Showing posts with label activism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label activism. Show all posts

Monday, 28 April 2025

As Just Stop Oil disbands could climate activism turn uglier?


Today, the Guardian suggests future movements are likely to go underground:
You’re not going to see people prepared to put themselves out of action by sitting in a jail cell for years, when they believe we don’t have much time left. 
We’ve started seeing trains of coal being set on fire, arson attacks on cement factories, full-on riots between environmental protesters and the police. 
I think we’ve got a long way to go in terms of how bad things can get but in the next few years I think we’ll look back and what JSO did, blocking roads and throwing washable paint onto buildings, will seem mild.
Arson attacks on cement factories? Apparently so. In 2024, climate activists set fire to a cement factory in Berlin
Their action was, as they indicated, inspired by previous attacks by colleagues from France, Belgium and Switzerland who sabotaged concrete factories. According to the radicals from ‘Switch Off!’ concrete production is ‘totally deadly for the climate’ and generates more carbon dioxide than all air traffic.

Wednesday, 3 April 2024

Angry protestors at Pontypridd quarry extension draw ‘heavy police presence’


We posted about Craig yr Hesg Quarry, at Glyncoch near Pontypridd, back in 2020, when Rhondda Cynon Taf County Borough Council originally rejected Hanson’s plans for a 10 million tonne extension. We edited the post in 2022 when the appeal was allowed.

An article by Ben Gosling in The Planner: The Appeals Annex: A tale of two quarries compared the Craig yr Hesg appeal decision with the one for Chard Junction Quarry in Dorset: 
The inspector in the Craig yr Hesg Quarry appeal accepted that the quarry caused stress and anxiety to locals, but did not accept their evidence that blasting at the quarry caused damage to their homes, because photos of cracks in walls were not supported by a structural survey. In Dorset, the inspector acknowledged that the quarry would cause noise disturbances to residents— after scrutinising a noise impact assessment provided by the appellant. 

Hard evidence is the key, but this can be an unaffordable option for residents and individuals. Heledd Fychan, Member of the Senedd Cymru for South Wales Central recognised this when the inspector’s decision was delivered: 
“Glyncoch is not an affluent area, and the planning inspectorate were critical of the fact that no hard evidence was presented to support their testimony, other than the images,” she said. “Collating such evidence is costly, meaning that communities will always struggle to have their voices and views heard as part of an appeal process without the means to do so. 

She continues: “Their testimony was powerful, and included pictures of cracks that have appeared in their homes which they believe have been caused by powerful blasts at the quarry, clouds of dust above the site, thick dust covering outside tables and cars, and evidence on how the lorries from the quarry are impacting their lives. 

“I find it disappointing that the views of local residents have been completely disregarded in relation to the quarry. Economic drivers and a need for the aggregate have trumped their views, meaning that they will have to continue to suffer the impact of the quarry. A quarry that they have had to live with for decades, and a quarry they were told would close when the last application prior to this was made to extend its life.” 
Last month, work started to erect a new security fence around the newly permitted extension.

This week, angry residents protested at the site drawing "a heavy police presence", as these articles from the BBC, Nation.Cymru and WalesOnline explain: 
Protestors have been gathering near the site of the quarry this week, with dozens joining for a second day of action on Tuesday, March 26. Residents say they are worried about the quarry's impact on their health from silica dust and the proximity to houses and public amenities like schools. They also believe it could disrupt wildlife and cause traffic issues, as well as impacting public rights of way. 

Heidelberg Materials UK has said it has addressed wildlife concerns and that "strict restrictons" on blasting and air quality monitoring were in place as well as other measures to mitigate any negative impact on residents. 

On Tuesday around 40 people gathered near the fence by the quarry site and there was a heavy police presence in the area. Dr Andrew Thomas, a university lecturer in Cardiff, was one of those protesting and said: “It’s fairly peaceful. There are about 40 or 50 of us, families, adults, children. About the same number of police and enforcement officers, about 30 of them. There is a bit of a standoff, but there is no pushing or shoving. 

Dr Thomas said the Welsh Government's decision to permit expansion for 29 years after RCT council rejected the plans was "scandalous", adding that it will leave the site within touching distance of residents' gardens in Glyncoch. 

"It’s been contained behind the mountain but the big controversy here is that this new land was used as a public right of way. So you have a working class community which is about 2,000 people who are literally 100 metres from the site, the legal distance from a quarry in the UK. There is a primary school which is 200m away too. 

"This is encroaching into their back garden. This is totally NIMBY because it is literally in their back garden. It is literally two rugby pitches away. 

"They’re impacted by blasting, which is felt right into their properties at least once a week. They’re also impacted by lorries going to and fro - it is a road which is only really fit for residential driving, not lorries. Their worry is how they are going to move the lorries into and from the new site. It’s a lot of unknowns and as soon as you have that you impact mental health. 

"I think once the dust starts blowing over and they are exposed to silica particles in their lungs… They’ve also lost a green space they were very sentimental about, their children’s upbringing playing in the woods is gone. 

"It blocks off access to parts of the countryside and it hasn’t been made clear how public rights of way will be protected. Nothing has been communicated. 

"I cannot believe this has been signed because it goes against everything the Welsh Government claims to support. It’s so sad. And there is no reason for it to have been done it this way. You can’t stop the planning but you can slow them down doing what they want to do. We don’t believe they care." 
None of this, the blasting, the cracks, the noise, the dust, the health fears, for decades more, would have cut any slack with Mr Kimblin KC – the barrister representing Hanson at the public inquiry, and the subject of this post. In fact, at the Inquiry, he even argued that the refusal by Rhondda Cynon Taf CBC was "perverse" and "unreasonable" and that the Council – a cash-strapped Council "in one of the most deprived areas of Wales" – should pay Hanson’s, now rebranded Heidelberg Materials, appeal costs, a request that was upheld

That’s hardly the way to endear yourself to a community facing decades more quarrying.
 
EDIT 5.5.24
What Heidelberg fails to acknowledge is the profound, immeasurable significance of Craig yr Hesg to the people who hold it dear. For them, it represents more than a geological feature with easy access to mineral wealth. It embodies a collective treasure steeped in shared memories and cultural heritage. Heidelberg Materials fails to understand the ancient and deep-rooted relationship between the Welsh people, their language, and the landscape. What’s left of it.

Monday, 13 February 2023

Holcim targeted by climate activists

Last week, Holcim – parent company of Aggregate Industries, the company who recently won permission to trash Straitgate Farm – was targeted by climate activists. The company’s Zurich HQ was daubed with the German word "Klimazerstörer", or "climate destroyer".

Friday, 3 February 2023

Indonesian islanders file climate lawsuit against Holcim

Residents of an Indonesian island, at risk of losing their livelihoods due to the rise in sea level and flooding, have filed a lawsuit against the parent company of Aggregate Industries seeking damages for its role in climate change. One of the plaintiffs warned
Our existence is under threat. We want those responsible to now finally take action. 
Not our problem, says Swiss cement giant Holcim: 
We do not believe that court cases focused on single companies are an effective mechanism to tackle the global complexity of climate action.
Well they wouldn’t, would they? This the company that claims climate change is a "top priority", but whose cost to society in 2021 was 156 million tons of CO2 emissions – up from 146 million tons in 2020.

Thursday, 2 February 2023

Protesters hold ‘funeral’ for site of Holcim quarry extension

Holcim’s capacity to wreak environmental destruction is not limited to East Devon. Last month, the parent company of Aggregate Industries won another quarry battle, this time on its home turf.

We had previously posted about the site in 2021, when police cleared protesters using tear gas and rubber bullets

Last month, campaigners finally lost their battle and held a ‘funeral’ for the site.

Starting from the village of La Sarraz, the protesters went up to the Birette plateau at the Mormont site, stopping in front of the pit already dug by Holcim and throwing in a symbolic funeral wreath. Speakers included Swiss Nobel prize-winner for chemistry Jacques Dubochet.   

Alain Chanson, president of the Association to Save the Mormont, said environmental activists had been defending the site for ten years “against the voracity of Holcim”, but that the Federal Court had just “condemned it to death". 

The protest follows a decision this month by the Federal Court on appeals by three associations against the extension of the Mormont quarry. The court ruled that while Holcim could exploit the new site known as Birette, it must restore damage to the landscape afterwards. Chanson said that "the fight goes on" to preserve what remains of the Mormont, whose environmental richness was recognized by the court. 

Activists occupied the site in October 2020 in an attempt to stop the quarry extension. However, they were forcibly evacuated by police in March 2021.

Thursday, 15 December 2022

Climate activists target Lafarge Holcim cement plant

Aggregate Industries’ parent company – a company responsible for more than 7bn tonnes of CO2 emissions between 1950 and 2021 – has been targeted by climate activists in France. Cement is responsible for around 8 percent of all greenhouse gases.

Thursday, 27 October 2022

Holcim emitted more than 7bn tonnes of CO2 between 1950 and 2021

... according to research by the Climate Accountability Institute – that’s 0.42% of all historical global industrial emissions. 

It’s a shameful legacy for one company to bequeath to humanity – especially since:
Leading companies and industry associations were aware of, or wilfully ignored, the threat of climate change from continued use of their products since the late 1950s.
Yesterday, the United Nations warned that current pledges to cut greenhouse gas emissions will lead to global heating of 2.5C – a level that would condemn the world to catastrophic climate breakdown. Today, Inger Andersen, executive director of the UN Environment Programme, said:
We had our chance to make incremental changes, but that time is over. Only a root-and-branch transformation of our economies and societies can save us from accelerating climate disaster... Every fraction of a degree matters: to vulnerable communities, to ecosystems, and to every one of us.
Cement giant Holcim – previously badged LafargeHolcim until controversies like the one below – is the parent company of Aggregate Industries.

It is ranked 47 out of the Top 100 emitters by The University of Massachusetts Amherst’s 2021 greenhouse polluters index. 

Of course, you'd never know. Holcim doesn’t broadcast its dirty secret. It is the same company pumping out statements like "Sustainability is at the core of what we do", and that concrete is "the ideal sustainable material for our future", and that "Our teams are going above and beyond to keep our people and communities safe, while firmly leading our decarbonization journey."

Maybe one day companies will be banned from greenwashing. There was a glimmer of hope last week from the Advertising Standards Authority, which banned a series of misleading adverts from HSBC promoting climate-friendly initiatives. The watchdog ruled that the bank had to ensure any future environmental claims were: 
adequately qualified and did not omit material information about its contribution to carbon dioxide and greenhouse gas emissions. 
Campaign groups welcomed the ASA’s ruling, saying it was a "significant moment in the fight to prevent banks from greenwashing their image." 

Clearly, it’s not just banks. Holcim proclaims it "takes climate action very seriously." But not seriously enough to stop its UK subsidiary from appealing the decision by Devon County Council to refuse permission to haul bog-standard aggregate 23 miles from quarry face to processing plant – a distance unheard of in the UK.

But, as we touched upon in the post Holcim’s cost to society in 2021? 156 million tons of CO2 emissions, the company’s carbon legacy and the impact it has left upon us is now being tested in the courts in "a first-of-its-kind lawsuit". 

According to Agung Wardana, an environmental law expert and a Humboldt Fellow at Max Planck Institute for International Law in Heidelberg, Germany, the lawsuit showcases an increase in public awareness on climate change and a desire for justice: 
This will be a landmark case in Indonesia. I think many others could follow suit in demanding accountability of major polluters. The homework to win the case is to find the causality between Holcim’s activities and its impact on Pari Island. That’s the challenge.

Friday, 22 July 2022

Holcim’s cost to society in 2021? 156 million tons of CO2 emissions

As the UK hit 40°C this week, a milestone in UK climate history, spare a thought for residents of an Indonesian island threatened by rising sea levels who have begun legal action against the cement producer Holcim – parent company of Aggregate Industries. 


You can see why. We have posted about Aggregate Industries’ parent, and its record on CO2 emissions. Last year we posted LafargeHolcim’s cost to society in 2020? 146 million tons of CO2 emissions – more than many countries

Since then the name has changed but the pollution goes on. In 2021, Holcim's cost to society has INCREASED to 156 million tons. 


So much for all the claims, for all the greenwash:


Holcim maintained its focus on CO2 emission reduction in 2021... we acknowledge we must accelerate our CO2 reductions in the coming years.
And what about Aggregate Industries, Holcim's UK subsidiary? 


Kirstin McCarthy, sustainability director at Aggregate Industries, says: 
We need to transform our business and we have already made progress.
This is the same sustainability director who spoke in support of the company’s wholly unsustainable 2.5 million mile haulage plan for Devon

She says: 
Our priorities are to reduce our impact on the climate, protect and enhance nature and the environment, drive the transition to a circular economy and protect and support our people and communities.
More greenwash. 

But for how much longer can companies make meaningless, hollow claims? Lawyers and environmentalists have greenwashing companies in their sights.


As one article in the financial press remarked: 
The popular ploy of marketing everything from burgers to investment funds as 'green' doesn’t look sustainable any more.
Suggest they include concrete in that list.

Sunday, 12 June 2022

Another rural community standing up against the Holcim leviathan


Holcim, previously LafargeHolcim, causes aggravation wherever it goes: 
On the French Atlantic coast, a small town of a few thousand inhabitants is rising up against a powerful opponent: two massive sand mines that have been nibbling away at their land. 

The mines, run by industry giants Lafarge and GSM, already cover a surface of 115 hectares. The two companies have applied for an extension permit that could see their quarries grow by several dozen hectares. 

A citizens' association, La tête dans le sable (Head stuck in the sand), is firmly standing in their way. Its members say they won't let their rural community get sacrificed for the sake of sand.   

"The mining companies will dig huge holes. And that means the aquifer, water reserves found underground which are normally out of sight, are going to be burst open," explains Sylvain Jallot, the association's spokesperson. 

The non-profit claims that least 1 million cubic metres of water will evaporate from the surface each year, the equivalent of the domestic water consumption of about 30,000 people.  

The group has already organised several rallies and is leading a legal battle against the mining companies.

Monday, 5 July 2021

‘Cement industry's enormous sand needs putting harmful pressure on ecosystems’

The first link in this chain? Sand. 

…a camp of meetings and actions was held from June 19 to 21 in Saint-Colomban, in Loire-Atlantique... In this town, two sand quarries have been operated by two giants in the sector for nearly twenty years: Lafarge, with 49 hectares and GSM (from the German group HeidelbergCement), with 65 hectares. Together, these companies extract no less than 750,000 tonnes of sand per year. But here it is: they are reaching the end of their operating possibilities, and wish to expand, from 2022.

"GSM and Lafarge? They are sand predators," says Jean-Claude Mercier, founder of the citizen collective Graine de Celle-Saint-Avant 37, owner of agricultural land in the town and a former engineer. The areas on which the new quarry would be established combine forest and wetlands. "It's a place that I call "the green lung"", sighs the founder of the collective. 
And what of "the risk of pollution of the water tables in which the residents' drinking water circulates"? 
GSM will be required to leave a layer of one meter of sand, at least. "This is not enough", fears the head of the collective. "And who's going to check that they don't go below one meter?" This minimal layer acts "like a coffee filter: you see what happens if you forget to put the filter in your machine ..." he sums up. 
At Straitgate Farm, Aggregate Industries is not even proposing to leave "one meter of sand, at least", but is instead proposing to quarry all the way down to the maximum water table, removing all of the unsaturated zone – in effect forgetting to put the filter in the machine

Wednesday, 30 June 2021

Extinction Rebellion targets LafargeHolcim again

Extinction Rebellion has once again targeted LafargeHolcim in Paris, following protests last year. One protester was quoted by Reuters as saying: 
We need to act now! We know what needs doing and it’s to stop this constant pursuit of growth and reduce carbon emissions. And for that to happen we need to stop using cement

Wednesday, 31 March 2021

Police clear protesters from LafargeHolcim quarry in Switzerland

LafargeHolcim – parent of Aggregate Industries – clearly has problems on its own doorstep too:
Police on Tuesday cleared environmental protestors from a quarry in western Switzerland that they had occupied for months in a demonstration against cement maker LafargeHolcim... The activists said they were seeking to block expansion of the quarry to prevent more carbon dioxide emissions and protect biodiversity in the area.

Monday, 1 February 2021

Reddit: a ‘breeding ground for targeted disruption of companies’?

It was difficult to avoid the news last week about GameStop, Robinhood and the power of Reddit, how hedge funds faced billions in potential losses having been humbled by an army of small investors buying shares in a failing computer gaming shop that the hedge fund industry had bet against. Much of the discussion took place in the Reddit group r/WallStreetBets which has some 4.8 million users. The action has now moved on to silver.

Will the impact of Reddit stop there? It's unlikely.
 
These investors might remind corporates, platforms and perhaps even fund managers where the money that flows so neatly into their pockets actually comes from.
They might also join together to make stands on issues that really matter. 
 
One Wall Street investor who spoke under the condition of anonymity speculated that these platforms would not retreat back into obscurity, predicting instead that they could become a "breeding ground for targeted disruption of companies", especially those perceived to be behaving badly. The person warned that institutions that do not make good on certain environmental, social and governance standards, for example, could get caught in the crosshairs.

Thursday, 18 June 2020

London Climate Action Week


Readers may remember that this time last year – a time that now seems like another age – climate protestors targeted London Concrete, part of Aggregate Industries. As one protester put it:
I’m taking part in this action to disrupt concrete production, because we have to pause and recognise the harm it is causing both locally and globally; locally with the dust in the air our children breathe and globally with the inextricable CO2 emissions involved which are destroying the world.

Wednesday, 1 April 2020

MPA issues guidance on dealing with protesters

The Mineral Products Association – the trade association representing Aggregate Industries et al. – has issued guidance notes in light of the coronavirus outbreak, at safequarry.com.

In the midst of a global pandemic, and with unprecedented conditions for the construction industry and its members, the MPA saw the need to issue advice on dealing with protesters:
During this period there is a risk that employees either travelling to work or involved in work activities off-site (such as delivering materials) may encounter members of the public or protesters objecting to their activities.
The note finishes by saying "Further information relating to dealing with protests is available in the MPA Members Briefing: Protester Advice", for example should the cement/concrete sector "become a target in the future – particularly given the recent emergence of the Extinction Rebellion."

The MPA advises that:
In all cases, protestors will look to undertake hostile reconnaissance in advance of protests, so the awareness and vigilance of office/site staff remains paramount.
Operators should:
DENY individuals the opportunity to gain information
Company employees should be briefed to ensure:
they do not provide protesters with photo opportunities or sound bites with negative propaganda potential.
And finally, on a long list of measures:
PLEASE DON’T... Provide comment to any press
It’s important that MPA members get these things right. After all:
Everyone with a mobile phone is a potential cameraman/woman, who will be tweeting/blogging to a potential online audience of thousands or millions.

Wednesday, 19 February 2020

Extinction Rebellion targets LafargeHolcim

Last year Aggregate Industries was targeted by climate activists. Now it's the parent company's turn:



Wednesday, 17 July 2019

Aggregate Industries targeted by climate emergency protesters

London Concrete – part of Aggregate Industries, and already in the news this month for a fatal incident – has now been targeted by climate protesters.


Extinction Rebellion activists blocked the entrances of its premises in East London:
The disruption is planned to halt the expansion of the site, which is intended to support the construction of the Silvertown Tunnel.
The Silvertown tunnel is a £1bn toll road proposed to run under the Thames.
The project – backed by the London mayor, Sadiq Khan – has drawn widespread criticism from environmentalists, local politicians and others concerned about deadly air pollution in the capital.
Construction "could begin in late 2019 or 2020, with the new tunnel expected to open from 2025." The proposal is opposed by the 'No to the Silvertown Tunnel' campaign. An Extinction Rebellion spokeswoman said:
Concrete has a huge environmental impact and building another tunnel will only make air pollution across East London worse.
The air pollution is already at dangerous levels and is affecting the health of children and adults in the area. With the siting of this industry right next to two schools, these children face lifelong negative impact on their health.
We confirm there are currently peaceful protests taking place outside of our London Concrete premises in Bow, East London and we are cooperating with authorities on this matter.
We are cognisant of the carbon footprint of cement and concrete and we are at the forefront of efforts to mitigate climate change.
Of course, if AI has been at the forefront of any efforts to mitigate climate change, we all know by now how very unsuccessful those efforts have been. As we've posted in the past: If AI’s record is an example of corporate action on climate change, we’re all screwed; and parent LafargeHolcim: Acting in a way that would “wipe out most life on the planet”. We've posted how:
AI's emitting nearly 1.3 million tonnes of CO2 each year, more than 5x the amount in 1999.
LafargeHolcim’s net CO2 emissions increased in 2018 to 121,000,000 tonnes*, up from 118,000,000 tonnes in 2017, up from 115,000,000 tonnes in 2016.








* Net CEM CO2 emissions. Total gross direct CO2 emissions 135Mt. Total indirect CO2 emissions 30Mt. Source: LafargeHolcim Sustainability Report 2018

Thursday, 2 May 2019

UK Parliament declares climate change emergency

The power of protest. The power of school children. Yesterday, MPs approved a motion to declare an environment and climate emergency.







Today, the Committee on Climate Change – the independent adviser to government on climate change issues – says the UK must set a zero-carbon target for 2050, which would mean, amongst a gamut of other measures, the planting of an estimated 1.5 billion trees. Lord Deben, the chair of the CCC, said the zero emissions target for 2050 must be passed into law immediately:
We [must] do it now. The urgency is not just a matter of a shortness of time, but the quicker you do it, the cheaper it is. Recent events have shown how strongly people feel.
For some, including Mark Maslin, Professor of Climatology at University College London, the target is not urgent enough:
The zero-carbon target is essential, but the date of 2050 is too far in the future. The UK must adopt a 2030 zero-carbon target.
For one company in particular, any target is apparently meaningless.

The momentous, historic, if symbolic, events of yesterday did not go unnoticed by Aggregate Industries, one of the UK’s major polluters. The company planning a 2.5 million mile climate-busting haulage route across Devon thought yesterday would be a good opportunity to tell the world "From #climate to #circulareconomy, we are pioneers of best practice in #sustainability...". Pioneers? Really?


The tweet provides a link to the company’s Sustainability Policy signed off by Guy Edwards, the company’s new CEO:
We are committed to tackling climate change. We are determined to reduce our emissions per tonne...
They are words that Aggregate Industries has uttered before, and words that have proved utterly meaningless. In 2006, AI had a clear message:


They didn’t. AI now emits nearly 1.3 million tonnes of CO2 each year – more than 3x the amount it did in 2006, and 5x the amount it did in 1999. Here are the results of its action on emissions per tonne too:

Wednesday, 24 April 2019

Extraordinary times

These really are extraordinary times. Not only because we have just seen the biggest civil disobedience event in recent British history, with Extinction Rebellion arrests now passing 1,000, but also because photos of a 16-year-old Swedish climate activist are splashed across this morning’s front pages, after she met with applause in the House of Commons, earlier having told MPs: "You lied to us. You gave us false hope. You told us that the future was something to look forward to", before asking them "Is my microphone on? Can you hear me?" Read her full speech, or watch a short clip of it below:



The messages from the Extinction Rebellion protests and from Greta Thunberg are beginning to resonate with more and more people; here are two who used to work for the Police:
Attending the protests on Monday, was Philip Kedge, a retired chief inspector with Hampshire constabulary. "I have a seed of doubt that’s been growing in terms of what’s been happening to our environment and I decided that I could do two things. I can go sit on Bournemouth beach and enjoy the sunshine with ice cream or I can come here and find out more. My respect to all the service officers here. I’ve seen nothing but the utmost professionalism and respect. And the same goes to the protesters who have treated the police with dignity and respect."
Another former police officer, Richard Ecclestone, who attended the protests separately from Kedge, said he had policed protests against the A30 road in Devon in the 90s, but that Extinction Rebellion felt different. "This is very different because it is not just a bunch of very well meaning and committed activists. This is all of us".
I am really quite terrified of the prospects for our society and civilisation if we don't take action on climate change. The sense of emergency of it is just so important that we need to get a hold of this. We are in the situation where we need to turn this catastrophe that we are sleepwalking into around.
Read about some of the others. As one protester put it:
We are coming into Parliament Square because we have captured the media’s attention and a lot of attention around the globe, and now it’s time for the politicians to come and talk to us.
But as far as one of our politicians is concerned:
Surely this is the time for the protesters to take their pink boat to Tiananmen Square, and lecture them in the way they have been lecturing us.
Five years ago, we posted Climate change – we should all be doing our bit ... We said:
There are many notable projects around the country attempting to bring down our carbon footprint. There’s one in Lyme Regis - a hydro-electric system in the Town Mill. By generating electricity from the River Lim, it hopes to save 13 tonnes CO2 annually.
But benefits from schemes like this are dwarfed by unsustainable proposals from corporations, selfishly focusing on nothing but profit. Whatever happens with Straitgate, the idea of processing material 7.5 miles away must be a non-starter. With climate change, everybody must pull their weight.
Things have changed since then. The scale of our climate emergency, and what needs to be done, has come into sharper focus. What has also changed is that Aggregate Industries now wants to process Straitgate material some 23 miles away, not 7.5. Plainly this is a company that fails to recognise the climate emergency. This is a company that neglected to report around 600,000 tonnes of CO2 in 2016. This is a company owned by LafargeHolcim – named second worst company for increasing CO2 emissions. As we posted:
AI has talked about reducing its CO2 emissions for more than 15 years, and has achieved exactly the reverse. It is plainly in denial: denial about having to do anything to change the way it operates, denial about having to do anything to reduce its contribution to an impending climate catastrophe.
AI is now emitting nearly 1.3 million tonnes of CO2 each year, more than 5x the amount in 1999.

As Greta Thunberg says:
... the basic problem is that basically nothing is being done to halt – or even slow – climate and ecological breakdown, despite all the beautiful words and promises.
Now we probably don’t even have a future any more. Because that future was sold so that a small number of people could make unimaginable amounts of money.


Some of the other climate-related posts we've made this year and last can be found here:

Resource extraction responsible for half world’s carbon emissions; Concrete: “the most destructive material on Earth”; UK experiences hottest winter day ever; DCC declares ‘climate emergency’ but rejects 2030 target; Schoolchildren across the world call for climate action; DCC declares “climate emergency”; Our future, and our children’s future, in numbers; AI’s digital presence on climate change; We’re killing our planet; There must be two Aggregate Industries; If AI’s record is an example of corporate action on climate change, we’re all screwed; IPCC: “The next few years are probably the most important in our history”; ‘If the cement industry were a country, it would be third largest emitter in the world’; Whilst Europe burns, what’s the UK minerals industry doing about climate change?; The terrible human cost of LafargeHolcim’s operations; ‘Cement companies must double emission cuts to deliver Paris Agreement’; Legacy; “We are committed to tackling climate change”.