28/09/2021
Greenpeace and Extinction Rebellion Protest Cornwall Council Offices:
Climate activists from Extinction Rebellion and Greenpeace staged a colourful protest outside the Cornish Council offices to ask gathering politicians about a commitment to net zero emissions made by the previous administration.
The May elections returned a majority Conservative council knocking the previous coalition of Liberal Democrats and Independents out of Cabinet positions. The coalition’s goal of Zero Emissions by 2030 was announced after declaring a Climate Emergency in January 2019. The plans included 8000 hectares of trees and hedges, a “Whole House Retrofit Project” which would see energy efficiency improvements made to council owned housing and the formation of a “Climate Emergency Planning Document” which would aid the council in mitigating Cornwalls role in the Climate Crisis and strengthen green policies for the “Cornwall Local Plan”.
In July this year Liberal Democrat Cllr Andrew George tabled a motion asking for support of the “Climate and Ecological Bill (CEE). The Bill would’ve committed the government to formulate strategies taking action against Climate Change that went above and beyond the “Environment Bill” that was making its way through the House of Lords. Devon County Council had debated and voted to support the CEE paving the way for Cornwall Council to follow suit.
An amendment forwarded by Conservative Cllr Louis Gardner removed support for the bill shifting the focus back onto Cornwalls Conservative MPs and the already in motion Environment Bill. Cllr Edwina Hanniford suggested an amendment that gave support to both the CEE and the Environment Bill. Cllr George accepted this, but even with Cllr Hanniford amendment it was ultimately defeated again, this time by a 39 - 35 majority.
The gathered protestors wanted to raise their collective anxieties about what will happen to the former councils commitments when it comes to the environment. Debacles like the one caused by Cllr Gardner have done little to ease the growing concern about Cornwalls environmental direction. They called for more information about what the council had planned as well as highlighting more specific environmental problems.
During my time there the protest went without any major issues and the gathered Police presence of three officers didn’t intervene at any point. The activists sat close to the roadside entrance to the county hall on grass verges and did not disrupt the busy flow of rush hour traffic passing them. Any photographs that appear to show the activists dangerously close to moving cars will be somewhat an exaggeration caused by long lens compression, both drivers and activists were as safe as possible so far as I saw.