| http://www.ted.com/talks/naomi_klein_addicted_to_risk.html?utm_source=newsletter_weekly_2011-01-20&utm_campaign=newsletter_weekly&utm_medium=email
Naomi Klein is a Canadian author and social activist known for her political analyses and criticism of corporate globalization from a democratic socialist perspective. She is well worth listening to – listen out for her passing reference to the fracking blight we are fighting to avoid here in South Wales. She provides insight into what motivates these companies to continue these reckless endeavours. (Can’t say I approve of the film tagged on (NOT by Naomi) at the end though – Coca Cola as a champion of women’s liberation Africa is a little rich!) Andy |
Yearly Archives: 2011
Meeting reminder
| Hi folks,
Hope to see as many of you as possible at the meeting:@ Thursday 20th January |
Have I got FRACKING news for you?
The case against fracking mounts and mounts
| BBC Newsnight report from last month.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/newsnight/9255520.stm More lessons we can learn from elsewhere. But are we? We need to find out. |
Ecologist Film Unit film on fracking – be afraid, be very afraid!
| This is not scaremongering. This is about what we truly value. It is about care and prudence. It is about holding people to account for decisions they make.
This film was made in the USA by a UK film team from the highly respected Ecologist Film Unit: http://wn.com/Fracking_Hell_The_Untold_Story I believe this could be the most important issue in Bridgend and the South Wales region today (along with many other parts of the country). Who can the people of South Wales turn to to lobby on their behalf to ensure fracking hell is not let loose beneath our feet? It is time for the Green Party to step forward. |
Fracking hell – Bridgend beware!
| Press release
To: glamorgan.gazette; gemeditorial; Bridge FM; newsgathering.wales@bbc.co.uk Dear Editor, I had heard a little about the disastrous impacts of fracking in North America, but it was only this week that I have come realise just how serious the threat is here in Bridgend. Fracking is the controversial method of extracting natural gas from shales and coal seams, often utilising highly toxic chemicals in the process. It is the focus of a newly released film called ‘Gasland’ that I sincerely hope reaches Bridgend soon. It graphically depicts how fracking interferes with groundwater and can contaminate water resources with devastating consequences for humans and wildlife. The release of the film prompted a news report about a fracking project starting close to Blackpool, and there was a passing reference to South Wales being a good prospect for it too. This got me curious. A little digging has revealed that the whole South Wales coalfield area has already been subdivided and licensed out (by the DECC) for potential fracking to four main companies. Centrica are the big name player involved around Bridgend (alongside a local company, Coastal Oil & Gas). Test drilling has already been allowed to take place by BCBC near Pencoed and Llangeinor. The results were apparently encouraging – from the money men’s point of view. Centrica have publicly stated their intention to commence full scale operations at two sites – near Llangeinor and near Ogmore Vale / Lewistown – in 2012, subject to planning approval. Those plans were submitted to BCBC last summer and must be close to a decision soon – so time is of the essence if we are to ensure these applications are dealt with properly. I have reason to doubt this is happening. The big issue with fracking is groundwater and water resource implications. As someone who is geography/geology trained, I appreciate how complex these issues are. No-one at BCBC seems aware of this in the least. If you check out the the documentation for the planning applications (P/10/500/FUL and P/10/462/FUL) – available online – you find lots of concern from BCBC over relatively petty surface issues like traffic, noise and light pollution and not a single mention anywhere of groundwater concerns. The surface impacts are indeed modest, and based on these alone, Chief Planning Officer, Tony Gore, has astonishingly already decided that an Environmental Impact Assessment is not necessary for these applications! Centrica’s own consultation documents also skillfully avoid the issue, and stress the benign surface impacts. One document tucks a blunt enough question in at the back, as too whether Centrica can guarantee there will be no groundwater issues. It simply lists a few precautions it will put in place as a response. So that is NO GUARANTEE then. A watertight guarantee (excuse the pun) is indeed impossible. In the light of evidence emerging all the time about the possible negative consequences of this technology, and the evidence that BCBC has completely failed to address the correct issues, it must surely be incumbent on BCBC to put an immediate moratorium on these planning applications until all due diligence is complete. I would happen to concur with Professor Kevin Anderson of the renowned Tyndall Centre and Manchester University, who said this week: “If we are serious in our commitment to avoid serious climate change, the only safe place for shale gas remains in the ground”. We have to break our dependency on fossil fuels. Bridgend could and should be the focus of renewable energy technology and production – not the focus of horror stories when fracking hell breaks loose. A lot more information is a available via the Bridgend Greens blog – address below. |
Fracking licensed not just on our doorsteps, but under our doorsteps!!
| The extent of the fracking threat can be seen here: https://www.og.decc.gov.uk/information/bb_updates/maps/landfields_lics.pdf Bridgend and much of south Wales has been licensed for fracking already!!! Re-enforcing my earlier points: Kevin Anderson, professor of energy and climate change at the University of Manchester, said: There is also a significant risk its use will delay the introduction of renewable energy alternatives. Consequently, if we are serious about avoiding dangerous climate change, the only safe place for shale gas remains in the ground. The report has been released to coincide with the UK premiere of the documentary film Gasland which focuses on the problems with the industry in the US. |
FRACKING hell!! Major threat in South Wales
| Fracking (sometimes known as hydraulic fracturing) is a method of extracting natural gas from shale rock which has horrific consequences for wildlife and people in the area where fracking occurs.
Highly hazardous and carcinogenic chemicals are mixed with water and pumped thousands of feet under ground to release gas from the shale rock. It doesn’t take a scientist to realise that this kind of gas extraction leads to water contamination on a massive scale, killing wildlife and causing irreversible harm to local people. If anyone has any doubt as to the harmful consequences of fracking please watch the new documentary film ‘Gasland‘ which is to be released in the UK on 17 January 2011. Fracking has already devastated rural areas in the the USA and it’s coming here. It has already started in the Blackpool area A company called Composite Energy has earmarked a 100km squared area of natural beauty outside of Swansea for fracking and there are appraisal wells being drilled all over the UK as we speak. South Wales is particularly at risk- across the old coalfield areas especially: “The gas contents in Wales are the highest encountered in the 2009 drilling campaign and Composite is considering its further exploration and pilot development options in this area.” Shale Gas Drilling by fracking must be kept out of the UK. Support this Facebook page to give a big ‘FRACK OFF’ to the energy companies who put money before anything else: As per usual, the main ‘establishment parties’ are turning a blind eye to the dangers, beholden as they are to the fossil fuel lobby and seduced by being less dependent on Russian reserves in the short to medium term: SOUTH WALES SHOULD BE THE FOCUS RENEWABLE ENERGY RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT THAT HAS THE POTENTIAL TO FREE THE UK COMPLETELY FROM FOSSIL FUEL DEPENDENCY. ONLY THE GREEN PARTY CAN LEAD US TOWARDS THIS KIND OF FUTURE. |
POINTS OF VIEW submission
| (Published in the Gazette on 20/01/11)Dear Glamorgan Gazette,
You can tell that there are elections coming up – the undignified scramble for votes has begun. First we had Carwyn Jones suggesting disgruntled Lib Dems should ‘come home to Labour’. Then we have Tim Thomas pecking at the perceived corpse of the Lib Dems on behalf of Plaid Cymru. For Plaid to slam the Lib Dems for having the courage to enter into a coalition government is utterly disingenuous as Plaid Cymru support proportional representation (as indeed I do), which would make coalition government the norm rather than the exception. The whole point of proportional representation is to get people voting for what they do actually want, rather than voting tactically to try and manipulate results to avoid what they really do not want (as is too common with FPTP and will remain the case with AV). As the forthcoming Welsh Assembly elections are on a reasonably proportional ‘additional member’ system, then true democrats should be encouraging people to vote for what they really want in terms of policy – pure and simple. I challenge Carwyn Jones and Tim Thomas, and every reader who wants to really understand who they should be voting for on the basis of policy, to take the quiz on this site: ANDY CHYBA P.S. The old adage about lies, damned lies and statistics is reflected in correspondence about the size of the VAT increase. It went up from 17.5% to 20% which means we are actually paying 14.3% more VAT than we were before the increase, if I am not mistaken (not 20% more or 2.5% more as suggested by your correspondents). This is nonetheless a regressive, inflationary, ideological choice promoted only by true blue Tories – the choice of a mere 36% of the voters last year (the same percentage that Madeleine Moon won the Bridgend seat with would you believe). |
EMPLOYER PLEDGE – to improve employees basic skills – a WAG initiative worth promoting.
| COMPANIES across Wales should be aiming aiming to tackle poor literacy and numeracy rates in the workforce.
More than half of all adults aged 16 to 65 in Wales have poor numeracy skills and one in four has a reading age of 11 or below, according to figures from the Welsh Assembly Government. The figures reported in the Western Mail earlier this year, show that 25% of 15 to 65-year-olds have a reading age of 11 or below and 53% have numeracy levels of 11 or below. These are shocking figures and an indictment of decades of ineffective meddling and a lack of the vision needed to reshape our education system in line with the needs of the 21st century. Companies have warned that some employees struggle to write a letter and there are fears Wales will get left behind in the global economy unless basic skills are improved. More than 220 employers in Wales have so far signed the EMPLOYER PLEDGEwith the Basic Skills Agency and its providers to provide reading, writing and maths help in the workplace. The WAG funded EMPLOYER PLEDGE initiative is certainly something we should be getting behind. If anyone would like to know more, or know of a local business that would like to know more, they can check out the WAG website: http://new.wales.gov.uk/topics/educationandskills/skillsandtraining/employerpledge/?lang=en Or contact Andy Chyba direct. |
