Ipswich, Queensland, Australia —
Friday July 11, 2008, 7am: Four Greenpeace activists are currently scaling a 140-metre-high smokestack of a coal-fired power station near Ipswich to stage a peaceful demonstration that will call for Australia to be powered by renewable energy.
Two
other activists have unfurled a banner reading "Energy [R]evolution"
on the roof of the 37-year-old Swanbank B coal-fired plant, Greenpeace climate
and energy campaigner Julien Vincent said.
"If we are to avoid catastrophic climate change, we must urgently drive
down our carbon emissions now," Mr Vincent said, before he began his
ascent of the stack. "This will only be achieved if renewable power
such as solar and geothermal replace dirty coal-fired power plants, like this
one."
Swanbank B is responsible for more than 2 million tonnes of carbon emissions a
year - equivalent to the annual pollution of 300,000 cars. If every home in
Queensland changed to solar hot water, the station could be switched off.
"Queensland has the best solar resources in the world and it is a tragedy
that the Sunshine State isn't leading the way in renewable energy," Mr
Vincent said. "If Prime Minister Kevin Rudd acts now, Australia could
become a powerhouse for renewable energy manufacturing and technological
development, creating thousands of new jobs and investment opportunities."
Australia is already falling behind many other countries in the development of
renewable energy. Over the next 18 months, Spain will roll out enough solar
thermal power to replace this power station four times over.
The renewables industry is ready to power Australia. Rodger Meads, managing
director of renewable energy company, Conergy, said: "The suggestion that
Queensland could be a renewable energy powerhouse is spot on."
"The region has world-class renewable resources - especially in solar -
and the only reason you don't see companies investing heavily in the state is
the lack of encouragement and the right legislative and regulatory environment
from Government" Mr Meads said.
The peaceful protest comes at a critical time in Australia's fight against
climate change. By the end of this year, the Federal Government will release
its detailed policy response to the climate challenge. The Government's climate
change advisor Professor Ross Garnaut is in Brisbane today to present his
interim report which Greenpeace says places too much emphasis on unproven
"clean coal" technology and failed to clearly detail how
zero-emission renewable energy would be rolled out in Australia.
Greenpeace has already shown how Australia could source more than 40% of
electricity from renewable energy by 2020 and phase out coal entirely by 2030
in a report released last month called Energy [R]evolution. It also found there
are tens of thousands more jobs in renewable energy and energy efficiency
industries, than there are in coal-fired power generation.
As part of the Energy [R]evolution tour, the Greenpeace ship, the Esperanza,
will be open for free public tours in Brisbane this weekend and will
promote the benefits of renewable energy.
For further information or comment
Contacts at Swanbank:
Ria Voorhaar, Media Officer, mo: 0400 376 021
Jason Collins, Campaigner, mo: 0418 650 995
Michelle Thomas, Audio Visual Coordinator, mo: 0404 096 556
Broadcast quality images and vision are available at http://www.greenpeacemedia.org
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