Maandamano Ufaransa kupinga kampuni ya Total kujenga bomba la mafuta la Uganda na Tanzania

Maandamano Ufaransa kupinga kampuni ya Total kujenga bomba la mafuta la Uganda na Tanzania

RT ni television ya Urusi! Urusi ndio anategemewa Ulaya kuzalisha na kusambaza mafuta! Ujenzi wa Bomba la mafuta ni pigo kwa Urusi maana dominance yake kwenye suala la Mafuta itashuka sana!

No wonder anaipa airtime sana hiyo habari!

Kiuchumi Bomba la mafuta ni breakthrough kwa Uganda na Tanzania kiuchumi. Ila ni a big blow kwa Urusi.

Ndo maana mkiambiwa msimtetee Urusi kwa ujinga anaofanya Ukraine muwe mnaelewa. Mrusi ni mnyama sana
Ulipoharibu ni Aya ya mwisho
 
Kumbe sisi bado hatujajua umuhimu wa kutunza mazingira yetu badala yake mabeberu ndio wanaujua umuhimu.

Au ni wivu kwa sisi kuja kunufaika na ajira zitakazomwagwa kwenye huo ujenzi...
Watu wa nyayo Hawa waanaona wivu
 
Wote wnaoendesha huu mradi wanahitaji masikio ya kimagufuli.

Hakuna cha kumsikiliza yeyote baada ya maamuzi ya kuujenga mradi.
 
Wanafunzi na wanaharakati wengine wa maeneo mbalimbali mjini Paris wameandamana kupinga kampuni ya kifaransa ya Total kujenga bomba la mafuta kutoka Uganda hadi Tanga, Tanzania.

Wanafunzi hao na wanaharakati wa mazingira wanaitaka serikali ya Ufaransa kuizuia kampuni ya Total kujenga mradi huo wa bomba kwa kigezo cha uharibufu wa mazingira.

Students all around Paris, France are denouncing politiciansโ€™ indifference to climate issues. In particular, theyโ€™re highlighting plans to build a pipeline between Tanzania and Uganda as part of Totalโ€™s EACOP project.
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#StopEACOP: Uganda and Tanzania in the battle against oil giants

How a huge new pipeline is set to perpetuate neocolonialism in East Africa

The East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) in Uganda and Tanzania is a major environmental threat to some of the most delicate ecosystems in the world. The project is being developed by French oil giant Total and the Chinese National Offshore Oil Company (CNOOC). At 1,445 kilometres (900 miles), it will be the longest heated oil pipeline in the world and emit more CO2 than all of Uganda and Tanzania combined โ€“ which will undeniably come with catastrophic consequences.

The threat of fossil fuel investment in East Africa

I became involved with the Stop EACOP campaign when I met Omar Elmawi, one of its coordinators, through my work with Stop Cambo at COP26. He had come all the way from Kenya to spread the word about what was happening in East Africa and to demand climate justice.

At the gates to the conference, he held a powerful speech stressing that there must be an end to the use of fossil fuels in a world with climate change โ€“ โ€œnot here, not anywhereโ€. Since then, the two campaigns have partnered to highlight that the fight against fossil fuels is a global one.

Recently, the governments of Uganda and Tanzania, alongside the main stakeholders Total and CNOOC, announced the final investment decision for EACOP. It was met with a statement signed by fifty NGOs from Uganda and DRC, urging governments to invest in green industries instead of fossil fuels.

Room for manoeuvre

Speaking to Omar about the recent announcement, he says: โ€œItโ€™s definitely a milestone for the project. 40% of the financing is supposed to come from equity and around 60% from outside loans. Currently, the government has said they are serious about proceeding โ€“ but they didnโ€™t disclose whether theyโ€™ve secured all the funding they need to go ahead with it. We think itโ€™s unlikely; the announcement seemed more like a way to bring publicity to the project, make financiers interested. But it also means that itโ€™s now at that critical juncture where we have to escalate our organising to try and stop EACOP.โ€

Iโ€™m surprised by his take, as many media outlets portrayed the recent developments as if the pipeline was now definitely going ahead. So itโ€™s still up in the air, I ask?

โ€œExactlyโ€, says Omar, โ€œand recently, four of the five biggest banks in South Africa have committed to not invest in EACOP. Around the same time, Total announced the biggest profits ever seen by a company in France (around โ‚ฌ13 billion). Itโ€™s interesting to look at the discrepancy between their profits and how the countries they operate in are faring.โ€

What threats does EACOP pose?

This brings us to the crux of why EACOP is so problematic. Much of the project will be financed with loans, while Total will cash in most of the profits. There is a real danger that Uganda and Tanzania could actually end up with more debt than they had before. I ask Omar whether he agrees with the many campaigners who accuse Total of perpetuating neocolonialism in East Africa with its extractive ventures.

โ€œYeah, thatโ€™s definitely true. Just look at how the deal is structured: Total and CNOOC have 70% ownership of the project. The governments of Uganda and Tanzania have 15% each. Those who profit the most take the least risks, because itโ€™s the people of Uganda and Tanzania that are exposed to all the impacts. If there are any health impacts and people need to go to the hospital, or if thereโ€™s an oil spill in the Lake Victoria region โ€“ itโ€™s not Total who will bear those costs.โ€

No accountability for exploitation
Iโ€™m in disbelief. So they donโ€™t even have to pay for cleaning up oil spills?

โ€œThereโ€™s no law covering this. Theyโ€™ve even passed new laws to give Total a tax holiday for 10 years. The project spans 20 years, so for half of it they wonโ€™t be paying any VAT or corporate income tax โ€“ and in that time they can extract as much oil as they want. Some of those laws are even infringing on constitutional environmental safeguards. Theyโ€™re passing a law which enables corporations to extract those resources without taking any responsibility once theyโ€™re done. Itโ€™s a huge problem. Theyโ€™re selling it as a โ€œgame changerโ€ for Uganda and Tanzania โ€“ but itโ€™s more of a game changer for Total. And they will just continue to make more and more profit.โ€

Concerns of the local community
There are a number of concerns surrounding the project, and not just from environmentalists.

Uganda is already experiencing the effects of climate chaos โ€“ such as floods, droughts, and crop failures โ€“ and it is probably already too late for an oil boom, given that the majority of the global economy has committed to decarbonisation. There is a real risk of stranded assets โ€“ economic devaluation due to a fall in demand โ€“ as the world moves away from fossil fuels.

But the real threat comes from the pipeline itself: running through multiple protected wildlife habitats and along Lake Victoria (Africaโ€™s largest lake), the risk of oil spills cannot be understated. The project has already led to land grabs from local communities in Uganda, and tens of thousands could be displaced to make space for infrastructure, roads, and a new airport. Those displaced are being sent to temporary housing, where they are suffering from cramped conditions and human rights violations.

Itโ€™s not just environmental: the social impact of EACOP
On the social effects of the pipeline, Omar comments: โ€œItโ€™s a really, really long pipeline. Itโ€™s going to affect people significantly, especially those who live on the land. Some of them have already been displaced. Theyโ€™re losing their homes and livelihoods, because a big percentage depend on the land for farming. Seven out of ten people in Uganda are employed in the agriculture sector, so it could affect 70% of the local working population. More than a third of EACOP will be located within the Lake Victoria water basin, which is a source of freshwater and food for more than 50 million people โ€“ with no alternative. If an oil spill happens, those communities will be affected the most.โ€

He continues, โ€œThereโ€™s also been issues around security. The government has been aggressive in pushing through this project. Anyone speaking up against it could find themselves being arrested. Weโ€™ve seen organisations being threatened to have their licences deregistered. And thereโ€™s many other examples.โ€

But despite constant intimidation and threats, the campaign is going strong. โ€œOur messaging is now focusing on who will be the biggest winners if EACOP goes through, and who will be the biggest losers,โ€ Omar explains. โ€œWe are also targeting banks because this project is expensive. The current participants cannot foot the bill โ€“ they need lending. So weโ€™re pushing them to commit to not investing in EACOP. So far, itโ€™s working: 15 of the 27 banks weโ€™ve approached have confirmed that they wonโ€™t be proceeding with the project. And therefore we have hope that thereโ€™s still a chance of stopping it. We are also targeting financial advisors and insurance companies, questioning their climate leadership.

Solidarity and the need for international awareness

But most importantly, weโ€™re trying to escalate this issue on international platforms. Hopefully more and more people will see the wrongdoing thatโ€™s being perpetrated in Uganda and Tanzania in the name of โ€˜developmentโ€™.โ€

Stop EACOP has huge international support; French and Ugandan NGOs have taken Total to court over its human rights violations last year. The case was dismissed, but the groups are appealing โ€“ with the hope that the oil giant will be forced to take responsibility for its actions.

In the meantime, there are lots of ways we can help remotely: โ€œPeople can pray for us, but they can also take actionโ€, Omar says. โ€œYou can donate to support our community partners in Uganda and Tanzania, so theyโ€™re able to be consistent with the work that needs to be done. You could sign our petition pushing stakeholders to drop the project, which has around 1 million signatures so far. On our website, you can send an email to the banks and insurance companies weโ€™ve been targeting.

People can also help by following our Twitter and Instagram pages and sharing our message. You can take a photo with a โ€˜Stop EACOPโ€™ sign and tag us. We want to show that this campaign is not just a few people who are opposed to development, but a global campaign thatโ€™s being driven by communities. Because itโ€™s an injustice to all life.โ€

When asking whether Omar has a message to people reading this article, he stresses: โ€œWe should not be looking at fossil fuels as a vacuum, without considering the bigger picture. People should be just as concerned about fossil fuel projects in Uganda as those in their own backyard. People in the UK, for example, should be just as bothered about EACOP as they are about the Cambo oil field. We need to build an understanding that we must fight all fossil fuel projects โ€“ not just in our own countries, but around the world. Once we are able to do this, then we can claim that we are genuinely taking climate action.โ€


Hawa watoto manina kabisa, tena ungese wao wabaki nao hukohuko
 
Duuh makubwa haya, kwamba wana uchungu sana na Tanzania au Nini? Hii EACOP itaathiri vipi Mazingira? Na je athari hiyo itaigusa France?
Chochote kitakacho tokea kutokana na mradi huo UG na TZ ndio waathirika zaidi
 
Wanafunzi na wanaharakati wengine wa maeneo mbalimbali mjini Paris wameandamana kupinga kampuni ya kifaransa ya Total kujenga bomba la mafuta kutoka Uganda hadi Tanga, Tanzania.

Wanafunzi hao na wanaharakati wa mazingira wanaitaka serikali ya Ufaransa kuizuia kampuni ya Total kujenga mradi huo wa bomba kwa kigezo cha uharibufu wa mazingira.

Students all around Paris, France are denouncing politiciansโ€™ indifference to climate issues. In particular, theyโ€™re highlighting plans to build a pipeline between Tanzania and Uganda as part of Totalโ€™s EACOP project.
View attachment 2165648
View attachment 2165647


=====

#StopEACOP: Uganda and Tanzania in the battle against oil giants

How a huge new pipeline is set to perpetuate neocolonialism in East Africa

The East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) in Uganda and Tanzania is a major environmental threat to some of the most delicate ecosystems in the world. The project is being developed by French oil giant Total and the Chinese National Offshore Oil Company (CNOOC). At 1,445 kilometres (900 miles), it will be the longest heated oil pipeline in the world and emit more CO2 than all of Uganda and Tanzania combined โ€“ which will undeniably come with catastrophic consequences.

The threat of fossil fuel investment in East Africa

I became involved with the Stop EACOP campaign when I met Omar Elmawi, one of its coordinators, through my work with Stop Cambo at COP26. He had come all the way from Kenya to spread the word about what was happening in East Africa and to demand climate justice.

At the gates to the conference, he held a powerful speech stressing that there must be an end to the use of fossil fuels in a world with climate change โ€“ โ€œnot here, not anywhereโ€. Since then, the two campaigns have partnered to highlight that the fight against fossil fuels is a global one.

Recently, the governments of Uganda and Tanzania, alongside the main stakeholders Total and CNOOC, announced the final investment decision for EACOP. It was met with a statement signed by fifty NGOs from Uganda and DRC, urging governments to invest in green industries instead of fossil fuels.

Room for manoeuvre

Speaking to Omar about the recent announcement, he says: โ€œItโ€™s definitely a milestone for the project. 40% of the financing is supposed to come from equity and around 60% from outside loans. Currently, the government has said they are serious about proceeding โ€“ but they didnโ€™t disclose whether theyโ€™ve secured all the funding they need to go ahead with it. We think itโ€™s unlikely; the announcement seemed more like a way to bring publicity to the project, make financiers interested. But it also means that itโ€™s now at that critical juncture where we have to escalate our organising to try and stop EACOP.โ€

Iโ€™m surprised by his take, as many media outlets portrayed the recent developments as if the pipeline was now definitely going ahead. So itโ€™s still up in the air, I ask?

โ€œExactlyโ€, says Omar, โ€œand recently, four of the five biggest banks in South Africa have committed to not invest in EACOP. Around the same time, Total announced the biggest profits ever seen by a company in France (around โ‚ฌ13 billion). Itโ€™s interesting to look at the discrepancy between their profits and how the countries they operate in are faring.โ€

What threats does EACOP pose?

This brings us to the crux of why EACOP is so problematic. Much of the project will be financed with loans, while Total will cash in most of the profits. There is a real danger that Uganda and Tanzania could actually end up with more debt than they had before. I ask Omar whether he agrees with the many campaigners who accuse Total of perpetuating neocolonialism in East Africa with its extractive ventures.

โ€œYeah, thatโ€™s definitely true. Just look at how the deal is structured: Total and CNOOC have 70% ownership of the project. The governments of Uganda and Tanzania have 15% each. Those who profit the most take the least risks, because itโ€™s the people of Uganda and Tanzania that are exposed to all the impacts. If there are any health impacts and people need to go to the hospital, or if thereโ€™s an oil spill in the Lake Victoria region โ€“ itโ€™s not Total who will bear those costs.โ€

No accountability for exploitation
Iโ€™m in disbelief. So they donโ€™t even have to pay for cleaning up oil spills?

โ€œThereโ€™s no law covering this. Theyโ€™ve even passed new laws to give Total a tax holiday for 10 years. The project spans 20 years, so for half of it they wonโ€™t be paying any VAT or corporate income tax โ€“ and in that time they can extract as much oil as they want. Some of those laws are even infringing on constitutional environmental safeguards. Theyโ€™re passing a law which enables corporations to extract those resources without taking any responsibility once theyโ€™re done. Itโ€™s a huge problem. Theyโ€™re selling it as a โ€œgame changerโ€ for Uganda and Tanzania โ€“ but itโ€™s more of a game changer for Total. And they will just continue to make more and more profit.โ€

Concerns of the local community
There are a number of concerns surrounding the project, and not just from environmentalists.

Uganda is already experiencing the effects of climate chaos โ€“ such as floods, droughts, and crop failures โ€“ and it is probably already too late for an oil boom, given that the majority of the global economy has committed to decarbonisation. There is a real risk of stranded assets โ€“ economic devaluation due to a fall in demand โ€“ as the world moves away from fossil fuels.

But the real threat comes from the pipeline itself: running through multiple protected wildlife habitats and along Lake Victoria (Africaโ€™s largest lake), the risk of oil spills cannot be understated. The project has already led to land grabs from local communities in Uganda, and tens of thousands could be displaced to make space for infrastructure, roads, and a new airport. Those displaced are being sent to temporary housing, where they are suffering from cramped conditions and human rights violations.

Itโ€™s not just environmental: the social impact of EACOP
On the social effects of the pipeline, Omar comments: โ€œItโ€™s a really, really long pipeline. Itโ€™s going to affect people significantly, especially those who live on the land. Some of them have already been displaced. Theyโ€™re losing their homes and livelihoods, because a big percentage depend on the land for farming. Seven out of ten people in Uganda are employed in the agriculture sector, so it could affect 70% of the local working population. More than a third of EACOP will be located within the Lake Victoria water basin, which is a source of freshwater and food for more than 50 million people โ€“ with no alternative. If an oil spill happens, those communities will be affected the most.โ€

He continues, โ€œThereโ€™s also been issues around security. The government has been aggressive in pushing through this project. Anyone speaking up against it could find themselves being arrested. Weโ€™ve seen organisations being threatened to have their licences deregistered. And thereโ€™s many other examples.โ€

But despite constant intimidation and threats, the campaign is going strong. โ€œOur messaging is now focusing on who will be the biggest winners if EACOP goes through, and who will be the biggest losers,โ€ Omar explains. โ€œWe are also targeting banks because this project is expensive. The current participants cannot foot the bill โ€“ they need lending. So weโ€™re pushing them to commit to not investing in EACOP. So far, itโ€™s working: 15 of the 27 banks weโ€™ve approached have confirmed that they wonโ€™t be proceeding with the project. And therefore we have hope that thereโ€™s still a chance of stopping it. We are also targeting financial advisors and insurance companies, questioning their climate leadership.

Solidarity and the need for international awareness

But most importantly, weโ€™re trying to escalate this issue on international platforms. Hopefully more and more people will see the wrongdoing thatโ€™s being perpetrated in Uganda and Tanzania in the name of โ€˜developmentโ€™.โ€

Stop EACOP has huge international support; French and Ugandan NGOs have taken Total to court over its human rights violations last year. The case was dismissed, but the groups are appealing โ€“ with the hope that the oil giant will be forced to take responsibility for its actions.

In the meantime, there are lots of ways we can help remotely: โ€œPeople can pray for us, but they can also take actionโ€, Omar says. โ€œYou can donate to support our community partners in Uganda and Tanzania, so theyโ€™re able to be consistent with the work that needs to be done. You could sign our petition pushing stakeholders to drop the project, which has around 1 million signatures so far. On our website, you can send an email to the banks and insurance companies weโ€™ve been targeting.

People can also help by following our Twitter and Instagram pages and sharing our message. You can take a photo with a โ€˜Stop EACOPโ€™ sign and tag us. We want to show that this campaign is not just a few people who are opposed to development, but a global campaign thatโ€™s being driven by communities. Because itโ€™s an injustice to all life.โ€

When asking whether Omar has a message to people reading this article, he stresses: โ€œWe should not be looking at fossil fuels as a vacuum, without considering the bigger picture. People should be just as concerned about fossil fuel projects in Uganda as those in their own backyard. People in the UK, for example, should be just as bothered about EACOP as they are about the Cambo oil field. We need to build an understanding that we must fight all fossil fuel projects โ€“ not just in our own countries, but around the world. Once we are able to do this, then we can claim that we are genuinely taking climate action.โ€


Ebu ninyi acheni ujinga, angalia huyo dada wa Kikenya kajaa wivu hadi kwenye mashavu. Tutajenga bomba na hatutasimama hata dakika moja.
 
Nchi za magharibi zimeendelea kwa kutumia mafuta na makaa ya mawe, leo "wameamka" wanataka sisi tunaotaka kufanya maendeleo kwa kutumia mafuta, gesi na makaa ya mawe kutofanya hivyo ili kuokoa dunia!
 
Vita ya kiuchumi..wao ulaya wametandaza mabomba ya gesi na mafuta.. mbona hawaoni ni uharibifu wa mazingira.. Afrika tunaonewa sana na mabeberu.


#MaendeleoHayanaChama
 
Hao wanatumika, ukute makampuni ya kiarabu yanapiga zengwe, sawa na chuma ya mchuchuma lijamaa linamiliki majichimbo na haliendelezi, kisa linaendesha machimbo mengine, yaani sawa timu ikija juu unaishusha kwa kununua wachezaji wake muhimu, inasambaratika kama Simba SC.
 
Kwa nini hii itokee kipindi hiki samaki na viumbe wengine wa majini wanakufa huko Mara kwa kinachoitwa uchafuzi wa mazingira. Kina nani wameshikia bango kupigia kelele uchafuzi huo? Mzungu hajawa rafiki wa ngozi nyeusi/ Mwafrika kamwe. Wazungu na vibaraka wao watasumbua sana tu.
 
Huyu Omar Elmawi ambaye ndiye muasisi wa kupinga EACOP kwenye COP 26 ni Mkenya? Maana mwandishi anasema ndiye aliyempa habari
 
Huyu Omar Elmawi ambaye ndiye muasisi wa kupinga EACOP kwenye COP 26 ni Mkenya? Maana mwandishi anasema ndiye aliyempa habari
Ni mkenya ndio, na ndiye muasisi wa hiyo movement.

Oia wapo Diana Nabiruma na Bill Mackibenn wanaosimamia huo mchongo๐Ÿ˜€๐Ÿ˜€
 
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