Panorama
 
 
 
 
 

VICTORY IN GREECE AS THE QUIT COAL CAMPAIGN MOVES TO INDONESIA


Environmental Panorama
International
February of 2009


12 February 2009 - International — Choking children, destroyed crops and a devastated fishing industry. That's the price the local community at Cilacap in Indonesia have had to pay since a coal-fired power plant was constructed in their town. Today 40 Greenpeace activists and local community representatives chained themselves to the gates of the coal plant to block the transport of coal on Central Java's south coast.

The action is in response to the Indonesian Minister of Energy's decision to build or expand 35 more coal-fired plants in the next 2 years - including doubling the size of the Cilacap plant. The activists are determined that, rather than devastate more communities and fuel global warming with coal power, Indonesia should embrace its potential in geothermal, solar and wind energy, and choose for an energy revolution.

That's what has just happened in Greece where, following a six-month long Quit Coal campaign by Greenpeace, the Greek Minister of Development has stated that the government is not considering hard coal or nuclear power as part of Greece's energy future. Instead the Greek government will be rewriting its Long-Term Energy Plan to exclude coal and promote renewable energy and energy efficiency.

That's the kind of future Indonesia needs to choose. Along with allies including KAM Cilacap, JATAM, Walhi and Sekolah Demokrasi Ekonomi we have launched a campaign against building new, and expanding existing, coal-fired power plants in Indonesia. The first step is the launch of an Indonesian version of our True Cost of Coal Report, which spells out the real costs of coal power - over 350 billion euro a year in environmental and health costs; costs that are borne by communities like Cilacap rather than utilities like PT Segara Sumber Prima who operate the planet in Cilacap.

Decisions like those being taken in Greece and Indonesia will have a global impact. In December this year, world leaders have their best chance to avoid run-away climate change at the UN talks in Copenhagen. As countries like Greece choose for an energy revolution the chance of a good deal rises, but if nations like Indonesia lock themselves into a future of pollution the challenge becomes greater.

The Quit Coal Tour- Greece, October 2008
In 2008, the Rainbow Warrior and the Arctic Sunrise took the clear message to Quit Coal to 11 Mediterranean and European countries, including Greece.

When the campaign began, four new coal-fired power plants were planned in Greece. Following a campaign against the first, we met with the prospective owner and convinced him to drop the plan. We also hosted the two main opposition parties in Greek politics on board the Rainbow Warrior, where both agreed to quit coal if they came to office. Now that determination has reached the government and Greece can look forward to a cleaner future.

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Cattle ranching biggest driver of Amazon deforestation

January 29, 2009Print Tell a friend Belém, Brazil — At the World Social Forum in Belém, in the heart of the Amazon, we’ve released evidence confirming cattle ranching to be the biggest driver of Amazon deforestation. Greenpeace Brazil has produced a series of maps that show in greater detail than ever before the direct links between cattle ranching and forest destruction in the Amazon state of Mato Grosso.

The maps have been released as part of our "Save the Planet - Now!" Brazilian ship tour.

Brazil is the world’s fourth biggest climate polluter, and 75 percent of its greenhouse gas emissions are the result of deforestation. The Brazilian government has made promises to tackle destruction of the Amazon as part of its commitment to combat global warming, but its plans to expand the cattle industry are at odds with this commitment.

Our Amazon team used specialized techniques to analyze and compare satellite images of vegetation (or lack thereof) on the ground, and data showing the growth of infrastructure, such as roads and agribusiness. It is the first time that these two types of data have been put together in this way. Our maps in the report Amazon cattle footprint, clearly show how much former rainforest is now used for cattle pastures in Mato Grosso.

We focused on Mato Grosso because it is area of the Amazon with the highest rates of deforestation. It is also where the cattle industry is largest – there are well over 25 million cows in the region, and 7 of the 10 biggest cities in the Amazon producing cattle and cattle products are found there.

Forests are carbon sinks. When they are logged the stored carbon is released into the atmosphere. Tropical forest destruction is responsible for a fifth of global greenhouse gas emissions – more than the entire international transport sector. Deforestation in Brazil makes the country the world’s fourth biggest climate polluter.

Billions urgently needed to protect rainforests and save the climate

The European Commission estimates that halving deforestation will cost anywhere from €15-25 billion annually. It is not just the Brazilian government’s responsibility to protect our climate by protecting our rainforests. As world leaders prepare for the most important climate negotiations ever, taking place in Copenhagen, Denmark at the end of the year, we need to see commitments from industrialized countries that pay as much attention to saving the world’s rainforests as they have done to bailing out fat cat bankers.

Brazil has promised to tackle deforestation as part of its climate commitments. But, as our maps clearly show, unless it stops expansion of the cattle industry in the Amazon, there is no chance that it can live up to this promise.

Zero deforestation by 2015: we’ve got the solution

If we are to have a fighting chance against climate change, global greenhouse gas emissions have to peak by 2015, and then start to fall dramatically. That means halting deforestation completely by 2015 in the Amazon. But, even without its plans to expand the cattle industry, the Brazilian government’s promises to tackle Amazon deforestation are not strong enough. The plan aims to reduce deforestation by 72 percent by 2017. This is a good start but it’s not enough. It misses the 2015 deadline, and will not halt deforestation. Luckily we’ve got the solution – working together with Brazilian NGOs we produced a “zero-deforestation” plan that shows how it can be done.

 
 

Source: Greenpeace International
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