Extinction Rebellion blockade refinery
Extinction Rebellion Scotl and activists have l ocked themselves to boats parked at a chemical plant to block access to the country’s “biggest polluter.”
The protesters were demonstrating at Ineos in Grangemouth after claiming the company requested a £ 500m bailout due to losses during the coronavirus.
They t i e d t hemselves t o boats blocking access to the chemical manufacturer at t he Bo’ness Road gate and on Inchyra Road, outside the company’s main office.
Activists were pictured carrying banners and signs saying “the future you fear is already here” and “government funded ecocide" from about 7am yesterday morning.
Annie Lane, 26, a campaigner from Glasgow, said: “Ineos Grangemouth is Scotland’s largest climate polluter. It is Scotland’s only crude oil refinery.
“It also stores fracked gas f rom t he States. Given t he widely assumed ‘ ban’ on fracking in Scotland, for fracked gas which harms communities worldwide to still be processed here is outrageously hypocritical.
“We are here to expose the climate destruction that Ineos is causing. We are running out of time, with the climate crisis affecting so many in the global south already.” Mark, 46, a care worker from Glasgow, said: “I'm here today as an everyday citizen with Extinct i on Rebellion S cotland t o highlight the fact that Ineos are Scotland's single biggest polluter driving climate change." Controversial fracked gas is imported from the U. S. to be turned into plastics here at Grangemouth, and I ne - os recently requested a £ 500 million bailout due to losses they claim Covid restrictions caused."
In May this year, The Times reported Ineos called for an emergency government fund of up to £ 500m in light of the coronavirus pandemic and the subsequent slump in oil prices. A demonstration will also be taking place today outside the Ineos headquarters in London. Meg Peyton Jones, from Edinburgh, added: “We’re ten years on from Scotland’s first Climate Act, and yet plants such as Grangemouth are still being expanded.
"We cannot trust big oil corporations t o prioritise t he planet and the long term wellbeing of either their workers or the general population above squeezing every last drop of oil and gas out of the North Sea, no matter how much they try to distract us with greenwash about renewables.
“The government, big oil and big finance companies have outwardly promised for decades to reduce our destruction of the climate, whilst continu
ing to profit from it”
A spokeswoman from Ineos said: “Ineos respects the right to peacefully protest in a responsible and safe manner, but notes that over the
ten years between 2009 and 2019, CO2 emissions f r om t h e I n e o s G r a n g e mo u t h site have reduced by 37 per cent and f r om t he chemicals business by 43 per cent.
Ineos products are used i n a wide r a nge of e s s e nt i a l items, currently protecting front line healthcare professionals and their patients.”