German Jens Loewe, 36, is looked after by Filipino Pam Palma and New Zealander Debra Gay Pristor after Loewe was mauled by Masinloc Coal plant security personnel.
Enlarge Image
more images
Zambales, PHILIPPINES —
A German Greenpeace activist participating in a peaceful protest against the Masinloc coal power plant outside Manila was horrendously beaten by local plant personnel.
Three other Greenpeace activists from New Zealand and the
Philippines had stones thrown at them. German Jens Loewe, 36, has been
taken to a hospital emergency room. Filipinos Janine Mercado, Pam
Palma and New Zealander Debra Gay Pristor have also been taken to
hospital with less serious injuries.
"Greenpeace condemns this violent attack to a peaceful protest," said
Greenpeace Southeast Asia Energy Campaigner Red
Constantino. "It is disproportionate to the nature of the protest
which is a peaceful, non violent protest.
"We're disappointed that the Filipino plant personnel prefers to
protect the interests of a power plant that brings more harm than good
to people. Coal is the culprit here, not peaceful protest."
Greenpeace activists were at the plant to draw attention to Australian
and Japanese backing of the expansion of climate changing coal
dependency in Asia. "The Masinloc power plant displays the very worst
excesses of the Philippine and Asian coal industry," said Constantino
at the plant site. "Masinloc's environmental impact has never been
publicly scrutinised and yet funds from organisations like the
Asian Development Bank and the Japan Bank for International Cooperation
(JBIC) are being earmarked for a 50% expansion
of the plant's power capacity at a time when there is
considerable controversy surrounding the financing of its
privatisation sale. Worse still, it is primarily coal from Australia
that will feed the planned expansion.(1)
"Burning coal is the main cause of global warming. Australia and Japan
are underwriting climate change at a time when the Philippines and Asia
are facing the likelihood of devastating social and economic
instability from climate change precisely when the country and the rest
of Asia are least able to deal with its impacts.(2) The expansion of
coal in the Philippines and Asia must stop. Greenpeace calls on
the Philippine Senate for an inquiry into Masinloc's expansion
plans," said Constantino.
"It is no surprise that countries like Australia refuse to join the
Kyoto Protocol and then talk of secret climate pacts," said Greenpeace
International's Athena Ronquillo on-board the Greenpeace flagship the
Rainbow Warrior. "It is the world's biggest coal exporter, it has Asia
on an addictive drip of climate changing coal and it plays dirty," said
Greenpeace International's Athena Ronquillo. "Japan is equally as
hypocritical. It is a signatory to the Kyoto Protocol yet continues to
be far and away the biggest funder of dirty energy projects in Asia."
Clean alternatives to fossil fuel power in Asia are widely available.
In the Philippines enough wind power potential exists to produce 7
times over the country's current energy demand. In the Chinese province
of Guangdong there exists sufficient wind power potential to meet the
equivalent of the current energy supply in Hong Kong.(3)
"Time is not on our side. We have to cut global greenhouse emissions by
at least half by the middle of this century to avoid catastrophic
climate change. That means that global emissions must peak within the
next 10-15 years, not 25 or 30 years from now," concluded Ronquillo.
Greenpeace is an independent campaigning organisation that uses
non-violent creative confrontation to expose global environmental
problems to force solutions that are essential to a green and peaceful
future.
Contact Information:
In the Philippines
Red Constantino, Greenpeace SEA Energy campaigner, +63 917 524 1123
Athena Ronquillo, Greenpeace International Energy Campaigner + 63 9178131 562
Michael Kessler, Greenpeace International Communications + 63 915 945 0066
Lea Guerrero, Greenpeace SEA Media Officer, +63 917 374 4969
In Europe
Gina Sánchez, Greenpeace International Communications, +31 627 000064
Photos
John Novis, Greenpeace International Photo Editor +31 6 53 81 91 21
Notes:
(1) In July this year Greenpeace's flagship the Rainbow Warrior
shutdown the world's largest coal port in Newcastle. Coal exports from
the port are set to increase some 50% in the coming years. Australia is
the largest coal exporter in the world and is aggressively planning to
increase its exports from 220 million tonnes to 300 million by 2010.
(2) .Crisis or Opportunity: Climate Change Impacts and the Philippines, see www.asiacleanenergy.org
(3). Wind Guangdong, see www.asiacleanenergy.org