APEC Climate Change protest shuts down Victorian Coal Power Station
Activists have shut down power generation at the Loy Yang power station in Gippsland's Latrobe Valley on Monday morning for five hours, as a protest against inaction on climate change by the Australian Government of John Howard, and policies that maintain the coal power industry and its contribution to climate change.
At least four activists from Real Action on Climate Change entered the power station at 5am and locked themselves on to a coal conveyor and an overburden conveyor belt, forcing the shutdown of the 600 megawatt generator, halving production from Victoria's biggest coal fired power station that supplies 30% of the states power, the dirtiest power supply in the developed world. (Watch Video)
Another power unit at Loy Yang is out for maintenance and today's forced shutdown has dropped power output to half. The electricity price in Victoria has risen to $63 because of the action and is expected to cost the operators thousands of dollars in lost production.
Spokeperson Michaela Stubbs said the action was intended to send a message to APEC leaders meeting in Sydney this week.
"We're already seeing the effects of climate change and it's our generation and future generations that are going to be dealing with the long term consequences of climate change," she said in an ABC new report. "We need to see real action now, through the Kyoto process."
The Group say they are making a stand for all Australians to protect our community against the dangers of climate change. The group says the APEC meeting is being used to further the lies and deciet being spread by Prime Minister Howard in regards to the Climate Change issue and his continuing efforts to undermine the Kyoto Protocol. A group spokesperson said that Climate Change ends with leaving coal in the ground.
"It is people of our age, our generation who will be dealing with the long-term consequences of climate change. We need real action on climate change to stop our reliance on polluting forms of energy such as coal and move towards a renewable energy future." said spokesperson Michaela Stubbs. "Real action on climate change is about people power not coal power" said Michaela Stubbs.
Police Search and Rescue squad were forced to cut the activists free from the conveyor belts, and they have been taken to Traralgon police station.
Sources:
- Beyond Zero Emissions Media Release Sept 3, 207 - Protesters block coal supply to Loy Yang Power station
- Scoop Sept 3, 2007 - Real Action: People Power, Not Coal Power
- ABC online, Sept 3, 2007 - Climate protest shuts down power station
- ABC online, Sept 3, 2007 - Michaela Stubbs on ABC Radio 774 (MP3)
- Blog, Sept 3, 2007 - Real Action on Climate Change for account of action and photos
- Climate IMC, 3 Sept 2007 This is real action on climate change
- Engagemedia.org Sept 5, 2007 APEC Climate Action at Loy Yang Power Station (Video)













Re: APEC Climate Change protest ...
Demand drives supply. As long as autosprawl is heavily subsidized, the demand for energy will outweigh all protests and alternatives. To reverse this, stop subsidizing carbon dioxide dumping. 1. carbon tax 2. free public transit http://www.freepublictransit.org
Re: APEC Climate Change protest shuts down Victorian Coal Power
Video of the action: http://www.engagemedia.org/Members/raocc/videos/loyyang.ogg/view
Re: APEC Climate Change protest shuts down Victorian Coal Power
Did anybody do the sums on how much ADDITIONAL coal would need to be burnt as a consequence of this action?
These generators run most efficiently at constant load. To shut down and re-start the plant would require significant amounts of coal to be burnt without producing any electricity at all. Total waste.
And then there's the additional fuel used by whatever powerplant stepped up generation to cover the shortfall from Loy Yang. There was no sudden decline in power consumption for those 5 hours, so the power must have come from somewhere.
I'm no apologist for the dinosaur burning industry, but if we must use this filthy technology to power our society - in the short term at least - let's do so as efficiently as possible.
Not a well considered protest at all, in my eyes. There's a sad irony when an action to highlight inaction on climate change causes more carbon release than doing nothing.