Campaigns Archives

nuclear waste likely to be dumped in nt

http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2010/02/23/2827837.htm?site=alicesprings

Australia’s first nuclear waste dump is likely to be sited in the Northern Territory.

Resources and Energy Minister Martin Ferguson has revealed Muckaty Station, about 120 kilometres north of Tennant Creek, as the location the Federal Government will pursue for a national radioactive waste repository.

“We will proceed firstly with the only voluntary site that we have, and that goes to the Ngapa land with respect to the Muckaty Station,” he told 105.7 ABC Darwin.

Mr Ferguson said several sites preferred by the Howard government would no longer be pursued.

“We have knocked out the three sites which were not volunteered by the community but were determined by politicians in Canberra,” he said.

This is “despite the fact that scientifically they actually stack up”.

Should environmental and scientific assessments fail at the Muckaty site, Mr Ferguson said the nuclear waste dump could be located elsewhere in Australia.

“I also have the capacity, if I assess that that is not a proper site, to then open up to a national voluntary site nomination process.”

Mr Ferguson said the Government would this week repeal Howard government legislation that would have enabled it to force the waste dump on the Northern Territory.

He said radioactive waste stored at the site would not be linked to Australia’s uranium exports, but to isotopes used in medical treatments.

He said the Muckaty site had been nominated by the Northern Land Council, however he acknowledged that some traditional owners were not in agreement.

“Clearly there are some differences in terms of the Muckaty Land Trust.”

He said before the site could be approved as a waste dump, the Northern Land Council would “have to prove that it’s been done in accordance with the law of the Northern Territory”.

He said a final decision on the dump site would still take a long time.

“If the science stacks up, and if it meets environmental approvals - but thirdly and more importantly, it obtains the necessary approval from the Ngapa people, through the Northern Land Council - then it will potentially be the appropriate site.”

Natalie Wasley from the Beyond Nuclear Initiative says the decision is extremely disappointing.

“There is an agreement that was made between the Northern Land Council, the Federal Government and some traditional owners of the land trust,” she said.

“This agreement has never been made public and there’s been a number of documents submitted by other traditional owners calling for the contract and the agreement to be made public so they can see what’s actually been agreed upon for their country.

“It’s a very contested nomination.”

A woman representing some traditional owners of the Muckaty Land Trust says she wants the Federal Resources Minister to visit her country before making decisions about a nuclear waste facility.

Dianne Stokes represents the area’s Miyilwayi traditional owners and says any past agreement with the Ngapa people is not valid.

“I want to get the traditional owners together, talk about it and maybe have a ceremony to show Martin Ferguson who we are, because he didn’t come when we asked him,” she said.

“We’ve written him a letter to come.

“He never came towards us, he never came and faced us, he never came and talked to us.

“None of the people, not even the NLC, came and talked to the traditional owners.”


Beyond Nuclear Initiative
www.beyondnuclearinitiative.wordpress.com
08 8952 2011
0429 900 774

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get along to australia’s climate action summit 2010

Saturday March 13 – Monday March 15 Australian National University, Canberra

You’re invited to the 2010 Climate Action Summit, the only national meeting of the grassroots movement for a safe climate.

The Summit will provide much needed space to work out how we move forward in the year of a federal election after Copenhagen. Plenary speakers include David Karoly, Christine Milne, and Walden Bello, and there is a strong focus on alliance building and tactics to build the movement.

The full program is available for download from http://www.climatesummit.org.au/summit-2010-program

With the climate summit this year we’re aiming to build on the work of last year, and have developed campaign streams, a network stream as well as issues and skills workshops.

The campaign stream are: 100% renewables, coal campaigning, vote climate, climate emergency, green jobs and building alliances with trade unions. There is also a full range of issues and skills workshops on topics as diverse as forests, transport, climate justice, alternatives to the CPRS, population, media, dealing with sceptics, lobbying and communicating on climate change.

Who should come to the Summit?
- Members of climate action groups, whether actively involved in organising or just wanting to learn more about the issue and meet like minded people
- anyone interested in or active on climate change

Registration
Please register through the Climate Summit website, at http://www.climatesummit.org.au/register-2010-summit.This year we are asking participants for a registration payment to cover the costs of organising the summit. Registration will cost $10-15 per person day for unwaged individuals and $25-30 per person per day for waged individuals.

Applications for exemptions can be made by emailing 2010climatesummit@gmail.com.

For more information please contact Ellen Roberts on 0408 583 694.

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free tash and all copenhagen climate prisoners!

Danish authorities are continuing to detain an Australian, Natasha Verco, for a fourth week since the Copenhagen climate conference. She is currently detained in the Vestre Faengsel prison, and will appear in court in Copenhagen on Monday January 4th 2010.

Natasha was arrested on Sunday December 13th, three days before the major ‘Reclaim Power’ protest during the United Nations climate negotiations. She is being charged with “incitement” for her role in organising the climate justice protest.

Holly Creenaune, spokesperson for Friends of the Earth Sydney, says, “Natasha should be released, and charges against her dropped. Three weeks gaol for a protest she could not even attend is obscene.  We already gave the Danes a princess – give us back our protestor!

“The Copenhagen meeting was an abject failure – with rich countries like Australia pushing false solutions of offsetting and carbon trading, and avoiding urgently-needed emissions reductions.  But instead of taking action, the authorities locked up those who actually were,” says Ms Creenaune.

Tadzio Mueller, a German arrested alongside Natasha, said on his release from custody, “The Danish government’s appallingly disproportionate reaction, the political policing used to gaol some 1800 activists for nothing at all; using tear gas, pepper spray, baton charges and mass preemptive arrests; sets a precedent dangerous not only for Denmark, but for the future of the world.”  A statement from the prisoners is available at www.climate-justice-action.org/

Ms Verco is a long-time advocate for social change in Sydney, Australia. She is a graduate of the University if Sydney, where in 2000 she was elected President of the Student Representative Council.  She was an active member of ASEN and the NSW Student Environment Activist Network; and later, an important educator for social change.  She undertook Honors at the University of Technology honors program in Social Inquiry, was a founder of Rural Australians for Refugees, and a co-founder of Friends of the Earth Sydney.

A direct appeal to the Danish Consul General in Sydney, Michael Hansen, was launched today. Friends of the Earth Sydney will hand-deliver a personal letter to Mary, Crown Princess of Denmark, who comes from Australia.  Friends and supporters of Mrs Verco will gather at the Danish Consulate General to raise their concerns directly in person.

The letter asserts the right to protest as a fundamental human right, and requests the charges against Mrs Verco be dropped and that she be immediately released so that she can continue her important work for climate justice.  The Australian Student Environment Network demands all climate justice activists be released immediately.

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australian nuclear free alliance meeting

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new resource to download: climate justice kit

Friends of the Earth Sydney collective put this 16-page booklet together as a resource for climate justice action – for people organising in their communities and in their workplaces.

Download the Climate Justice Kit here.

Right now, all eyes are on climate change stories – whether it’s the upcoming international talks at Copenhagen, or the new coal-fired power stations being proposed to meet Sydney’s future energy consumption. But we don’t always look at what debates over ‘parts per million’ and emissions trading mean in human terms: who will pay, whose land is being mined or covered with private plantations, and whether ‘green’ industries are creating jobs where workers have a real voice in their workplaces.

We think climate justice is about which solutions to the climate crisis we campaign for, and how we campaign for them. This Climate Justice Kit includes short stories from across the world of communities that are fighting for clean air and secure livelihoods in the face of big polluters and offset entrepreneurs; as well as some key facts, like who is going to bear the heaviest burdens of climate change.

You can download the Climate Justice Kit here: http://tiny.cc/KW2Qg

Regardless of what businessmen and politicians do in Copenhagen (or any other capital cities), people across the globe will keep fighting for real solutions. We hope some of our ideas for action will be a useful contribution to that struggle in Australia.

If you’d like printed copies mailed to you, let foesydney@gmail.com know how many you want, your name and address.

If you have comments or questions, are keen to do a workshop or an action with us, we’d love to hear from you!

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student night blockade against uranium mining in meghalaya, india

Shillong, Oct 14 – The influential Khasi Students Union (KSU) has announced a two-night road blockade in Meghalaya beginning Wednesday to protest a proposed uranium mining project in the state.

The road blockade would affect vehicular movement, specially night passenger buses and goods laden trucks, on the national highways between Assam, Meghalaya, Mizoram and Tripura.

The blockade will be on from 7 p.m. till 5 a.m. Wednesday, and then again for the same duration Thursday.

‘The KSU at a meeting Tuesday decided to intensify its stir… to protest the Meghalaya government’s decision to lease out land to the Uranium Corporation of India Limited (UCIL),’ said KSU president Samuel B. Jyrwa.

‘The KSU believes the uranium project would harm the environment and health of people living adjoining areas,’ Jyrwa said.

The state government has tightened security across the Khasi and Jaintia Hills of southeastern Meghalaya.

‘We are concerned that the proposed road blockades may affect other northeastern states too,’ Meghalaya principal secretary (home) Barkos Warjri told reporters here.

Police heads of the four districts — East Khasi Hills, West KhasiHills, Jaintia Hills and Ri-Bhoi — have been asked to see that the traffic flow along the national and other highways are not disturbed due to the night blockade.

Chief Minister D.D. Lapang told reporters: ‘The uranium reserves are a national property and no one can stop the government from using them.’

‘The government has waited for 20 long years to persuade the people to allow uranium mining at Domiasiat in West Khasi Hills district of southern Meghalaya.’

The KSU and local parties have been spearheading the movement against the Meghalaya government’s decision to allow the Uranium Corporation of India Limited (UCIL) to carry out pre-project development programmes in 422 square hectares in the uranium-rich
areas of West Khasi Hills.

A senior Meghalaya government official said the union ministry of environment and forests had already allowed UCIL to start uranium mining for the annual production of 375,000 tonnes of uranium ore and processing of 1,500 tonnes of the mineral ore per day in West Khasi Hills district.

The UCIL has proposed a Rs.1,046 crore open-cast uranium mining and processing plant at Domiasiat in the West Khasi Hills district. Meghalaya has an estimated 9.22 million tones of uranium ore deposits.

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climate camp ‘09: student activists shutdown bhp billiton’s dendrobium mine

In the early hours of the 11th of October, four student activists locked onto the conveyor belt at the Dendrobium coal mine in Wollongong. The group was protesting over concerns about the mine’s impacts on the local river system. Shot and edited by Tyler Freeman Smith, music by The Herd.

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join us next week at climate camp ‘09

We hope to see you next weekend at Climate Camp ‘09 at Australia’s oldest coal mine: where actions speak louder than words.

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kayaking against coal in brisbane

Members of QEAN in Brisbane are preparing for a peaceful action at a Qld coal port to protest continued coal exports in the face of climate change

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climate camp 09 art auction & exhibition

Works by diverse artists from across NSW & the ACT will be auctioned off with all proceeds going towards the running of Climate Camp 09. Come to find out more about Climate Camp next month.

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always was, always will be Aboriginal land