Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 25 – After
anti-trash protests eased in Moscow oblast with the authorities promising that wastes
would be sent further away from the capital, many in the Russian government
comforted themselves with the fact that environmental protests were taking
place mostly far from the megalopolises and thus represented less of a
challenge.
But now, Boris Livanov of the MNews
portal, says, Russian policies are setting the stage for Shiyes-type protests
to re-emerge in Leningrad Oblast, the region around St. Petersburg that many Russians
have long used as a vacation destination (mnews.world/ru/natsionalnaya-ideya-protiv-kolchatoj-nerpy-v-lenoblasti-mozhet-vspyhnut-vtoroj-shies/).
The reason for that conclusion, he
says, lies in the fact that two investors have put ten billion rubles (150
million US dollars) into a project involving the use of a newly expanded port
to export coal, something not approved by the local authorities but included in
the nearly sacred “national plans” of Moscow and thus likely to go ahead
regardless of protests.
Local people and environmental
activists are protesting the purchase in court as a violation of Russian
anti-monopoly laws and calling attention to the impact of coal dust on the
surrounding land and the Gulf of Finland where contamination will kill off many
species of animal life.
The activists have expert assessments
on their side. Oblast level officials claim to have expert assessments showing
something else but have not released them, and they are giving the green light
to the project despite the consequences.
That has infuriated residents of the oblast and the northern capital.
All this clearly shows, the MNews
commentator continues, that “those protesting do not intend to stop and will
seek a ban on construction [of the coal terminals not listed in the original plans]
by all available means.” And they have been encouraged in this by the visit of Greta
Thurnberg to St. Petersburg last month.
Moscow has been trying to quiet the
situation by promising that no final decision on the coal exporting facilities
has been made. But Livanov says it is highly improbable that the two Russian
investors would have put so much money down “if they weren’t certain” that the coal
terminals will be built.
As a result, he concludes, the authorities
are creating the conditions for “a second Shiyes” – and one certain to garner
more attention because it is closer to a major city and has more international
support and one that may become the driver of a new round of environmental
demonstrations as the weather warms up.
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