PIGLAS PILIPINAS: 10,000
march against coal plants in Batangas, nationwide
PH joins global
wave of actions to “Break Free from Fossil Fuels”
Press Release
May 4, 2016
BATANGAS CITY –
Around 10,000 Filipinos marched here today, five days before the
elections, to demand that the next administration cancel all proposed
coal plants nationwide and hasten a transition to renewable energy.
“We are facing a planetary
emergency. Now more than ever, we need leaders who are pro-people and
pro-environment, not pro-coal and pro-climate change,” said Lipa
Archbishop Ramon Arguelles, who led the march to the Batangas
Provincial Sports Complex.
The anti-coal march
highlighted a national campaign called “Piglas Batangas! Piglas
Pilipinas!” symbolized by the struggle against the proposed
600-megawatt coal plant of JG Summit Holdings in Barangay (Village)
Pinamucan Ibaba, Batangas City. The opposition to the plan is led by
the Lipa Archdiocesan Ministry on Environment, local fisherfolk, and
other concerned citizens.
“Even without the coal
plant, the existing plants of JG Summit are already poisoning our air,
water, and land. The proposed coal plant would only make it harder for
us to breathe, much less fish,” said 27-year-old Reymond Mendoza, a
fisherman from the nearby barangay of Simlong, which also hosts the
Gokongwei family-owned complex. The complex has a petrochemical and
naphtha cracker plant.
The local anti-coal groups
were joined by other coal-affected communities from Quezon and other
parts of the country, as well as people’s movements and civil society
groups from Metro Manila and other provinces in Southern Luzon.
“Piglas is a call for the
incoming president and other new government officials to scrap the
Pinamucan coal plant and the other 26 proposed coal plants currently
in the pipeline. It is also a demand for the phase-out of the 19
existing coal plants nationwide,” explained Ian Rivera, national
coordinator of the Philippine Movement for Climate Justice.
“The next administration
must review the current one’s commitment to reduce 70% of our
country’s emissions by 2030. It must also demand climate finance from
developed countries, as well as mobilize its own resources, so it can
implement a swift and just transition to clean and renewable energy,”
added Ruel Cabile, national coordinator of Aksyon Klima Pilipinas.
The campaign is part of a
worldwide movement and the first in Asia to join “Break Free from
Fossil Fuels 2016”, a global wave of peaceful direct actions across 12
days and six continents. Mass actions are scheduled until May 15 in
other countries including Indonesia, Nigeria, Brazil, the United
States, Germany, and Australia.
“Under the banner of Break
Free, the global climate movement is proclaiming the end of fossil
fuels, challenging governments to concretely respond to the climate
crisis and the urgent need to keep global warming below 1.5⁰C,” said
Lidy Nacpil, coordinator of the Asian Peoples Movement on Debt and
Development and global steering committee member of Break Free.
Other communities will also
be holding solidarity actions in Cebu and Calaca, Batangas, which
hosts the oldest coal plant in the country, among other areas.
“Piglas Batangas, Piglas
Pilipinas is our battlecry for a safe, peaceful, and sustainable
society. Batangas and the rest of the Philippines will not bow to
those who think of nothing but profit instead of people and plunder
instead of protecting the environment. Coal represents darkness, and
Break Free is our source of light, especially for all communities who
are standing up in the face of the fossil fuel industry's relentless
expansion despite climate change and the people's clamor for climate
justice. Today we declare that we will break free from coal,” said
Naderev ‘Yeb’ Saño, executive director of Greenpeace Southeast Asia.