The Rising Tide āPeopleās Blockadeā of the worldās largest coal port at Muloobinba/Newcastle began on November 19.
The protestival is demanding: āNo new coal and gas projects; 78% tax on fossil fuel export profits to fund workersā transition; and end coal exports from Newcastle by 2030ā.
10:30pm, Wednesday November 27
Wednesday at the Canberra Wave was a massive day of action including: āpollie watchā in the morning, a mass rally at midday, a banner drop and attempted flashmob inside parliament, and music and workshops in the afternoon. The 48-hour vigil continues as well.
The rally moved onto the road outside Parliament House where activists were arrested who refused to leave the road. āWe took the channel, we took the street, we will not accept defeat,ā they chanted.
More photos are on the .
The Canberra Wave includes a 48-hour vigil outside the federal Parliament House in Ngunnawal/Canberra.
On November 26, activists spelled out āNo New Coalā and called on Prime Minister Anthony Albanese to act now.
The final days of the Peopleās Blockade will take place in Ngunnawal/Canberra.
The āCanberra Waveā began with a smoking ceremony and Welcome to Country from hosts at the Aboriginal Tent Embassy. Activists also marched up to parliament house and began a 48-hour vigil. A mass rally is planned for the next day.
Day 7 of the Peopleās Blockade is mainly focused on debriefing and strategy discussions. Activists are happy with the success of the weekend actions.
People took time out to express solidarity with the activists in Rotterdam, who stopped a coal train in solidarity with Rising Tide.
showcases some of the voices of participants in the Peopleās Blockade, including Anjali Beames, Zack Schofield, Wendy Bacon, David Shoebridge, Isaac Nellist and many others.
Rising Tide that āPolice have confirmed 138 people arrested for blocking coal ships at the Newcastle coal port; an additional 14 have just been arrested now in a second attempt to stop another coal ship; and 40 people [have been] charged under the NSW governmentās draconian anti-protest lawsā.
The latter charges were made under ās241A (b) seriously disrupt or obstruct persons attempting to use the major facilityā, threatening fines of $22,000 and up to two years in prison.
More than 100 people successfully blocked coal exports from the worldās largest coal port, while thousands more gathered in support on the beach.
āDespite attempts to shut down our peaceful protest, we showed that people power can take on the coal industry,ā Rising Tide .
Hundreds of climate activists have formed a line of kayaks across the entire channel leading into the Port of Newcastle.
Numerous activists are prepared to risk arrest to get their message heard. Already, some activists have been arrested and NSW Police seem to be preparing to arrest more.
Rising Tide activists are preparing to ātake the channelā on the final day of the 50-hour Peopleās Blockade.
See some of the atmosphere from yesterday in :
and were among the on the main stage at the Peopleās Blockade on Saturday.
A memorial was held for Isla Bell on Saturday evening at the western end of Horseshoe Beach. Bell was from Naarm/Melbourne and involved in progressive community activism. She had been missing for several weeks: this week it was announced she had been murdered.
Isla is deeply missed by family and friends, including Rising Tide activists. The memorial remembered a beautiful person, whose life was senselessly cut short.
Chanting āWeāre here, weāre queer, protect the biosphereā and āLGBTQ+A, no coal ships pass todayā, 200 people joined a Pride March at the Rising Tide Peopleās Blockade on November 23.
People brought signs including āQueers for climateā, āNo Pride on a dead planetā and a memorial banner for Dr Ea Mulligan who was at last yearās blockade but died this year.
There was a strong anti-genocide message, including the chants: āWeāre gay, weāre trans, no coal on stolen landā and āNo pride, no pride, no pride in genocideā.
Rising Tide that āRising Tide Activist Peter Schofield was placed under arrest and detained on a Police vessel before being returned to the shore and released without charge.
āPeter said he chose to risk arrest because the government is not listening to the science that clearly says we canāt open new coal and gas projects.
āAs a doctor and research scientist I know that climate change is causing a global public health crisis and I know that many medical professionals are similarly concerned.āā
Rising Tide activists have delayed a coal ship by paddling kayaks into the shipping channel.
The shipping channel has been heavily policed, allowing a number of coal ships to enter and leave the Port of Newcastle to the frustration of activists who want to challenge the coal industry.
A number of activists entered the channel on Saturday afternoon and were towed away by police. At least two were told they were under arrest, but have so far been released without charge. Others made several attempts to enter the channel, but so far no charges have been laid.
Activists believe that the action delayed the passage of a coal ship.
Earlier, the off Horseshoe Beach, something that police had earlier tried to prevent.
Peter Garrett, musician, environmentalist and former Labor minister, said the peopleās blockade is on āright side of historyā.
Performing an acoustic set, he spoke about his experiences of the 2019ā20 Black Summer bushfires.
āWe need to break the nexus between fossil fuels and our economy,ā he said. āFossil fuel companies are the real climate criminals.ā
He also said the AUKUS nuclear submarine deal is a ātravestyā.
Mehreen Faruqi said it was ādisgracefulā that Labor tried to shut down the blockade after approving 28 new coal and gas projects.
MĆ”ori activist Guy said Indigenous sovereignty and right to country are vital for climate justice. āHow dare our treaty come into question,ā he said. āAnd where is treaty in this country?ā
Greens senator Mehreen Faruqi is speaking on the main stage. She congratulated the protesters for taking the important action to combat fossil fuels and she expressed solidarity with Palestine. Peter Garrett will be performing shortly.
Day 5 of the Peopleās Blockade began with a Welcome to Country, Woomera Yarrabah dance performance and a Midnight Dreaming dance performance.
More and more people and organisations are bringing stalls and displays.
For the second time ever, this yearās Peopleās Blockade featured a night flotilla. People took to the water in eight shifts to demonstrate determination to win the Rising Tide demands.
The shifts were smaller this year than last, but this yearās blockade will have night flotillas for two nights in a row.
Safety is a high priority on the night flotilla (as with the Peopleās Blockade as a whole), with people checked in and out from the water.
A midnight karaoke is planned on the beach to support the on-water action.
Filipino and Murrawarri musician Dobby played with Gabriella Spritz on the main stage at the Rising Tide protestival on Friday evening.
There is a full musical program throughout the coming weekend.
There is a , as the on the water of Horseshoe Beach.
Thousands of people have registered to be part of the activities.
Socialist Alliance is one of several groups hosting talks and workshops throughout the Peopleās Blockade, including an Introduction to Ecosocialism workshop. There is an āImperialism and Warā workshop on now.
Rising Tide launched the main (50 hour) flotilla at 11am on November 22.
from Horseshoe Beach to peacefully protest Newcastle coal port.
āweāre here because this port exports coal that creates one per cent of global emissions, while our government keeps approving new coal and gas projectsā.
The group is demanding: āNo new coal and gas projects; 78% tax on fossil fuel export profits to fund workersā transition; and end coal exports from Newcastle by 2030ā.
More photos from the flotilla launch are on the .
This was the scene at the main camp just before people marched down to Horseshoe Beach for the of the 50-hour Peopleās Blockade.
Youth Rising organised a Ā that marched into the main Rising Tide Peopleās Blockade on November 22. Passionate speeches by young people talked about the campaign to rescue the future, rejoiced in Rising Tideās court victory of the previous day and called for climate action.
Phoebe Ulph called on āall the adultsā to āplease do your jobā. She said that people have watched the Port of Newcastle āproudly export 14.2 million tonnes of coal in just one month this year even though you are well aware that we have less than five years left on the climate countdownā.
āIt's your job to protect every young person here today. It is your job to protect everyone in our community.ā
āWe should not be risking our education to educate you,ā she said.
There are more photos from on the .
The over hundreds of people camping at Foreshore Park.
Today, there will be a student strike beginning at Customs House and a launch of the official mass flotilla at 11am.
Rising Tide activists were on the water when the 4pm announcement came through that the movement had won a victory in the Supreme Court.
The Chris Minns government had tried to impose an exclusion zone, which would have prevented people from going onto the beach or into the water in Newcastle Harbour. It was an āunprecedentedā use of the Marine SafetyĀ ActĀ 1998Ā that had ānever been used to shut down a protest beforeā, according to Rising Tideās Zack Schofield.
At 4pm, one hour before the exclusion zone was due to come into effect, the that the Supreme Court declared the exclusion zone invalid.
Hundreds of activists were on the water in a of kayaks, boats, rafts and inflatables.
The camp is abuzz with the victory and people are looking forward to more water action in coming days.
Alexa Stuart from Rising Tide has lodged a legal challenge in the NSW Supreme Court against the protest exclusion zone around Newcastle Harbour.
āThis marine exclusion zone shows that the government is more interested in protecting the interests of coal and gas billionaires, than protecting everyday Australians from dangerous climate change,ā she said in a . āWhen our governments fail us, the people will act.ā
Economist Billy Mitchell was one of the speakers at the Just Transition forum on Wednesday night. He said there could be no climate justice while capitalism exists. He argued that the state can use deficit spending to finance projects instead of relying on the āneoliberal assumptionā that we need to find funding.
Justin Page from the Hunter Jobs Alliance told the forum that it is a problem that the Hunter Transition Authority is not sufficiently resourced. He also argued that its focus on domestic coal power workers at the expense of workers in the coal export industry means there is no framework for supporting workers when a coal mine closes.
Matt Grudnoff from The Australia Institute spoke in support of Rising Tideās demand for a 78% tax on fossil fuel exports.
Leena Sudano, former secretary of nurses and midwives in South Australia, and left-wing environmentalist Abul Nassan Rubel also spoke.
Rising Tide activists have launched an on-water kayak practice in preparation for a flotilla the next day.
Rising Tide spokesperson Alexa Stuart told Ā鶹“«Ć½ that āpeople have gathered, both locals and from all around the country, to make a clear statement that the climate crisis is destroying our future and so the government needs to start actingā.
Todayās action was a practice run. āTomorrow afternoon, weāre planning to have a flotilla because that is why weāre here,ā Stuart said.
āWeāre here because the government is failing and people are angry.ā
The First Nations panel is beginning in āthe Gathering Spaceā, the main marquee and the blockade camp.
10:38am, Wednesday: Day 2 of the Peopleās Blockade
The second day began with a good sense the action is being well organised. Activists areĀ .
On the other hand, NSW Police are systematically looking for excuses to issue traffic or other minor infringements to camp participants.
Climate activists protested outside the office of NSW transport minister Jo Haylen against Laborās attempts to suppress the action.
Jackson from Rising Tide Sydney told Ā鶹“«Ć½ that Haylenās decision to implement an exclusion zone around Newcastle Harbour was a āshameful actā and a āclear attempt to suppress peaceful protestā.
More than 300 people have joined the action already, in defiance of attempts by NSW Labor to stop it from going ahead. Thousands are expected throughout the week.
Aunty Theresa conducted a smoking ceremony to welcome participants.
Rising Tide organisers recounted attempts by police, Labor and the Port Authority to prevent or restrict the Peopleās Blockade at a briefing session.
Alyssa from Rising Tide told the crowd that it was a āmassive winā that the government felt compelled to go to the Supreme Court to try to prevent the action ābecause it shows that we are becoming extremely threatening and powerfulā.
The City of Newcastle has agreed to give the Peopleās Blockade access to the Foreshore Park.
It will go ahead, with activities planned all week.
[See more photos on the .]