Skip to content or view screen version

Climate Camp Cymru eviction shows need for action

Climate Camp Cymru | 14.08.2010 23:30 | Climate Chaos | Ecology | Repression

Climate Camp Cymru near Selar and Nant-Helen opencast coal mines, Glyn-Neath in South Wales was brought to a premature end on Saturday afternoon with a massive police incursion to evict the camp. The camp was expected to last until Tuesday 17th August.



From the outset on Friday there had been a massive police presence. On Saturday a spokesperson said that there were at least 15 riot vans and numerous mounted police in the area around the camp.

One activist said they were planning to take direct action against the fossil fuel corporations such as Celtic Energy, who own nearby opencast coal mines Selar and Nant-Helen. (1)

“Our economic system is based upon an addiction to fossil fuels and ever increasing consumption to create profit at the expense of people and the environment” said Tim Jones.

Mr. Jones went on to say, “This just goes to show the priorities of the current government, who are more interested in protecting climate criminals like Celtic Energy and in repressing those taking action on climate change, than on actually tackling the climate crisis themselves.”

The historic monuments organisation Cadw visited the site and accepted that the camp could go ahead with police monitoring. Climate Camp Cymru were very concerned not to damage the soil and therefore did not erect their wind turbine.

While climate campers are well-known for ensuring that land they use is left as they find it - cleaned up and undamaged - open cast coal mines can make no such claim. The nearby Selar open cast mine engulfed and destroyed a Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI) in the 1990s with the loss of an important wildlife habitat. (2)

Notes for editors:

(1) Nant Helen has applied for permission to expand and Selar has been given the recent go-ahead.

(2) Promises that a colony of rare marsh fritillary butterflies would be successfully moved were empty. Celtic Energy, who own Selar mine, removed vital marsh thistles they had mistaken for weeds at the new habitat they had provided for the butterflies. The fritillary population in the area subsequently disappeared.
 http://www.swanseafoe.org.uk/selar-farm-sssi.html

(3) Last year's camp was held next to Ffos-y-fran in Merthyr Tydfil, the largest opencast coal mine in the UK. The camp included workshops on climate science, direct action training, a solar-powered cinema, compost toilets, solar-heated showers, greywater systems and wind power.  http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/blog/2009/aug/12/climate-camp-cymru-blog

(4) On Friday a group of climate activists were given conditional discharges at Merthyr Tydfil crown court for blockading the railway line between Ffos y Fran and Aberthaw power station.

Climate Camp Cymru
- e-mail: info@climatecampcymru.org
- Homepage: http://www.climatecampcymru.org

Comments

Hide the following 5 comments

so what happened?

15.08.2010 00:23

BBC are reporting that people left without resistance after a police request:
 http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-10977368

Is it true? Why was that decision taken? I'm not saying it was necessarily the wrong decision, since I wasn't there, but I'd like the full story, not just this sanitised press-release pap...

curious


Replace the word "request" with "threat"

15.08.2010 07:51

Yes, we left without resistance - this is because the police had stopped people getting onto the site and, as a result, our numbers were very low. 30 people (including children) vs 200 police just wasn't worth it.

Camper


what are the authorities scared of?

15.08.2010 17:18

Its a real shame this got cancelled. I wonder why the authorities are so scared of a relatively small camp of people trying to show real alternatives to live sustainably.

Why are local governments not facilitating ideas for change, and sustainable living? in the face of potential global meltdown and continued burning of fossil fuels, why do governments not have any vision or guts to do something? and when people come together to try to do something about it, it is actively opposed, instead of trying to engage with it.

Neil


Oops!

16.08.2010 10:38

Please note that 'marsh thistles' should read 'meadow thistles'.

Typo


not canceled - moved location

16.08.2010 11:13

not canceled - just moved! Latest I heard is that a Climate Camp Cymru has established a new site on the Gower Peninsula near Swansea. More a case of 'watch this space' than anything.

Hannah