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AMEC Blockaded over Baku Pipeline Construction
Early this morning a group of people from the Earth
First! and Rising Tide Baku campaigns and other concerned individuals
closed off the entrance to AMEC House in Warrington, Cheshire in
protest against the construction company's role in the proposed
Baku-Tblisi-Ceyhan Oil Pipeline.
At aroud 7:30 am, a tripod was erected and a chain
of people locked together across the entrance and leaflets were
handed out. The action prevented around 250 vehicles from entering
the complex, causing deliveries to be cancelled and making company
workers climb over locked-on people and a banner proclaiming "Stop
Baku Pipeline" to get to work.
After 3 hours and absolutely no action on the part
of the three baffled and slightly bored police, the protest packed
up and went to the pub, retrieving the materials, with no arrests.
The Baku-Tblisi-Ceyhan pipeline will be 1086 miles
long if built, with 1 million barrels of oil a day planned to flow
through it. AMEC have so far been awarded a £300 million contract
to assemble and bury the pipeline in Azerbaijhan, and to build facilities
such as pumping stations in Azerbaijhan and Georgia. This action
is part of an ongoing campaign against financiers, construction
companies and government departments involved in pushing ahead with
this project.
LEAVE THE OIL IN THE GROUND - NO NEW OIL!
There are about 90 days left for public consultation
on whether UK TAXPAYERS MONEY will be given to private companies
to profit from this madness.
See the text of the leaflet given to AMEC staff below.
For further info on the pipeline and things you can
do about it see:
Baku-Ceyhan Campaign: http://www.bakuceyhan.org.uk
Rising Tide (a UK grassroots network against climate change): Tel
01865 241097 Email: info@risingtide.org.uk Website: http://www.risingtide.org.uk
http://www.earthfirst.org.uk/manchester/baku
Text of leaflets given to AMEC staff (and other intrested
people working in the area):
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AMEC
OUT OF BTC
AMEC is being visited
today because of their involvement in the environmentally
and socially devastating BP-led Baku-Tblisi-Ceyhan pipeline
which is set to bring one million barrels of oil a day to
Europe via Azerbaijan, Georgia and Turkey. AMEC will continue
to be targeted until it pulls out of the project. Our aim
today is to disrupt business as usual in order to draw attention
to the terrible consequences of the pipeline outlined below.
It is not too late to stop the pipeline being built. This
is an action by a group of concerned individuals.
ENVIRONMENTAL CONSEQUENCES:
The pipeline would cause major pollution. Unlocking these
vast oil reserves would directly contradict climate change
commitments. The burning of these reserves would have a catastrophic
impact on the earths climate, for centuries. It would
create more pollution each year than every power station in
the UK, or the combined effect of every car, truck, bus and
train in the UK, or twice as much as heating every house in
the UK.
The pipeline route would run through the most serious earthquake
zone in Turkey. The pipeline itself and the transport to markets
would lead to greater risks of oil spills, as the recent Prestige
oil spill shows.. Not to mention the risk of the pipeline
becoming a target for guerrilla bombing campaigns as has happened
historically.
HUMAN RIGHTS:
The pipeline would pass through 8 different conflict zones.
BPs pipeline in Colombia has exacerbated conflict in
the region, with BP funding paramilitaries to silence its
critics, including its own workers, to keep the oil flowing
. Is AMEC prepared to be associated with this profit-driven
brutality?
ENVIRONMENTAL AND SOCIAL
IMPACT ASSESSMENTS:
These are vital for BP to get money from the public purse.
They are also a joke. The assessments were carried out by
ERM and RSK who presented the pipeline as a certainty, not
a possibility. Furthermore, independent researchers found
that consultations had not been done in local languages, that
many villages had been ignored and key locations excluded.
The consultants claimed to have talked to 100% of villagers
in Hacibayram in north-eastern Turkeya village which
was, at the time, completely
abandoned following local conflict!
FINANCIAL BENEFITS FOR
HOST COUNTRIES AND
LOCAL COMMUNITIES: It is often argued that projects like these
will benefit the host governments and affected communities
financially. The records show this is rarely the case. BP
pays notoriously low taxes. It paid almost no tax on its North
Sea pipeline system. Even if local people were employed by
the consortium for the lifetime of the project, the long term
consequences are the loss of local land, skills and health.
In fact the only long term jobs to be created by the project
are 350 in Turkey, 250 in
Azerbaijan and 250 in Georgia.
Whats
this got to do with you?
This is a hugely unpopular and vulnerable project. If AMEC
continues to support the pipeline it is risking your future.
It has started construction on a project which has not yet
been given an official go-ahead and has not succeeded in securing
the necessary funding (70% of £3.5b construction costs).
This means that you could lose your job as AMEC struggles
to keep its head above water having invested unwisely in a
lemon. If BP was so
confident in the project, why isnt it funding the project
itself?
What you
can do:
· Pass confidential information on to the Baku-Ceyhan
campaign.
· Refuse to work on anything related to the Baku-Ceyhan
project.
· Tell managers, directors and CEOs what you know about
the pipeline and pressure them into pulling out.
· Get involved in the campaign (Subscribe to the campaign
newsletter)
·
For further information, here are some contacts:
Baku-Ceyhan Campaign: www.bakuceyhan.org.uk
Rising Tide (a UK grassroots network against climate change):
Tel 01865 241097 Email: info@risingtide.org.uk Website:
www.risingtide.org.uk
http://www.earthfirst.org.uk/manchester/baku
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