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Greenwash
Flier Handed Out at Metals: Energy, Emissions and the Environment Conference
ALCOA | Articles | Greenwash | Norsk Hydro | Pollution | Rio Tinto-Alcan | Saving IcelandSaving Iceland
Brussels
11 February 2008
This text was distributed by activists whilst disrupting this conference.
GREENWASH CONFERENCE OF METALS INDUSTRY
The conference Metals: Energy, Emissions and the Environment (11&12/02/2008 in Radisson SAS Royal Hotel, Brussels) is a fine example of pure greenwash.
Saving Iceland Conference Declaration 2007
ALCOA | Amazon | Arms Industry | Australia | Century Aluminum | Corruption | Democracy deficit/Repression | Ecology | Economic | Greenwash | Icelandic Alloys-Elkem | India | Jamaica | Landsvirkjun | Laws/Treaties | Malaysia | Media bias | Norsk Hydro | Pollution | R & D Carbon | Rio Tinto-Alcan | Saving Iceland | South Africa | Surinam | Trinidad & TobagoThis declaration was made in consensus by dozens of people attending the first Saving Iceland conference, 'Global Consequences of Heavy Industry and Large Dams' on July 7-8, 2007. [Video report part 1 | 2]
Photo gallery of the conference.
We are gathered in Olfus, Iceland, we are people from more than fifteen different countries and five continents. We are here to share our experiences of heavy industry, dams, transnational companies and other expressions of globalisation, in Iceland, in Brazil, in South Africa, in Denmark, in Canada, in England, Germany, India, Trinidad and Tobago and many other countries.
We are not professional protestors. Unlike the well-paid corporate lobbyists and spindoctors that try to sell you heavy industry, none of us gets payed to be here. We are ordinary people, we are teachers, nurses, youth workers, students, shopworkers, fathers, mothers. We are here because we care. The Icelandic wilderness is unique. It is the largest in Europe and one of the few wild places left on this continent. It’s beauty and uniqueness and fire and ice are a heritage we must preserve and must defend. It is the heritage and responsibility and privilege of all Icelanders, and all Europeans, and all humans...
'Glacial Rivers Reduce Pollution on Earth' by Gudmundur Páll Ólafsson
Ecology | Greenwash | PollutionGlacial rivers are not only the lifeblood of Iceland, but also of the whole planet.
River water contains sediment in suspension and various substances in solution; glacial rivers, especially, carry a large amount of sediment which increases as the atmosphere grows warmer.
Defending the Wild in the Land of Fire and Ice - Saving Iceland Takes Action
Amazon | Arms Industry | Democracy deficit/Repression | Ecology | Greenwash | Landsvirkjun | Pollution | Saving Iceland | South Africa | Trinidad & TobagoJaap Krater
Earth First Journal
3 August, 2007
Summer of Resistance in Iceland - An overview
This year, Iceland saw its third Summer of direct action against heavy industry and large dams. In a much-disputed master plan, all the glacial rivers and geothermal potential of Europe’s largest wilderness would be harnessed for aluminum production (see EF!J May-June 2006). Activists from around the world have gathered to protect Europe’s largest remaining wilderness and oppose aluminum corporations.
Aluminium Tyrants
ALCOA | Articles | Century Aluminum | Democracy deficit/Repression | Ecology | Greenwash | Rio Tinto-AlcanThe Ecologist, October 2007
Krater, J., Rose, M., Anslow, M.
The gates of a geothermal power station are not where you would expect to find environmental activists. But the morning of 26th July 2007 saw the access road to Hellisheidi power station in Hengill, South-West Iceland, blockaded by a group of protestors from the campaign group ‘Saving Iceland’. After a brief demonstration, nine activists were arrested and several now face legal action.
Geothermal power in Iceland is big business. Just five plants generate 3 TWh a year – more than the annual output from all the UK’s wind turbines combined (Orkustofnun 2005; BERR 2006). Geothermal power also provides at least 85 per cent of Iceland’s homes with heat and hot water. This abundance of cheap, largely CO2-free energy has attracted energy-hungry industries to the country like sharks to a carcass. Of these, by far the most energy intensive is the aluminium industry (Krater 2007; Saving Iceland 2007).
'Goðsögnin um álver við Húsavík I-II' eftir Ragnhildi Sigurðardóttur
ALCOA | Íslenska | Ecology | Greenwash | Landsvirkjun | PollutionÞað er von mín að sem flestir taki afstöðu byggða á raunverulegum gögnum um hvort þeir telji þessar álvershugmyndir vera velígrundaða umhverfisvæna aðgerð sem verði öllum íbúum landsfjórðungsins til heilla og ánægju. Fyrir mér vekur umtal og áróður álverssinna hinsvegar upp margar spurningar, t.d.: “Hvenær verður múgsefjun að sannleika og hvenær verður tálsýn að veruleika?”
'Hydropower Disaster for Global Warming' by Jaap Krater
Articles | Ecology | Greenwash | India | PollutionTrouw, Netherlands
21 January 2007
Large dams have dramatic consequences. Ecosystems are destroyed and numerous people are made homeless, often without adequate resettlement. But it is yet little known that large-scale hydro-electricity is a major contributor to global warming. The reservoirs could, despite their clean image, be even more devastating for our climate than fossil fuel plants.
A letter to ALCOA from Dr. Ragnhildur Sigurdardóttir and Gudmundur Páll Ólafsson
ALCOA | Articles | Democracy deficit/Repression | Ecology | Greenwash | Pollution"The hurt many of us feel towards the developments in eastern Iceland is so great that we will never accept another aluminum smelter to be built in Iceland. We would not be surprised if the environmental NGO’s and grass root organizations would consider the proposed developments in Northern Iceland to be a serious provocation on the behalf of Alcoa."
Hydroelectric Power's Dirty Secret Revealed
Articles | Ecology | Greenwash | PollutionNew Scientist
* 26 February 2005
* Duncan Graham-Rowe
* Magazine issue 2488
Hydroelectric dams produce significant amounts of CO2 and methane - some produce more greenhouse gases than fossil fuel power plants.
CONTRARY to popular belief, hydroelectric power can seriously damage the climate. Proposed changes to the way countries' climate budgets are calculated aim to take greenhouse gas emissions from hydropower reservoirs into account, but some experts worry that they will not go far enough.
ALCOA's Alarming Record on Pollution
ALCOA | Articles | Corruption | Ecology | Greenwash | PollutionUtwatch.org
US Water News Online
Minesandcommunities.org
Alcoa, Inc. is one of the worst polluters on the planet. They are at the forefront of poisoning the air, land and water of Texas, the most heavily polluted state in the US. Alcoa has grandfathered facilities exempt from the 1971 Clean Air Act. In Texas alone, it has several hundred plants that are accountable for the mounting pollution problems of the state."
The Spin Doctor Is In: Examining Corporate PR at Bechtel by A.C. Thompson
ALCOA | Bechtel | Corruption | Democracy deficit/Repression | GreenwashCorpWatch
April 28, 2004
In the face of criticism over its controversial construction projects (including the illegal ALCOA smelter in Reydarfjordur), Bechtel has taken media manipulation to the next level, employing a three-pronged approach to weaving a rosy story for the public and investors.
Green Image, Grim Reality - Iceland and Alcoa Move Forward with "Aluminum Dam" in Glacial Wilderness
ALCOA | Articles | Democracy deficit/Repression | Greenwash | Landsvirkjun | WWFJon Swan
World Rivers Review
Volume 18, No. 1, 2003
Published by International Rivers Network
Iceland - famed for its geysers, glaciers, salmon rivers, and its one international celebrity, pop singer Bjork - has long enjoyed the reputation of being a squeaky-clean, environmentally aware country. This image has been burnished by dozens of articles touting the nation's stated goal of becoming a "hydrogen economy" (with its energy coming from fuel cells) by 2040. It was further enhanced when, on Earth Day 2001, the country's prime minister flew to New York to accept a "Global Green USA" award in acknowledgment of this laudable energy plan.
International Rivers Day - Saving Iceland and Sól á Sudurlandi join forces to free Thjórsá
Actions | Corruption | Ecology | Greenwash | Landsvirkjun | News | Saving IcelandSaving Iceland
Friday March 14th 2008
Tilkynningin er á íslensku hér
This morning Saving Iceland built a small dam in front of Landsvirkjun's office entrance so the workers had either to step over the dam to get inside or use a different entrance. With this peaceful demonstration Saving Iceland wanted to protest upcoming three dams that Landsvirkjun, the national energy company, hopes to build in lower Þjórsá river (pronounced 'Thjorsa'). At the same time SI sends support and solidarity to all the people fighting this destruction.
Damming of Lower Thjórsá River on Course in Spite of Fierce Local Opposition?
Greenwash | Landsvirkjun | NewsMarch 2nd 2008
Last Tuesday, Verne Holdings, a joint venture by General Catalyst and Novator, signed a 20 billion Icelandic krónur (306 millions USD) agreement with Landsvirkjun, the National Energy Company, Farice and Keflavík Airport Development Corporation on establishing a data center by Keflavík International Airport.
According to the contract Landsvirkjun will be providing electricity for the data center, around 25 MW per year and the energy is supposed to come from Landsvirkjun´s three planned dams in Þjórsá river. These 25 MW are less then 10 percent of what Landsvirkjun plans to create with the Þjórsá dams.
Dreamland Iceland: A Universe on an Island - A Talk by Andri Snær Magnason in New York City
Arms Industry | Cultural/Events | Democracy deficit/Repression | GreenwashMonday, March 3, 6:30 pm.
Scandinavia House
58 Park Avenue at 38th Street, New York City
$10 ($8 ASF members, students with ID free)
Icelandic author Andri Snær Magnason will speak about Iceland as a political, economic, and sociological microcosm of the world, arguing that Iceland as an island can be used as a model to understand issues of conflict, interest, influence, war, independence, and dependency around the globe. Drawing on his recent bestseller, Dreamland: Self Help for a Frightened Nation, Mr. Magnason will use local topics to help understand complex global issues like the military industrial complex, the exploitation of natural resources, globalization, corporations, and democracy. The New York Times calls Dreamland, which was awarded both the Icelandic Literary Award and the Icelandic Bookseller Prize in 2006, “a devastating polemic that puts Iceland's environmental issues into a global perspective.”

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