Activists protest at Australia power plant
By James Grubel
CANBERRA (Reuters) - Protesters chained themselves to a coal conveyor at one of Australia's largest power stations on Thursday in a protest against climate policies ahead of a major report on emissions trading.
Greenpeace said the dawn protest by 27 activists at the Eraring Power Station north of Sydney was the latest in an ongoing campaign to reduce Australia's carbon emissions.
Police rescuers cut the chains from 12 protesters to free them from the conveyor belt. A police spokeswoman said 27 people would face a range of trespass charges.
"Renewable energy is the future and it's bright," protester and retired coal miner Graham Brown said in a Greenpeace statement.
The state-owned Eraring Power Station, which has a generating capacity of 2,640 megawatts, said it reduced output as a safety measure during the protest, but did not shut down, and resumed normal output by late morning.
The protest came a day before the Australian government's key adviser on climate change, prominent economist Ross Garnaut, releases a report on carbon trading, which is due to start in Australia in 2010.
His report is expected to recommend a cap-and-trade scheme, to cover as much of Australia's economy as possible, which experts say will make it one of the world's most comprehensive trading regimes.
But another prominent economist and central bank board member Warwick McKibbin on Thursday warned the government to avoid firm targets and timetables for cutting greenhouse gas emissions. Continued...


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