At the Annual Meeting of the Asian Development Bank (ADB) today,
village leaders from three communities devastated by ADB-financed
coal plants presented the Bank President with a bowl of coal, in a
symbolic indictment of the ADB's continued funding of climate
change through dirty coal power plants. The three leaders were
speaking at a civil society meeting with Bank President, Mr.
Haruhiko Kuroda. Greenpeace highlighted these three leaders
representing communities particularly affected by the bank's dirty
energy
funding.
The three community leaders, Mr. Narudon Suchartphong (55), Mr.
Charoen Detkhum (63) and Mr. Sutti Atchasai (29) are representing
the communities of villagers around the infamous coal plants BLCP
and Mae Moh, which are directly responsible for mass respiratory
illnesses, the destruction of livelihoods in the community and the
displacement of countless villagers.
'The financing of the Mae Moh coal mine and the BLCP coal plant
by the ADB is an environmental crime', said Mr. Charoen Detkhum of
the Mae Moh villagers' community. 'The ADB should immediately
withdraw finance for the BLCP coal plant project and all future
construction should be halted until a full environmental audit is
conducted, which will make clear the huge toll that such monster
projects take on the environment and the people who live
there.'
The community leaders also handed the President a letter
detailing their demands from the ADB. The demands include
repatriation of some of the most affected villages to locations at
least five kilometers away from the mine as stated in the
Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA), the provision of doctors
trained in occupational health and tasked with investigating the
causes of the respiratory illnesses of the villagers and the
provision of treatment and compensation for villagers' ill health
and medical expenses. The community representatives have also asked
that the ADB withdraw funding from the proposed expansion of the
lignite mine at Mae Moh and the BLCP coal plant.
The BLCP project is expected to emit 229.4 million tons of
carbon dioxide emissions over the next 20 years, contributing
significantly to global warming, while a 2002 study conducted by
the Greenpeace Research Laboratories shows that the Mae Moh coal
plant is producing 39 tons of the deadly neurotoxin mercury
annually while generating almost 4.4 million tons of fly ash every
year.
'This meeting is a step on the way to bridging the gap between
those who harm and those who suffer,' said Tara Buakamsri,
Greenpeace South-East Asia Climate and Energy Campaigner. 'As long
as the ADB continues to invest in huge coal power plants without
regard for the consequences, they will be directly responsible for
funding climate change and global warming in the Asian region.'
Greenpeace is an independent, campaigning organisation that uses
non-violent, creative confrontation to expose global environmental
problems, and to force solutions essential to a green and peaceful
future.
For further information on Greenpeace activities in Hyderabad:
www.greenpeaceindia.org/india/fundingclimatechange or
www.greenpeace.org/seasia/en/adb-bad/