Saturday, March 30, 2013

Leave them alone, treehuggers tell school

Leave them alone, treehuggers tell school
http://www.chinapost.com.tw/taiwan/national/national-news/2013/03/30/374575/Leave-them.htm

By Lauly Li, The China Post

TAIPEI, Taiwan -- After hugging an old tree on a New Taipei campus for over 35 hours, Green Party member Wang Chung-ming (王鐘銘) yesterday traded turns with two other volunteers in a bid to keep the tree from being pruned by the school.

There are 27 trees on the campus that the school intends to trim before transplanting them to another district, Jiangcui Junior High School (江翠國中) principle Kuo Yueh-hsiu (郭月秀) said yesterday.


Kuo said that the school filed an application with the New Taipei City Government before commencing the pruning.

A city government official, Chen Yuan-chuan (陳淵泉), confirmed that the school had sent a proposal for New Taipei to review; however, the school did not report when it began to trim the trees.

Former Jiangcui Junior High School employee Cheng Tsai-luan (鄭彩鑾) and other former colleagues recently created the Rescue Jiangcui Old Trees group specifically to protect the trees on the campus.

Cheng said that some of the trees have suffered from overtrimming, which has left them ugly without tree branches or leaves. She said the way the school treated the trees was brutal and a negative demonstration to students.

Cheng and other members wore headbands and raised banners on Wednesday in front of the school, urging it to stop trimming the trees.

Police raised banners and warned Cheng and other group members that their gathering was against assembly laws.

In a last-ditch attempt to save the trees from overpruning, volunteer Pan Han-chiang (潘翰疆) and Green Party member Wang wore raincoats, opened umbrellas and stayed on one of the tree throughout Thursday night, despite the chilly breeze and thunderstorms. Police and firefighters inflated a large air cushion beneath the tree where Pan and Wang were staying and tried to persuade them to come down.

The authorities left before midnight.

On a visit to the school on Wednesday, Department of Agriculture (DOA) officials discovered that some of the trees had been excessively pruned, according to Chen.

The DOA officials asked the workers to halt operations at once, cover the trees and apply treatments on the trunks. Chen said.

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

The Best and Hardest time for anti-nuclear


The 1st, 2nd and 3rd nuclear power plants‎ in Taiwan started in 1978, 1981 and 1984 respectively. Shortly after the 1986 Chernobyl disaster, anti-nuclear activists went to Taiwan Power Company and Gongliao, the planned location of the 4th nuclear power plant,‎ to tell people the danger of nuclear power. Soon, anti-nuclear organizations were formed and more events were held.

In 2000,  because of the stop and restart of the constructing 4th nuclear power plant‎, Taiwan anti-nuclear movement reached a peak, and then declined. In the decade of 2000-2010, Gongliao residents and anti-nuclear organizations struggled and didn't give up.

After the 311 Fukushima disaster in 2011, Taiwan anti-nuclear activists continued their effort to stop nuclear power‎. There are large-scale anti-nuclear parades every year since 2011. The 309 anti-nuclear parade in 2013 gathered more than 200,000 people around the Taiwan. Now, the Taiwan government try to use the referendum of 4th nuclear power plant to solve the long-debated issue, but most people do not trust the referendum method because the government made it difficult to be effective.

It is the best time for Taiwan to stop nuclear power because of participation of people, but it is also the hardest time for anti-nuclear because of striking back of the pro-nuclear government.

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Nuclear waste poses huge problem


By Wang Chung-ming 王鐘銘

The Fukushima Dai-ichi nuclear power plant crisis taught the world one thing: The danger of nuclear waste is just as serious as having nuclear reactors in operation. Two years after the disaster in Japan, Taiwanese should not only insist that construction of the Fourth Nuclear Power Plant be halted, but that the government should face up to the fact that it is incapable of handling nuclear waste and seriously think about how to solve this intractable problem. The nation needs to come up with concrete and feasible policies for nuclear waste as soon as possible.

Environmental impact assessments (EIA) on management policies for radioactive waste are a crucial part of this process. However, the government has been lazy and has overlooked the formulation and assessment of such management policies. In May 2011, the Environmental Protection Administration (EPA) and the Atomic Energy Council (AEC) did not tell concerned civic groups what they were planning to do and secretly held the first-ever task force meeting on the matter.

After learning in November about the clandestine meeting, these groups attended the next meeting, which erupted into a dispute. Surprisingly, no other meetings on the matter were held after that. Does the government think that dealing with nuclear waste is a policy that only involves government officials and that the public should be excluded?

The environmental impact assessment submitted to the EPA by the AEC is riddled with contradictions and misinformation. When this document came out, civic groups identified five major problems. First, it is impossible to process nuclear waste outside of Taiwan, but neither is it feasible to process it within Taiwan because of local geological conditions.

Second, spent fuel rod storage pools have reached their legal capacities, increasing the risks of radioactive accidents.

Third, dry storage facilities are not the answer to the problem of overstoring spent fuel rods in these pools.
Fourth, despite precedents overseas of radioactive matter leaking into groundwater, the EIA failed to address this risk.

And fifth, forcibly storing low-level radioactive waste in less developed remote areas runs counter to the principle of promoting equal development for all regions.

It has been almost a year-and-a-half since the groups raised these five questions, but the AEC has yet to provide an answer, and the EPA has not taken the council to task over this. EIAs for nuclear waste policies are very important, but instead of following up on the matter or offering an answer or response to these groups, the AEC and the EPA have chosen to bury their heads in the sand and pretend the problem with nuclear waste does not exist.

Apart from highlighting how inefficient the government is and how it shirks responsibility, these phenomena are also proof that nuclear waste is an issue that has no solution. Since there is no solution, the only option is to immediately abolish nuclear power and stop the production of more nuclear waste.

The state-run Taiwan Power Co and the AEC often say that nuclear waste is a fact and there is nothing that can be done about it. In doing so, they are treating nuclear waste that has yet to be produced as something that already exists.

Such discourse is tantamount to blackmailing the public and is aimed at making people think they have no choice but to accept only one way of dealing with nuclear waste.

Trying to reduce nuclear waste levels was one out of four of the guiding principles for the management of radioactive waste and this is aimed at lowering output volume. However, the environmental impact statement only mentioned incineration and compression as methods for reducing nuclear waste and completely ignored other, more effective methods.

In its environmental impact statement, the AEC provided numbers on current and projected levels of high-level radioactive waste.

According to these estimates, assuming the nation’s four nuclear power stations were to operate for another 40 years, we have to date already produced approximately 42 percent of the total projected level of radioactive waste.

Viewed from another perspective, it means that if nuclear power were abolished immediately, 60 percent of the projected nuclear waste will never be produced.

Apart from coming up with ways to solve the problem of that 40 percent existing nuclear waste, the public needs to do one even more important thing: Stop operations of the three existing nuclear power plans and halt construction of the fourth. This way the nation could minimize its output volume at the source and stop nuclear waste from being produced ever again.

Translated by Drew Cameron


This article was published in Taipei Times:
http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/editorials/archives/2013/03/20/2003557507/2

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Taipei Times: Environmentalists rally against Tamkang Bridge


Environmentalists rally against Tamkang Bridge

RUINING THE VIEW:Protesters said the proposed Tamkang Bridge would destroy the vaunted Tamsui sunset view that has been ranked as one of the great ‘Eight Views of Taiwan’

Wed, Sep 28, 2011
By Lee I-chia / Staff Reporter
A small number of concerned residents rallied in front of the Environmental Protection Administration (EPA) in Taipei yesterday, calling on the government to clarify the construction plans for Tamkang Bridge (淡江大橋) and include more civic participation in the construction process.
Green Party central executive committee member Wang Chung-ming (王鐘銘) led about 10 people in the rally.
The bridge will span the Tamsui River (淡水河) in New Taipei City (新北市), linking Bali Township (八里) and Tamsui Township.
The project received conditional approval in 1999 from the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) committee, but construction was postponed because of the Tambei Expressway, which did not get approval until June.
The Directorate-General of Highways said the bridge would be convenient for residents, boost economic development and help ease holiday traffic. However, the area has been considered a famous scenic spot and one of the “Eight Views of Taiwan” (台灣八景) for decades. It is feared that the proposed bridge would obstruct the view.
Wang said the plan would ruin the scenery and questioned the procedural legitimacy of separating the bridge construction plan from the expressway construction plan. The government should have a total development plan for the area and evaluate the impact on and benefits to the natural environment, traffic, culture and economy as a whole, rather than individual segments.
“Some people say the sunset could still be seen on the new bridge, but actually the unique part of the sunset in Tamsui is that you can see the landscape of Bali and Tamsui on both sides of the river mouth, with the sun setting into the ocean,” a local resident surnamed Yan (顏) said.
Following the rally, an EIA meeting on the environmental impact analysis for the alterations to the original plan was held at the EPA’s headquarters in the afternoon.
The main alteration was to widen the bridge from 33m to 44m to include two-way light rail tracks, moving a highway ramp 500m south and changes to the interchange design.
During the meeting, two local residents and a representative from an environmental organization said the public hearings lacked civic participation because they were not announced early enough and very few people attended them.
During the discussion, two committee members asked whether the plan required a new EIA evaluation, because the environment and situation may have changed over the past decade. They said widening the bridge was not a minor alteration.
The meeting concluded that the developers must provide additional information, including an impact assessment for nearby nature reserves and riverbanks, impact analyses for different periods during the day, more public input and public hearings and an evaluation of the safety of water activities in the area.

Taipei Times:

Monday, July 11, 2011

Green Party to nominate 10 legislative candidates

Green Party to nominate 10 legislative candidates
http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/taiwan/archives/2011/07/11/2003507950

‘HEAL THE WOUNDED LAND’:Candidates put forward a number of platforms that include calling for the early retirement of nuclear power plants and tree protection

Staff Writer, with CNA

The Green Party Taiwan (GPT) will nominate 10 candidates for the district legislators election in January, with the list to be released at the end of the month, spokesman Pan Han-shen (潘翰聲) said on Saturday.
Pan said the GPT had received a 2.2 percent average voting ratio in the electoral constituencies where they had nominees during the five special municipalities elections in November, which was a “great leap forward” from the 0.6 percent the party achieved in 2008.
The party’s voting ratio reached a high of 9.7 percent in Danshui (淡水), New Taipei City (新北市), Pan said, adding that he hoped the party’s voting ratio would exceed the 5 percent benchmark during the election.
According to the Civil Servants Election and Recall Act (公職人員選罷法), political parties who do not garner at least 5 percent of votes for the party will not be eligible to nominate candidates for legislator-at-large seats.
Pan also said he would run for legislator in Taipei’s 7th electoral constituency against Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) nominee Alex Fai (費鴻泰) to safeguard old trees and government-owned land by pushing for a motion to have a second municipal forest park -created in lieu of the Taipei Dome.
The long-stalled Taipei Dome build-operate-transfer (BOT) project began in 2006 when the city government signed a contract with Farglory to construct a 40,000-seat indoor stadium complex with commercial facilities at the abandoned Songshan Tobacco Factory site.
Pan said GPT central executive committee member Wang Chung-ming (王鐘銘) would run for the 1st constituency in New Taipei City against KMT Legislator Wu Yu-sheng (吳育昇) and Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) Legislator Ho Po-wen (何博文) on a platform proposing the early retirement of the First and Second Nuclear Power Plants as well as more careful development of Danhai New Town (淡海新市鎮).
GPT member Lin Chen-yang (林震洋) will run for the 3rd constituency in Greater Kaohsiung against the KMT’s Huang Chao-shun (黃昭順) and the DPP’s Lin Ying-jung (林瑩蓉) advocating that the government keep its promise to shut down the Fifth Naphtha Cracker Plant “to heal the wounded land,” Pan said.
Pan also said that Tsai Shan-wen (蔡善雯), a participant in the National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts dispatch worker protest, would run in the 4th constituency of Greater Taichung against KMT nominee Tsai Chin-lung (蔡錦隆) and DPP nominee Chang Liao Wan-chien (張廖萬堅).
“We are currently trying to persuade former Changhua County Environmental Protection Union chief Lin Shih-hsien (林世賢) to run in the 2nd constituency in -Changhua County against the KMT’s Lin Tsang-min (林滄敏) to ensure the implementation of the anti-Kuokuang Petrochemical Park efforts,” Pan said.
The petrochemical park was initially scheduled for construction at the Dacheng Wetlands (大城濕地) in Changhua County and was expected to expand oil refining capacity and the production of chemicals such as ethylene.
However, the project was called off when President Ma Ying-jeou (馬英九) expressed his opposition amid growing protests from environmentalists and local residents.
Pan said the GPT would field candidates in the northeastern part of Taipei, where the controversial Fourth Nuclear Power Plant is being built, as well as the Sijhih (汐止), Yonghe (永和) and Zhonghe (中和) constituencies, where there have been many issues involving tree protection recently.
The GPT will also seek to have candidates in Hualien and Taitung in response to what has been described as improper BOT operations by corporations over the transfer of government-owned land and the building of nuclear waste dumps on Aboriginal land.
Translated by Jake Chung, Staff Writer

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Resolutions of Asia-Pacific Queer Greens

Resolutions of Asia-Pacific Queer Greens
Taipei, May 2nd, 2010

As mentioned in Charter of the Global Greens adopted in Canberra in 2001, “Respect for Diversity” is one of the principles of the Global Greens. Thus, defending the right of all persons with all kinds of sexual orientation and gender identity, without discrimination, should be regarded as an important mission for greens.

In Asia-Pacific area, queer people, which include but not limited to lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people, have different difficulties and issues in each country. In some countries, queer people have adverse discrimination in unemployment, housing, and delimiting queer lives.

On the other hand, there are minority queer groups such as disabled, elderly, teenagers, and those part of lower social-class. However, they have been ignored for a long time so their situations are not well-known and their needs are not satisfied.

During the 2nd Asia-Pacific Greens Network Meeting, Queer Greens and Greens who care about queer issues gathered together and discussed resolutions for problems which queer people are facing and will encounter in the future. There has been exchanges of thoughts and opinions, and has finalized conclusions.

The Resolutions of Asia-Pacific Queer Greens:
  1. Integrating queer groups and individuals in different countries in the Asia-Pacific area of different issues to do continuous and constant coordination.
  2. Giving a voice to queer people, especially the minority queers.
  3. Encouraging queer people to get involved in political affairs and become a queer politicians.
  4. Pushing an international convention to defend the right of all persons with all kinds of sexual orientation and gender identity Asia-Pacific area.