Greenpeace blocks mega soy ship at Dutch port
Greenpeace International
11 May 2022 2 min read
Amsterdam More than 60 activists from all over Europe, volunteering with Greenpeace Netherlands, have blocked a mega-ship arriving in the Netherlands with 60 million kilos of soy from Brazil, to demand a strong new EU anti-deforestation law. Activists blocked the lock gates the 225-meter-long Crimson Ace must pass to access the port of Amsterdam. The Netherlands is the gateway to Europe for the import of products such as palm oil, meat and soy for animal feed, often linked to nature destruction and human rights violations.
Theres a draft EU law on the table that could end Europes complicity in nature destruction, but it is far from being strong enough. Hundreds of ships carrying soy for animal feed, meat, and palm oil come to our ports every year. Europeans might not drive the bulldozers, but through this trade, Europe shares responsibility for clear-cut felling in Borneo and fires in Brazil. We will lift this blockade if Minister van der Wal and other EU ministers publicly announce that they will fix the draft law to protect nature from European consumption, said Andy Palmen, director of Greenpeace Netherlands.
Action in IJmuiden
Volunteers from 16 countries (15 European countries and Brazil) and Indigenous leaders from Brazil are taking part in the peaceful protest at the sea gate in IJmuiden. Climbers are blocking the lock gates and have hung a banner that reads EU: Stop nature destruction now. On the water, activists are sailing dinghies carrying banners in their own languages. Large inflatable cubes are floating on the water in front of the lock gates, carrying the message Protect Nature and the names of more than ten thousand people from six different countries who support the protest. The Indigenous leaders are joining the protest from aboard the Beluga II, Greenpeaces 33-meter-long sailing ship, with a banner between the masts reading EU: Stop nature destruction now.
Alberto Terena, Indigenous Leader of the Terena Peoples Council in the state of Mato Grosso do Sul said: We have been driven from our land and our rivers have been polluted with poison, all to make room for agribusiness expansion. Europe shares responsibility for the destruction of our homes. But this legislation can help to stop future destruction. We call on ministers to seize this opportunity, not only to ensure indigenous peoples rights, but also for the future of the planet. The production of feed for your industrial animals and the beef that is imported should no longer mean our suffering.
More:
https://www.greenpeace.org/international/press-release/53683/greenpeace-blocks-soy-ship-dutch-port/