Archive for 2007
Aug 21 2007
Cultural, Saving Iceland
Update! 26 August 2007
Wow, the collection sold for a cool US $512! Thank you to everyone who made up the twenty-seven bids and of course to ‘mictech_01’ from Germany who put down the winner. Also, another massive we love you to Sigur Rós for this, for the inspiring music and for the support. PRESS RELEASE Read More
Aug 20 2007
Actions, Saving Iceland
Saving Iceland
27 July 2007
Today we wrapped our protest camp at Bringur, Mosfellsheidi, but we are not through with this summers actions.
This means that if you are planning to join us in our fight against heavy industry in Iceland you are not too late. We have plenty of energy left and loads of targets to protest at.
Write to us at savingiceland@riseup.net if you want to find us.
Aug 19 2007
1 Comment
ALCOA, Bakki, Climate Change, Greenwash, Krafla and Þeistareykir, Pollution, Skagafjörður, Skjálfandafljót, Þjórsárver
Is the Energy on the Doorstep?
By Dr. Ragnhildur Sigurðardóttur
Many things have been said and written about plans for ALCOA´s aluminium plant at Bakki near Húsavík. One after another, important men have praised the idea and by now the only political parties not supporting it are the Iceland Movement and the Left Green party.
The propaganda of the supporters follows these lines: “utilise the national energy potential,” “the people of Húsavík have a right to an aluminium plant,” “the plant will only use energy drawn from the land nearby Húsavík, “damming of Skjálfandafljót and Jökulsá á Fjöllum is nothing but environmental propaganda”, “Geothermal energy has a low environmental impact”, “preparation work has been exceptionally well done.”
But how much truth do those slogans contain? Is there something more that needs to be looked into? Are the people of Húsavík, politicians included pushing the issues forward without really having looked at all the facts? Read More
Aug 18 2007
ALCOA, Arms Industry, Australia, Climate Change, Corruption, Cultural, Ecology, Economics, India, Jamaica, Laws, Pollution, Repression, Samarendra Das
In this exhaustive text, Felix Padel and Samarendra Das give a thorough analysis of the situation of the aluminium industry in India, its history as a global force of destruction intrinsically linked to the arms industry and its links to genocide. This is required reading for anyone with an interest in the aluminium industry, peace, and the desperate situation of the people of Orissa, India. Read More
Aug 18 2007
4 Comments
ALCOA, Amazon, Australia, Climate Change, Cultural, Dams, Ecology, Economics, Greenwash, Guðmundur Páll Ólafsson, hydropower, India, Jaap Krater, Pollution
Trouw (daily), Netherlands, 21 January 2007
Large dams have dramatic consequences. Ecosystems are destroyed and numerous people are made homeless, often without adequate resettlement. But it is yet little known that large-scale hydro-electricity is a major contributor to global warming. The reservoirs could, despite their clean image, be even more devastating for our climate than fossil fuel plants.
A few years ago, I spent a month in the valley of the Narmada River, to support tribal activists who have been resisting the Sardar Sarovar dam in central India for decades. These indigenous inhabitants, or adivasis, are desperate. In their struggle, inspired by Gandhi, they attempt to drown themselves when their villages are flooded. Death seems preferable to being forced to move from their valley to tin houses on infertile, barren soil. If they’re lucky, they can live on land that nobody else wants, the only available in the densely populated India. This forced resettlement, made necessary by ´progress´, is not unsimilar to what befell American Indians or the Aborigines in Australia. The consequences of mega hydro: cultures die and alcoholism, depression and violence remains.
Read More
Aug 18 2007
Rights Action Group. Email: rightsactiongroup@gmail.com
No Smelter TnT – good articles but hasn’t been updated in a while.
Smelta Karavan
Aug 17 2007
Actions, Climate Change, Cultural, India, Saving Iceland, South Africa
17 August 2007
The SI collective gave a presentation on Thursday 16th at the UK’s Camp for Climate Action. Over 30 people attended to hear about the heavy-industrial destruction of Iceland, Trinidad, South Africa, Brasil and India. Read More
Aug 17 2007
1 Comment
Actions, ALCOA, Australia, Barclays, Corruption, Cultural, Ecology, Economics, India, Jamaica, Norsk Hydro, Pollution, Repression, Samarendra Das, Surinam
By Felix Padel and Samarendra Das, Economic and Political Weekly, December 2005
“The evidence we present goes against the conventional history of aluminium, which tends to portray the industry as central to various countries’ economic power and prosperity, without understanding the financial manipulation and exploitation between and within countries, and the true costs.”
Few people understand aluminium’s true form or see its industry as a whole. Hidden from general awareness are its close link with big dams, complex forms of exploitation in the industry’s financial structure, and a destructive impact on indigenous society that amounts to a form of genocide. At the other end of the production line, aluminium’s highest-price forms consist of complex alloys essential to various ‘aerospace’/’defence’ applications.1 The metal’s high ‘strategic importance’ is due to its status as a key material supplying the arms industry. In these four dimensions ‘ environmental, economic, social and military ‘ it has some very destructive effects on human life.
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Aug 17 2007
2 Comments
ALCOA, Corruption, Ecology, Greenwash, Oil, Pollution, Repression
The local council in the westfjords yesterday gave their permission to build an oil refinery in the area, to “save the community from disintegrating since people are moving away.” They hope that a factory like this would interest young people in moving back to the area.
The likeliest place for the refinery would be Arnarfjordur, a place of tremendous beauty as most places in the westfjords are.
Scientists have pointed out that oceanic iceblocks may make the sailing route to the area unsafe for bigger ships. Also, a refinery of this size would pump one million tons of C02 into the atmosphere per year, which more than exhausts Iceland´s quota according to the Kyoto agreement.
Read More
Aug 13 2007
Arms Industry, Ecology, Greenwash, Pollution, Repression, Saving Iceland
The first issue of Saving Iceland’s magazine Voice of the Wilderness (download pdf) introduces all the key issues and speakers at the Saving Iceland 2007 Conference.