Petition Dole food company to drop its amicus brief with Shell in key case for Ogoni people

Today, a Supreme Court case starts to decide whether corporations can literally get away with murder. As well as being a vital case for the Ogoni people in Nigeria who have borne the brunt of Shell’s terrible attacks on the lives and human rights, this is also a key case in the battle about whether corporations can be held legally accountable for gross human rights abuses in foreign countries, or whether they enjoy legal immunity when operating internationally.

When the Ogoni people of Nigeria began to nonviolently protest Shell’s oil development, Shell cooperated with the Nigerian military regime to violently suppress opposition through extrajudicial killing, torture, and crimes against humanity. More than 60 villages were raided, over 800 people were killed, and 30,000 more were displaced from their homes.

Now this precedent-setting Supreme Court case could finally bring justice for the Ogoni people of Nigeria, but corporations like Dole Foods have filed briefs to the Supreme Court in support of Shell to protect their own interests and make sure they can’t be held accountable for human rights abuses abroad either.
Continue reading

Ask your Hebden Royd and Calderdale councillor to help make Ecocide a crime

The campaign to Eradicate Ecocide aims to outlaw the destruction of ecosystems by making it the 5th international crime against peace. To help this happen, you can ask your Hebden Royd and Calderdale Councillors to support the creation of the law of ecocide, and send them a Template-motion-for-councillors that spells out a motion for them to put to the Council. Oxford Council has already done this, so it’s not unheard of.
Continue reading

Energy Bill Revolution Update

Quote

The Energy Bill Revolution team has emailed to say:

“153 MPs have shown their support for our campaign for warm homes and lower bills – making it the second most successful parliamentary motion that MPs have signed up to during this session of parliament. This is fantastic progress. Thank you for helping to make this happen!

Continue reading

Last day to buy community shares in Pennine Community Power’s wind turbine

Pennine Community Power (PCP) reports that

“With only a day to go, we are just short of the target. We can proceed with what we have, but a couple more investors will mean that we can have all the preferred options on the installation.”

If you have a spare £250 in the bank, you can put it to good use by buying a community share in PCP’s community benefit wind turbine.

 

Email Deutsche Bank to stop financing palm oil plantations

Please email Deutsche Bank asking them to honour their stated commitment to sustainability and pull out of underwriting palm oil giant corporation FELDA’s flotation on the Malaysian stock market.

The problem

Rainforest Rescue says:

“FELDA is the world’s largest palm oil trader. Since its foundation, FELDA has cut down hundreds of thousands of hectares of rainforest in order to create oil palm monocultures. Now the company wants to collect three billion dollars at the stock market in order to buy more land in Indonesia and Africa, to destroy the rainforest and to set up oil palm plantations. 

In Malaysia there is a strong opposition against FELDA’s flotation and the land grabbing associated with it. “

Blood for oil in Kazakhstan- please email the Kazakhstan President

Quote

A Campaign by the Confederation of Free Trade Unions of Kazakhstan, the Confederation of Labour of Russia, and supported by the International Trade Union Confederation is seeking justice for oil workers in Kazakhstan, and asking people to sign an email   that calls on the President of Kazahkstan to make sure that justice is done.

At the end of 2011, months of dispute between oil workers and oil company managers ended in uncontrolled police violence, resulting in  17 deaths and dozens of injuries to oil workers and to Kazakhstan citizens who were not involved in the dispute.

The campaigners say,

“Dozens of people, whose involvement is contestable, were subsequently charged. Many of them were sentenced to different terms in prison. During the process, international observers, representatives of Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and OSCE, human rights defenders and journalists recorded numerous violations in the trial processes. Almost all defendants and some of witnesses stated that they were tortured in the course of the investigation, but the trials were not suspended. The trials were conducted in an environment of extreme tensions and close to a state of emergency measures in the region.

The international trade union movement demands that the sentences be reconsidered, that all cases of torture and provocation be thoroughly investigated, and that national legislation that envisages criminal responsibility for “calling for social strife” and that is used selectively to put pressure on trade unionists, human rights activists and public figures, be changed.”

Please sign the email that calls on the President of Kazahkstan to carry out these demands.

 

 

 

Support the Energy Bill Revolution

The Energy Bill Revolution is a campaign to make energy bills affordable to all, through the UK government using revenue from carbon taxes to pay for insulating people’s homes. This will make homes warmer, so people have to use less energy to heat them, and pay less on their energy bills. It would bring nine out of ten fuel-poor households out of fuel poverty, cut carbon emissions and create jobs.

Money spent on home insulation saves a lot more money for the NHS

Research in 2008 by the Chartered Institute of Environmental Health and Buildings Research Establishment showed that:

every £1 spent on improving energy efficiency in homes where cold is likely to damage people’s health, saves the NHS £34.19 over 10 years, per 100,000 homes.

I don’t exactly understand that statistic (can someone please explain it?), but it sounds as if using carbon tax revenue to pay for people’s home energy efficiency improvements would save a lot of money that would otherwise be spent on the NHS. So arguing that we can’t afford it because of the need to cut public spending probably isn’t going to wash.

24% of Calderdale homes are fuel poor and there are higher excess winter deaths here than in UK as a whole

The Energy Bill Revolution would be very helpful in Calderdale. Around 24% of Calderdale homes are fuel poor, according to the 2008 Calderdale Private Sector Stock Condition Survey. Fuel poverty damages the health of people living in these fuel-poor homes – through increasing respiratory illnesses, arthritis and risks of elderly people’s falls. It is associated with higher than average excess winter deaths – that is, the greater number of deaths that occur in winter, compared to the normal rate of deaths in the population.

There are two main carbon taxes: the European Union Emissions Trading Scheme (EUETS) and the carbon floor price, that’s due to start in April 2013. The carbon price floor will establish the rate of fuel duty or climate change levy payable on fossil fuels used to generate electricity. The amount payable will depend on the average carbon content of each type of fossil fuel.

Using the taxes to pay for home insulation and other energy efficiency measures would reduce the energy people use and help cut carbon emissions that way.

The Energy Bill Revolution is supported by by alliance of children’s and older people’s charities, health and disability groups, environment groups, consumer groups, trade unions, businesses, politicians and public figures

Energy Bill Revolution Petition

If you think the UK government should use our carbon tax revenues to pay for home energy efficiency improvements, you can sign a petition here.

Early Day Motion 47

In the last session of Parliament, one of the MPs in the Energy Bill Revolution alliance put forward Early Day Motion (EDM) 2769, which called for Parliament to pass the proposal. 121 MPs signed up to support the EDM.  Craig Whitaker didn’t, although there are over 9,000 households in fuel poverty in this constituency and presumably he wants to do something about it.

In the new session of Parliament, an MP has put forward EDM 47 (to replace EDM 2769). This is another chance for Craig Whittaker to do something that will help reduce his constituents’ fuel poverty.

You can email  craig.whittaker.mp@parliament.uk and ask him to sign Early Day Motion 49, calling for Parliament to pass Energy Bill Revolution proposal for the UK government to recycle carbon taxes into insulating people’s homes.

Ask Calderdale Council for low energy, dimmable street lighting

Over the last couple of years or so, Calderdale Council has installed a few LED streetlights – there’s one on my street. LED streetlights (ie using light emitting diodes) are much lower energy than traditional orange streetlights – but they give out a horrible blue glare. The first night the new one on my street came on, such a fierce alien light poured through my windows that I thought space invaders must’ve pitched up.

Now there’s a new form of dimmable warm-white street lighting that  gives  lower watt lighting on demand and also reduces light pollution – which LED streetlights create a lot of.

This would be good in Upper Calder Valley, wouldn’t it?

 

 

Exciting volunteering opportunities – Growing a Better Future at the Eden Project

OK so this is at the other end of the country, in Cornwall – but if you’re looking for exciting volunteering opportunities, Oxfam Grow has teamed up with the Eden Project  in Cornwall to run a three year food justice campaign, Growing a Better Future.

Grow volunteer at Bristol Festival of Nature

Continue reading