbon-costly enterprise. As this finite source depletes, ever lower quality of uranium ore will be sought, further increasing the energy required to extract the uranium, and raising the carbon price tag.

Fast breeder reactors technologies that could avoid some of the uranium ore issues have been tried, at enormous cost – and repeatedly failed due to intractable technological hurdles and monstrous expense, while their purported advantages in reducing long-lived nuclear waste have been hugely over-hyped.

Moreover despite bullish promises by the nuclear industry and its cheerleaders, for example over Hitachi’s Prism design, they do not exist – and probably never will.

As for the ‘molten salt’ thorium reactor technology you espouse, it is fraught with most of the same issues as any other nuclear fission technology.

And thanks to serious and possibly unsolvable technological difficulties, it’s a very long way of becoming a practical reality. Any large scale deployment is at least half a century away – by which time low cost renewables will surely dominate the world’s power supply, and it will be completely redundant.

Finite investment funds must go into renewables!

The amount of subsidies the government wishes to funnel into the greedy jaws of nuclear power is quite frightening, locking us into ridiculous contracts for decades and guaranteeing fuel poverty in the future.

Who knows what the energy market will look like in ten, twenty years? Yet energy consumers may be having to pay inflation-proofed subsidies for Hinkley Point C – if it’s ever built – to 2060 and beyond!

If renewable technology received the proper support – and that includes people like you ceasing to defend the nuclear industry that is threatening to grab almost all the UK’s ‘low carbon’ energy funding –  we could be online to meet our carbon targets.

Cheerleading for new builds that take years to get off the ground, even if you do believe they are low carbon – in the face evidence that clearly suggests otherwise – could delay action on climate change that should be happening right now, but is being deliberately starved of funds.

What if those nuclear energy subsidies were instead promised to the solar, wind, tidal, anaerobic digestion and retrofitting industries? Wouldn’t that be a far better way to tackle climate change?

There’s nothing ‘natural’ about fission products!

But back to radioactive waste, which is a sticky issue. We have to deal with what we have, but most environmentalists and humanitarians agree that adding to that pile is madness. Why would someone with your credentials think otherwise?

You have risen to a position of great power. You stood in the Moses room as someone who is known for their actions in protecting the environment, and damned it by championing nuclear power and nuclear waste dumping and stressing that it was a nationally significant issue that extends beyond the lifetimes of the people living in the area.

You spoke about a pendulum of nuclear regulation and how radiation is ‘natural’. Background radiation is natural. Mining ores, processing, enriching etc, is most definitely not natural. Even less so are the myriad fission products emitted by nuclear power plants, concentrated in spent nuclear fuel, and discharged during fuel reprocessing – and comparing the two through insinuation is both wrong and immoral.

How is reducing regulation ever a good move for protecting public health and safety?

You may be thinking right now that I am part of a public that is somewhat hysterical about radiation and its effects. I have a PhD in cancer biology and have studied the response of cells to irradiation.

I’m not frightened of a bit of background radiation, but I do have grave concerns about burying highly radioactive nuclear waste underground where it has to stay isolated for hundreds of thousands of years, without any of it ending up in our water supplies.

The one thing we know for certain about deep hydrogeology is that we don’t know all that much about it. How can you guarantee the safety of our water supplies, and those of our children and their descendants? I suggest you read the ‘Rock Solid?‘ review produced by GeneWatch on behalf of Greenpeace on geological disposal if you have not done so already.

I also very concerned about climate change, and quite aside from the radioactive waste issue, I am opposed to nuclear new builds due to their carbon emission consequences.

I would urge you to rethink your position on nuclear new builds and geological disposal on both pragmatic and ethical grounds.

 


 

Note: Baroness (Bryony) Worthington, a Labour peer, spoke in the House of Lords debate on the Infrastructure Planning (Radioactive Waste Geological Disposal Facilities) Order 2015.

Dr Becky Martin earned her PhD at the Institute of Genetics, University of Nottingham and went on to work at the University of Oxford studying DNA repair gene expression in bladder cancer for three years. She is now a full time mother and environmental campaigner, and blogs here. Together with several other mothers she co-founded the group No Geo Nuke Dumping @NoNukeDumping. 

 

 






London Assembly votes for £5 bn fossil fuel divestment – listen up, Boris!





Some victories are sudden and unexpected. Some take time, planning and weeks upon weeks of hard work. Today’s City Hall divestment victory falls into the latter category.

For months, the campaigners of Divest London have waged a less-than-silent war of persuasion, argument and charm on members of the London Assembly.

With the Green party as an ally, we fought to expand our influence on Labour and the Liberal Democrats. We prepared, we practiced and we convinced. We tweeted, we emailed, we called, we wooed.

And we won!

The London Assembly has voted – with an overwhelming majority of 15-3 – in support of fossil fuel divestment. Specifically, it has called on the Mayor of London to support divestment and on the £4.8bn London Pension Fund Authority to divest over the next five years.

This is no small feat. The motion – drawn up by Divest London and filed by Green Party Assembly Member Jenny Jones – will help to push fossil fuel divestment high up on the agenda for the 2016 mayoral race in the UK capital and square in front of Boris Johnson for the rest of his term. (You can read more about the motion here).

Now it’s over to Boris

This is a key moment for our campaign to get City Hall to go fossil free. The London Assembly is our voice in city government. The 25 elected members examine issues on behalf of Londoners and hold the Mayor to account.

Although Boris gets the final say, this positive vote at the Assembly is a key milestone for the campaign and gives us a strong mandate to put pressure all the way to the top.

Boris does not directly set the agenda for the LFPA, but he does appoint its chair and half of its board. This influence is significant given the political and financial scale of the Fund.

We estimate that the Fund currently invests upwards of £100 million in fossil fuel companies, including Shell and two coal companies – Rio Tinto and BHP Billiton – despite the fact that Goldman Sachs has warned thermal coal is reaching its ‘retirement age’, downgrading its long-term valuation by 18%. Meanwhile Ed Davey has singled out coal as “the short-term biggest worry by a long way.”

Boris Johnson is already behind on his climate adaptation and mitigation targets, receiving a 4.6 out of 10 scorecard from the London Assembly.

Perhaps most outrageously he had been accused by the head of the Met Office’s Climate Monitoring and Attribution Unit of “misleading the public” over spurious claims that global warming is due to solar activity.

Growing risk of ‘stranded’ carbon assets

If the Mayor refuses to divest, he will be forced to justify why City Hall is investing in companies that bank on the Conservative government, at both the city and national level, not enacting their emissions policies and not meaningfully tackling climate change.

This is what the major fossil fuel companies hope will happen. Shell and Exxon Mobil have written letters to shareholders saying they think it “highly unlikely” government will limit emissions in the way they have promised. We’re going to prove them wrong – starting today.

If Boris Johnson refuses to divest, he will be actively ignoring the wishes of the London Assembly, Londoners of all stripes – health workers, teachers, students, clergy members, lawyers and parents. He will also be willfully ignoring the warnings of the Bank of England, the Church of England, the World Bank and the UN.

Divestment campaigners claim that those invested in fossil fuels face serious risk from the prospect of ‘stranded assets’, which mean that the majority of reserves could ultimately be unburnable as governments worldwide consider committing to limit global warming to 2C, with global climate talks in Paris scheduled for December 2015.

Indeed, Carbon Tracker research has found that the London Stock Exchange is exposed to particularly high carbon risk, with a third of the FTSE 100 represented by resource and mining companies. And this exposure is increasing year on year; between 2011-2013, exposure to carbon (particularly coal) rose by seven per cent.

A recent London Assembly report cited the warning that, consequently, ‘London’s role as a global financial centre is at stake’. Over 250,000 individuals have their pension benefits invested in the LPFA. Most of them are unlikely to be aware that their money is invested in what Ed Davey has called ‘the sub prime assets of the future’.

Oslo, Oxford, Bristol – and now London?

This is only the beginning. Divest campaigns are springing up in city and borough councils all over the UK. If any of you have read the Guardian’s recent environmental and divestment coverage (which is excellent by the way) you can see that the divestment movement is going mainstream.

Indeed, it is no accident that this vote follows the massively successful Global Divestment Day – with its army of Boris Johnson lookalikes and 500 citizens rallying outside of City Hall – or the Time to Act! National Climate March last week with 20,000 people marching through London.

It is no accident that the vote comes less than two weeks after Oslo became the first world capital to support fossil fuel divestment, or after Oxford and Bristol City Councils have both divested.

Divestment is an idea whose time has come. More than 39 other cities in five countries worldwide have committed to divest from fossil fuels.  London can be on that list. London will lead on that list.

So – what are you on, Boris? You are in a position to do some real good for the city and to set an example for the UK and for, really, the world. You can be a leader in this fight for our planetary future or you can fall in line behind fracking CEOs and oil money.

Londoners and the London Assembly have sent a clear message. Are you listening?

 


 

Petition:Divest City Hall from fossil fuel investments!

Source: Divest London.

 






Israel escalates deadly attacks on Gaza’s fishers





Located in the southeastern corner of the Mediterranean Sea, and Palestine’s only access to the ocean, the Gaza Strip could be a natural gateway to regional trade for the Palestinian economy.

However, near daily shootings and arrests by Israeli forces since a ceasefire agreement last August are exacerbating a decade-long crisis in the fishing sector, with livelihoods particularly vulnerable following a 51-day war on the coastal territory.

At least 80 fishing boats, dozens of fishing huts, and hundreds of nets were destroyed during the Israeli military offensive last summer, according to Oxfam, adding further restrictions to the industry, which began in the year 2000.

The 2007 Israeli blockade, followed by a large-scale military offensive a year later, imposed a three nautical mile zone for fishermen along Gaza’s 40 km coastline, crippling an industry that could have been thriving in the blue expanse of the Mediterranean.

As a result, the numbers of fishermen registered in Gaza have dropped dramatically over the past ten years as the profitability of the sector continues to decrease.

In 2005, there were over 10,000 fishermen registered in Gaza, according to Oxfam. Today, that number stands at around 3,500, and the Union of Agricultural Work Committees, Oxfam’s partner in Gaza, says only a third of those go out to sea regularly.

Promise to expand fishing zone broken – now ‘shootings occur daily’

Fishermen and Palestinian rights groups say there has been a notable increase in shooting incidents along Gaza’s coast since the ceasefire agreement last summer.

The agreement had promised to expand the fishing area to six nautical miles – still below the agreed 20 nautical miles under the Oslo Accords – but locals say nothing has changed and the Israeli navy is enforcing the zone with excessive force.

On March 7, Israeli naval forces shot and killed a Palestinian fisherman after a group of fishing boats allegedly strayed from the designated fishing zone.

In reality, the area has never been expanded past twelve nautical miles, with Israeli authorities claiming it is a security prevention measure. Rights group Gisha says that Israel has often reduced the fishing zone to three nautical miles during escalations in fighting, such as when rockets have been fired from Gaza.

“This implies that the restriction was imposed as a punitive measure as there was, of course, no causal link between fishing beyond three nautical miles and the firing of rockets”, the executive director of the group said.

Hamdi Shaqqura, deputy director of the Palestinian Center for Human Rights in Gaza (PCHR), says the increase in attacks on fishermen is intentional and designed to stifle the industry, part of a wider set of measures which collectively punish Palestinians in Gaza:

“Attacks on fishing boats, confiscation of equipment, destruction of boats, fishermen wounded, and arrests are all regular and routine. They are almost a daily business for the Israeli navy.”

PCHR reports that nearly all of the attacks since August have taken place within six nautical miles from the coast, further proof that no fishing zone extension took place.

“Putting these restrictions in place prevents any opportunity for economic development and has nothing to do with so-called security, which is the justification for the land and sea closure”, Shaqqura says.

PCHR reports that there were over 236 attacks against fishermen in 2014, including 150 shooting incidents, the destruction of 14 boats, the confiscation of 25 vessels and the arrest of 51 fishermen.

“Everyone was hoping that the blockade would be lifted following the ceasefire. But it has not improved and there are almost daily incidents of shootings against fishermen”, says Arwa Mhanna, Oxfam’s representative in Gaza.

‘Struggling to survive’

Over 90% of fishermen in Gaza depend on aid for survival, and half live below the poverty line, Oxfam says.

During the war on Gaza, fishermen lost around $3 million in revenues due to restrictions on going out to sea, which PCHR estimates at 300-400 tons of fish.

The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs estimates that on average, fishermen miss out of on roughly 1,300 metric tons of fish per year due to Israeli restrictions since 2000, a massive financial loss for the sector, now one of the poorest in Gaza.

Despite the risks, some Palestinian fishermen head out to sea as most do not have any other livelihood option.

“The problem for fishermen is that they have invested everything they have in fishing boats. Often they sell the jewelry of their wives, take loans, or borrow money. But they have never been able to pay it back as they never receive profits”, Mhunna from Oxfam says.

During arrests, Israeli naval forces confiscate the boat and nets of fishermen, and they are often never returned. With fishing boats costing up to $10,000, a livelihood can be ruined instantaneously.

Israeli forces also often fire at the engine of the boat to disable the vessel during incidents, the most expensive part to repair, further adding to the financial woes of fishermen.

In a bid to mitigate the loss of equipment, and rising fuel prices, fishermen pool resources and share boats. But the majority of fish stocks lie beyond nine nautical miles off the coast, meaning the catch is often meager. Even if fishermen do achieve a modest catch, the Israeli blockade ensures they have no access to international markets, or to the West Bank.

“We firmly believe there is great potential for economic development in Gaza but Israel must lift its hands from the sea and land”, Shaqqura says.

“The same way Israeli fishermen have free access, to the Mediterranean and Atlantic seas, Palestinians need the same treatment: to be able to go into international territory.”

 


 

Charlie Hoyle is a senior editor for Ma’an News Agency in Bethlehem, Palestine.

This article was originally published by openDemocracy under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 licence.

Creative Commons License

 

 






The end is nigh: last rites for Hinkley C





I’ve always said that the two proposed new reactors at Hinkley Point would never get built. Now I’m not just saying it: I’m absolutely convinced that they’ll never get built.

A couple of weeks ago, EdF formally confirmed that no decision would be taken on Hinkley Point before the General Election, and probably not before the end of the year.

The reason it gave was that: “We are in the final phase of negotiations, but that phase can take a considerable amount of time, depending on the number of problems left to resolve.”

And that list of problems is daunting. First, it needs to be able to sign final deals with co-investors, including the Chinese, who are beginning to cut up rough. Then it needs final confirmation from the European Commission and the UK Government for a whole load of issues regarding the waste transfer contract.

It also needs to finalise a £10bn loan guarantee from the Treasury. And, despite months of discussions, it needs to conclude negotiations with the UK Government regarding the subsidy contract.

Legal challenges loom large

You’ll notice that this list does not include any delays that may be caused by the Austrian Government challenging the EU’s decision to approve as ‘legal’ (within the EU’s state aid rules) the billions of pounds of subsidy that the UK Government will pump into the project.

EdF doesn’t talk about that, as it still hopes that the Austrians will be ‘persuaded’ by the UK Government to withdraw its challenge. And the UK Government is certainly intent on doing exactly that!

Over the last few months, details have been trickling out about the retaliatory measures UK Ministers are now threatening in a demonstration of state bullying that beggars belief. A leaked memo showed UK ministers asserting that “the UK will take every opportunity to sue or damage Austria in the future.”

Which shows just how desperate the Coalition Government has become, having put all its notionally ‘low carbon’ eggs in the nuclear basket – a decision that has forced ministers to go to extraordinary lengths to get the Hinkley Point project over the line.

UK Government bending over backwards … to no avail

Influential commentator Dr Philip Johnstone, Research Fellow at the Science Policy Research Unit, put it as follows: “Every wish of the nuclear industry has been granted by the UK Government. The British planning system has been ‘streamlined’, with nuclear a key inspiration of the need to speed things up.

“The Government has created one of the best institutional contexts in the world for developing nuclear, with a new Office for Nuclear Regulation and the Office for Nuclear Development, and has ensured that nuclear regulators are equipped to pre-license designs for new build.

“As well as this, a strategic siting assessment and environmental assessment were carried out, further ‘streamlining’ the process of new nuclear construction. Electricity Market Reform has been brought in, where, despite being a mature technology, nuclear was granted Contracts for Difference at double the current market rate for the next 35 years.”

But none of that cuts much ice with the Austrians, and if their challenge proceeds, nobody quite knows how long a delay that might entail. It will certainly be years, not months.

And it just got worse for the Coalition Government. We heard last week that EdF is now going to have to deal with another legal challenge – this one from a German energy Co-operative (a very successful enterprise, founded by Greenpeace 15 years ago) on the grounds that the EU’s decision self-evidently distorts competition.

Greenpeace Energy is also calling on the German Government to join Austria in its formal complaint, but that’s still unlikely.

The nuclear dream crashes into harsh realities

But you know what – regardless of what happens with those legal challenges, it looks like the beginning of the end for Hinkley anyway. And here’s why:

  • The cost of the Hinkley Point project has gone up and up over the last two years, and shows little indication of stabilising where it now is;
  • The calamitous failure of EdF (and its partner Areva) to deliver the first two EPR projects at Olkiluoto in Finland and Flamanville in France has dragged on and on;
    – The two Chinese co-investors (the China National Nuclear Corporation and China General Nuclear Power) have got more and more leery about the EPR reactor design;
  • The French Government has become more and more outspoken about its reluctance to go on bailing out either EdF or Areva, as their balance sheets go from bad to worse;
  • Areva is now in such a bad state (with a €4.8bn loss in 2014) that it looks as if it might have to withdraw as a co-investor in the Hinkley project – a state of affairs pretty much confirmed by EdF’s CEO last week;
  • Worse yet, Areva has announced that it wants to suspend indefinitely any further work on the approval process for its EPR (the same reactor design as Hinkley) in the USA, which sends a pretty strong signal that the EPR in the USA is as good as dead and buried;
  • To cap it all, the UK Government has itself further muddied the waters by seeking approval from the EU to hold a ‘golden share’ in the Hinkley project. This would give them special voting rights, and could theoretically allow Ministers to block the transfer of ownership of Hinkley if EdF decided that it wanted to get out. (Worried about the Chinese taking total control, perhaps?!) Experts believe this may completely undo the case that the UK Government made to the Commission last year for approval of those huge subsidies.

And in the meantime, it has to be said that the world looks very different from the point of view of renewable energy. The costs of solar and wind continue to fall, year on year, with every indication that there’s a further 40% reduction to come over the next few years.

Hinkley has become toxic

So perhaps it’s not so surprising that the Coalition Government has been a lot quieter on its Hinkley hopes and dreams than it was last year. Not a peep, for instance, from the disgracefully compromised Liberal Democrat Secretary of State for Energy, Ed Davey. And not a peep from George Osborne, who must be looking at the finances of Hinkley Point with increasing hostility.

Interestingly, nor have we heard anything like as much from today’s pro-nuclear greenies as we did before – including George Monbiot, Stephen Tindale, Mark Lynas and even Jim Lovelock.

From what I’ve heard (by way of reliable gossip, it has to be said, rather than hard-and-fast evidence!), they’ve all realised that their ability to enthuse people with their pro-nuclear illusions is being severely (if not entirely) undermined by the Hinkley Point fiasco.

The combination of EdF and Areva (both realistically bankrupt, were it not for funding from the French Government), Chinese investors (demanding copper-bottomed guarantees that they will be bailed out when Hinkley Point turns into another Olkiluoto or Flamanville), a reactor design (the EPR) that even the keenest of nuclear engineers have started to describe as “unbuildable”, and the threat of further, even more costly delays (there’s now no chance at all that any reactor at Hinkley Point will be generating any electricity before 2025), is quite simply toxic.

My best bet is that these pro-nuclear greenies now desperately need Hinkley Point to fail, so that their reputations will be sort-of salvaged – even as they start hyping the next instalment of their nuclear nonsense.

We got a very strong sense of that through the speech of another pro-nuclear, former greenie, Baroness Worthington, Shadow Spokesperson for Energy and Climate Change in the House of Lords. In her words, the Hinkley Point deal has caused “a crisis of confidence” in the future of energy policy in the UK:

“policies which Conservatives brought in have resulted in a massive destabilisation of the energy market. Intervention in the market has dented confidence for a contract which has yet to be signed. We have become over-obsessed with the delivery of one project.”

And this from one of the keenest advocates of nuclear power in the Labour Party! No doubt her voice has been influential in the current Labour Party position on Hinkley, which is to argue that it needs a completely new financial appraisal, effectively giving the Labour Party a ‘get-out-of-Hinkley Point’ post-Election option.

When in a hole, stop digging. Tom Greatrex, take note!

Which is by no means the same thing, sadly, as Labour developing a ‘get-out-of-nuclear-altogether’ option. The Labour Party’s deeply unimpressive Energy Spokesman, Tom Greatrex, recently told voters in Scotland that a future Labour Government would force Scotland to be part of a new UK-wide nuclear programme – regardless of the SNP’s very clear anti-nuclear stance. (Go for it, Tom: what better way of winning back Labour voters in Scotland!)

All this chaos and confusion must surely mean that, post Election, we might at last be able to get back to a serious debate about energy policy here in the UK, without Hinkley Point distorting every single aspect of today’s Electricity Market Reform, shadowing out every single policy alternative, and holding back the mindset and behavioural revolutions amongst both business and the general public on which our energy future really depends.

We’ve already paid a very significant price for Labour’s sad surrender to the seductive lies of the nuclear industry, and for this Coalition Government’s near-incomprehensible decision to pursue the EPR reactor design for Hinkley Point. Between them, they’ve dug a hole already so deep that they have no idea what to do other than to keep on digging.

So let’s just hope that those Austrians stick to their guns with their legal challenge, for this is by far the longest and by far the most robust rope-ladder up which those benighted politicians – and ever-more benighted pro-nuclear greenies – will soon – ever so thankfully – be able to climb.

 


 

Jonathon Porritt is Founder Director of Forum for the Future www.forumforthefuture.org. His latest book, ‘The World We Madeis available from www.phaidon.com/store.

This article was originally published on Jonathon Porritt’s blog.

 

 






Fukushima: an unnatural disaster that must never be repeated





Four years have passed since the March 11 tragic triple meltdowns began at Fukushima Daiichi. There is no end in sight.

Let’s be clear, the disaster at Fukushima Daiichi was manmade. Tokyo Electric (TEPCO) and indeed the entire nuclear industry worldwide act as if they are the victims of a natural disaster, but in fact the nuclear industry is the perpetrator of this travesty.

When the American nuclear companies, General Electric and Ebasco, built Fukushima Daiichi for TEPCO, they knew that huge tsunamis were a real risk.

Instead of designing for the worst imaginable consequences, which would make nuclear power unaffordable, the industry chose instead to save money, allowing economics to trump safety. The continuing problems at Fukushima Daiichi during the past four years stem from those skewed priorities.

Tokyo Electric, the government regulators in Japan, and the worldwide nuclear industry grossly underestimated the initial radioactive releases, underestimated the magnitude of the disaster, and underestimated the consequences of not taking action. The Japanese people will pay the price for decades to come.

Protecting people? Or protecting the nuclear industry?

Is Tokyo Electric or the Japanese government incompetent? I don’t think so. As I look back at the last four years, I think that TEPCO, Japanese regulators, and worldwide regulatory agencies wanted nuclear power to succeed so badly that they focused on saving Tokyo Electric and forgot about the people they were created to serve.

At each nuclear catastrophe: Three Mile Island, Chernobyl, and again at Fukushima Daiichi, the companies, governments, and agencies responding to these disasters were not working to protect people, but worked instead to protect the ongoing operation and potential future of nuclear power.

The mishandling of this disaster has shown us that emergency response must be directed by organizations that put people first, not agencies that have a vested interest in perpetuating nuclear power, banking, and industrial interests.

Why have the nuclear industry, its regulators, and governments worldwide attempted to minimize the devastation created by the obvious collapse of the myth of nuclear safety? The answer is money.

Throughout the world, banks and governments are heavily invested in the financial success of the ongoing operation of their nuclear power plants, no matter what health consequences and personal loss is forced upon the people of their nations.

Only nuclear power can destroy a country overnight

Following the Fukushima Daiichi triple meltdown, governments around the world have destroyed their social contracts with their citizens by pressing for costly and risky nuclear power without regard for the health and welfare of generations to come. The social contract between the people in Japan and the Japanese government has certainly been breached, perhaps for decades to come.

The same skewed decision-making process that lead to ignoring the tsunami risk at Fukushima Daiichi in 1965 is still being applied to new nuclear construction and old nuclear operation. The old paradigm has not and likely will not change, despite five meltdowns during the last 35 years disproving the myth of nuclear safety.

Of all the ways electricity is produced, nuclear technology is the only one that can destroy the fabric of a country overnight. In his memoirs Mikhail Gorbachev states that it was the Chernobyl accident that destroyed the Soviet Union not Perestroika.

Five former Japanese Prime Ministers: Kan, Koizumi, Nakazone, Noda, and Hatoyama, who span the spectrum of liberal to conservative, oppose nuclear power. And currently in Europe, former physicist and German Chancellor Angela Merkel is leading her country to be nuclear free by 2022.

Where there is a political will, nations can wean themselves from nuclear power without waiting for yet another nuclear disaster to occur.

And as Naoto Kan, Japan’s prime minister during the Fukushima Daiichi tragedy, said (Crisis Without End, From the Symposium at the New York Academy of Medicine 2011):

“Considering the risk of losing half our land and evacuating half our population, my conclusion is that not having nuclear power plants is the safest energy policy”,

 


 

Arnie Gunderson is an eminent US nuclear engineer and whistle-blower. He is know to millions via his website Fairewinds.com. He is in the United Kingdom this week to commemorate the tragic triple meltdown at Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant on March 11, 2011 by speaking to the House of Commons and several other venues about the disaster.

Event tonight:  Arnie Gunderson and Dr Ian Fairlie, international expert on radiation and health, are both speaking in Keswick, Cumbria, at the Skiddaw Hotel – 7:30 – 9.30pm. Event organised by Radiation-Free Lakelands.

Reference links, books, articles

http://www.economist.com/news/asia/21642221-industrial-clean-up-without-precedent-mission-impossible

http://www.fairewinds.org/fukushima-meltdown-4-years-later/

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/10/world/asia/critics-say-japan-ignored-warnings-of-nuclear-disaster.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0

Crisis Without End, From the Symposium at the New York Academy of Medicine, The New Press, ISBN 978-1-59558-960-6, 2014

The Ecologist: ‘Fukushima and the institutional invisibility of nuclear disaster‘, Dr. John Downer, December 20, 2014.

The Ecologist: ‘All fouled up – Fukushima four years after the catastrophe‘, Dr Jim Green, 11th March 2015.

The Big Lie, Secret Chernobyl Documents.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/aug/16/editorial-fukushima-nuclear-dirty-tricks

http://newsok.com/pge-releases-thousands-of-emails-with-state-regulators/article/feed/790236/?page=1

http://zeenews.india.com/news/india/cpi-asks-govt-to-explain-why-it-rushed-into-nuke-agreement_1537199.html

http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/nuclear-power-odyssey-of-naoto-kan-former-japan-prime-minister-during-fukushima/

http://www.fairewinds.org/alone-in-the-zone/

http://www.washingtonsblog.com/2012/03/soviet-leader-chernobyl-nuclear-accident-caused-the-collapse-of-the-ussr.html

http://www.democraticunderground.com/112760135