'Ecology'
Tag Archive
Sep 08 2004
ALCOA, Australia, Ecology, Kárahnjúkar, Laws, Ólafur Páll Sigurdsson, Pollution
7th September 2004
Senator Bob Brown will bring his Franklin River experience to help stop a huge dam being built in eastern Iceland.
Announcing in Sydney today Greens backing for the global campaign to stop the Iceland Energy Authority’s huge Karahnjukar Dam and the Alcoa smelter it will feed, Senator Brown said the scenario is very similar to Tasmania’s Franklin River experience.
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Aug 06 2004
ALCOA, Bechtel, Climate Change, Corruption, Democracy deficit, Ecology, Economics, Greenwash, Impregilo, Kárahnjúkar, Landsvirkjun, Laws, Pollution
Robert Jackson
So writes the poet and protester Elísabet Jökulsdóttir, and sitting in the board room of Landsvirkjun at a table long enough to hold a state banquet, it is hard to disagree with who is responsible for Kárahnjúkar. The walls of the ‘president’s floor’ have portraits of the men who in former times have managed the national power company. Read More
Aug 04 2004
ALCOA, Bechtel, Climate Change, Corruption, Democracy deficit, Ecology, Economics, Greenwash, Impregilo, Kárahnjúkar, Landsvirkjun, Laws, Pollution
Robert Jackson
It is now two years since the government gave the approvals that made way for the creation of a huge hydroelectric scheme in the Central Highlands at Kárahnjúkar. This paved the way for a subsequent deal with Alcoa for the building of an aluminium smelter in the coastal town of Reyðarfjörður.
WHAT DOES THE SCHEME INVOLVE?
The Kárahnjúkar project will consist of nine dams, three reservoirs, seven channels and sixteen tunnels. It will divert two large rivers, the Jökulsá á brú and Jökulsá í Fljótsdal, and several smaller rivers to the north of the Vatnajökull glacier, the largest glacier in Europe. The main dam will be highest rockfill dam in Europe, 190 metres high, 800 metres long and 600 metres wide at its base. This main dam will create a huge reservoir, to be called Hálslón, which will flood a wilderness area of 57 sq. km. 70 km of tunnels will carry water to an underground powerhouse, which will have a 690 megawatts capacity. Read More
Mar 27 2004
ALCOA, Amazon, Climate Change, Corruption, Cultural, Denmark, Ecology, Economics, Greenland, Greenpeace, Greenwash, Guðmundur Páll Ólafsson, Kárahnjúkar, Landsvirkjun, Laws, Media bias, Norsk Hydro, Pollution, Repression
Orion Magazine
March / April 2004
An important article which provides useful historical background.
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Feb 10 2004
1 Comment
ALCOA, Ecology, Kárahnjúkar, Landsvirkjun, Laws, Pollution
Hjörleifur Guttormsson
10 February 2004
This morning a case was filed in the Reykjavík District Court, brought by natural scientist Hjörleifur Guttormsson, resident of the district Fjarðabyggð in East Iceland, against the multinational aluminium conglomerate Alcoa and the Icelandic Ministers of the Environment and Finance, concerning the proposed aluminium smelter in Reyðarfjörður, East Iceland. Supreme Court Attorney Atli Gíslason will prosecute the case on behalf of the plaintiff.
News release – PDF file
Jan 01 2004
1 Comment
ALCOA, Barclays, Ecology, Economics, Kárahnjúkar, Landsvirkjun, Laws, Pollution, Surinam
Briefing from International Rivers Network and Friends of the Earth
January 2004
The article in pdf format
EXPOSING THE EQUATOR PRINCIPLES
Barclays bank are helping to arrange a $400 million loan to an Icelandic power company (‘Landsvirkjun’) to construct the countries biggest hydropower project (‘Karahnjukar’) in the Iceland Central Highlands, the second largest remaining wilderness area in Europe, in apparent breach of the banks own green project finance principles the Equator Principles and for the primary purpose of providing cheap electricity for a new aluminium smelter (‘Fjardaal’) for the aluminium producer Alcoa. Read More
Jan 01 2004
ALCOA, Amazon, Australia, Climate Change, Ecology, Economics, Impregilo, India, Kárahnjúkar, Landsvirkjun, Laws, Pollution, Repression, Surinam, WWF
‘Damned Nation’ is very good on the spiel behind the Karahnjukar project and Alcoa.
The Ecologist
v.33, n.10, 1. Jan 2004
Costing over $1 billion, the Karahnjukar hydroelectric dam in Iceland is a hugely controversial project. Mark Lynas journeyed to the blasting face, hoping to work out for himself whether this industrial elephant is green or brilliant-white.
Reassurances in the Impregilo work camp canteen Read More
Nov 29 2003
8 Comments
ALCOA, Barclays, Bechtel, Corruption, Dams, Democracy deficit, Ecology, Economics, Greenwash, Guðmundur Páll Ólafsson, Impregilo, Kárahnjúkar, Landsvirkjun, Laws, Ólafur Páll Sigurdsson, Pollution, Repression, WWF
The Guardian, November 29, 2003
‘Power Driven’ appeared in The Guardian Weekend in 2003 and made a major impact in Iceland. It is still the best main stream analysis of many key issues at stake and an excellent overview of the social background.
In Iceland, work has already begun on a colossal $1bn dam which, when it opens in 2007, will cover a highland wilderness – and all to drive one US smelter. Environmentalists are furious, but the government appears determined to push through the project, whatever the cost. Susan DeMuth investigates.
North of Vatnajokull, Europe’s biggest glacier, lies Iceland’s most fascinating and varied volcanic landscape. Ice and boiling geothermal infernos meet at the edges of the glacier, and then the largest remaining pristine wilderness in western Europe begins – a vast panorama of wild rivers, waterfalls, brooding mountains and mossy highlands thick with flowers. Read More
Jul 18 2003
2 Comments
ALCOA, Barclays, Cultural, Ecology, Economics, Greenwash, Kárahnjúkar, Landsvirkjun, Laws, Pollution
International Rivers Network
The $400 million loan for Iceland’s National Power Company
On July 9, 2003, a $400 million revolving credit was signed by Iceland’s National Power Company (Landsvirkjun) and a consortium of 19 banks. The mandated arrangers of the loan are Barclays Bank (UK), Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation (Japan), SEB (Sweden), and Societe Generale (France), with shares of $31 million each. The other members of the consortium are CDC IXIS (France), Danske Bank (Danmark), DePfa Group (Germany/Ireland), Dexia Group (France/Belgium), Fortis Bank (Netherlands), Islandsbanki (Iceland) and Landesbank Baden–Wuertemberg (Germany), with $25 million each; Deutsche Postbank (Germany), KBC Bank (Belgium) and Norddeutsche Landesbank Girozentrale (Germany), with $17 million each; and BNP Paribas (France), Deutsche Bank (Germany), JP Morgan (USA), Kaupthing Bunadarbanki (Iceland) and Landsbanki Islands (Iceland) with $10 million each. Read More