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chibiace t1_ja9z29s wrote

This hurts the message, plus her big green energy backers won't be happy.

−27

Kent_Knifen t1_ja9ztpm wrote

People need to read the last sentence in the title over again.

There is a court order to not build the turbines. Energy company wants to ignore the court order. Thunberg and court are on the same side in this.

180

Firvulag t1_jaa0kzx wrote

This supreme court order was 500 days ago and literally nothing has been done since, an absolute disgrace by the Norwegian government.

90

autotldr t1_jaa0wbr wrote

This is the best tl;dr I could make, original reduced by 74%. (I'm a bot)


> The Swedish environmental activist Greta Thunberg joined Indigenous Sami demonstrators on Monday, blocking the entrance to Norway's Energy Ministry.

> The Sami Indigenous people, who are spread out across mostly parts of Norway, but also Sweden, Finland and Russia, have been herding reindeer for centuries.

> "Indigenous rights, human rights, must go hand-in-hand with climate protection and climate action. That can't happen at the expense of some people. Then it is not climate justice," Thunberg told Reuters news agency outside the ministry's main entrance with other demonstrators.


Extended Summary | FAQ | Feedback | Top keywords: Sami^#1 Ministry^#2 Energy^#3 herding^#4 reindeer^#5

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cryolongman t1_jaa3b56 wrote

tradition shouldn't stand in the way of progress lol. if we would put tradition above of everything few things would get done in any society.

10

Immediate-Attempt-32 t1_jaa40tq wrote

The problem is that the Wind farm is fully developed, the problem for the government is that they have to clean up the mess the last government made (kinda funny nobody mention that detail ) they also have to take inconsideration the economic conditions for both the owner's of the wind park(they stand to lose about 300 million €) and the reindeer herds ( there really isn't an option for the government to let the Samí loose this one). My take on this one is to put the brakes (stopping them) on the wind farm during winter pasture and see what happens as the reindeers apparently don't like the sound of the windmills (after all we do shut down our hydrodynamic power plants when the rivers run low and to allow more water in the rivers so the ecosystem aren't hindered.

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Kent_Knifen t1_jaa4dmb wrote

People hear tradition and think it's a hobby or something. It is not.

This is a way of life for the Sami people. They rely on reindeer herding as a matter of survival. The energy company wants to take land from an ethnic minority group to further their own profits.

The path to progress should not be laid with the blood of indigenous minorities.

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nerbovig t1_jaa4ehx wrote

You can work within the limits of tradition to accomplish things. There wouldn't be a thing as culture if you eliminated every aspect of a society that didn't optimize productivity...

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stripy1979 t1_jaa8eqx wrote

It's okay to be principled on human rights but solving climate emergency is not just about picking who wins. There are people who are going to lose and that has to be accepted.

We can't as a world say we won't do this because it will hurt this group or that group, or Mr Smith...

It's all very complicated and decisions like this just highlight the tragedy of the situation

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Hikury t1_jaa9xx3 wrote

I think the compromise between tradition and environmental stewardship lies on the other side of this specific issue. and that you can pay adequate respect to the past while also allowing wind farms to operate in contravention of some elders sensibilities

4

beaverbait t1_jaaap17 wrote

Easy solution!

Have the energy corporation pay 150-200M euros to the reindeer folk to buy a nice plot of territory for them and buy some luxury barns as well. The wind farm comes out with half the cost of a worst case and the reindeer are filthy rich. Win-win.

−18

ClimateCare7676 t1_jaabuop wrote

Reindeer might play a role in the ecology of the region at this point, like bisons in the US prior to colonisation, who were both the source of food for the Indigenous communities and the essential part of the local environment. Preserving biodiversity, local species and the environment are as crucial for mitigating climate change and carbon capture as finding clean energy sources. Reindeer might be helping that - by moving the soil, proving natural fertilizer, transporting seeds, etc, and their role in the ecosystem needs to be researched and be accounted for. Indigenous peoples generally have better understanding of the role of the animals in their local ecosystem because they historically depend on this ecosystem being healthy for survival.

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ClimateCare7676 t1_jaadpn3 wrote

I think we face more ethical problems when it comes to who is losing and winning. Sometimes companies and govs make decisions that are the cheapest or the most profitable, even if they aren't that beneficial or ethical. They also tend to put the interests of the rich above the wellbeing of the least responsible and the most vulnerable communities.

Even the seemingly great things can have different value. Like, for example, "planting trees" can be done through planting quick-growing foreign monocultures in the Indigenous land. Or it can be done through replacing rich man's golf courts or dried up agricultural land with diverse local ecosystems and native plants. These things have different value and impact, but they can be presented as equal. Imo, it's important to consider that those are actually good options, and not the rich getting richer from patching up the problem instead of fixing it.

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Redneckmoans t1_jaah29z wrote

The reindeer are free roaming. There are no barns. The closest you get is some fenced areas they will herd the reindeer in during slaughter season.

Edit: They can use those million Euros to get rid of their wind turbine junk

17

exerciseforweak1000 t1_jaajnbb wrote

Always taking advantage of democratic government in order to gain attention

Will never see her dare to go to China or Russia to protest

−4

90swasbest t1_jaajon4 wrote

Preserve to kill.

Only humans would come up with something that stupid.

2

Redneckmoans t1_jaav7ui wrote

The content were doing just fine before she got involved. My impression is that she is being brought in to discredit the cause. It is definitely working. Here we are, discussing her instead of these awful wind turbines. Guilty as charged.

1

bigassbiddy t1_jaavhzk wrote

So an indigenous tribe’s right to herd reindeer is more important than averting a climate crisis? This just shows it was never about solving climate change, but being politically correct.

If an indigenous tribe wanted to burn coal all day, should we respect that and not build green energy on their land? Absolutely ridiculous.

−4

JustVGames t1_jaavmgv wrote

Why didn’t Greta go to East Palestine ?

−2

NobodyStriking t1_jaaxgzd wrote

Yup. Wait until she sees what Gov Murphy is doing to whales off the coast of NJ. It’s a fucking nightmare

2

trivertx t1_jaayly5 wrote

So you want green energy but not where it’s most efficient?

3

DWS223 t1_jab3p85 wrote

I mean this is silly. Don’t burn fossil fuels for energy (they pollute), don’t use nuclear reactors (they melt down), and don’t build renewable power (it shuffles deck blocks animal migrations).

At some point environmental activists aren’t helping the environment they’re just obstructing progress.

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MrInfected2 t1_jab7j2z wrote

>free roaming reindeers should have been corected to barn deers. no more payout for loss from goverment, cause its crazy, ourund here they feed the deers on the traintraks! insane but true

−3

scavenjo t1_jabf9nb wrote

The Sami people might possibly rank last with almost all other indigenous groups as the least responsible for the climate catastrophe. They have the least contribution to and enjoyed the least benefit from humanity's use of fossil fuels. If there was any justice in this world those wind turbines would have been built on top of the mansions of oil CEOs and shareholders. But I'm a realist so I realise that it is silly to force oil tycoons to give up their massive mansions and wealth and that it is silly not to force the sami to give up protecting their lands and livelihood so that the rest of us can continue to exist.

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SirionAUT t1_jabkpyc wrote

I can't wait for more urban nimbys to realize they just need to use hunting animals as an excuse >_>

0

Elliott2 t1_jabkthu wrote

Lol imagine killing your movement by not letting any progress to get through

2

Arkeolog t1_jabnxk8 wrote

I mean… it’s more complicated than that. Very few Sami people today are reindeer herders, and even fewer have it as their main occupation. I’m more familiar with the situation in Sweden than Norway, but here only about 100 herders (out of 4,600 people who own reindeer) have enough reindeer to live on. Economically the practice is heavily subsidized by the government (about 40-50 % of revenue come from compensation for predator kills and prize subsidies). Yet 30-50 % of all of Sweden is reindeer herding territory. Which means that almost any land use in half of the country run into these conflicts. Wind turbines, mines, roads, hunting, fishing - you name it.

Also, there are conflicts within the Sami over reindeer herding. You have to be a member of a “Sameby” to herd reindeer, and the “samebyar” has been accused by other Sami people to be discriminatory as the members decide who gets to be members, so it becomes a insider/outsider issue where Sami people who for some reason didn’t become members when they were formed are excluded despite having well documented Sami heritage.

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fourpuns t1_jabqyf0 wrote

How many people is “6 families”?

They raise reindeer for food and that’s lame reindeer aren’t returning to their ancestral herding area due to windmills but also 6 families Vs enough energy for 100,000 peoples homes.

Green energy is one of the things o feel like should be pushed ahead of most things and here it certainly feels like a cash buyout of some sort makes sense.

4

chillguin t1_jac4vzj wrote

>they have to clean up the mess the last government made (kinda funny nobody mention that detail

The concession to build the park was given in 2010 by NVE. This was during the Stoltenberg goverment(Workersparty/Arbeiderpartiet). So blaming the whole "mess" on "the last goverment" is incorrect. Under the Solberg goverments(Right/Høyre); Building started in 2015 and the park was fully operational in 2020.

The courts came to the verdict 11th of october 2021. The Støre goverment(Workersparty/Arbeiderpartiet) went into power 14th of october 2021. Doubt the Solberg had time to fix anything in the 3 days before transition of power.

So the current goverment is stuck cleaning up the mess made by their own political party in 2010. Not "The last goverment".

"Norgesvassdrags-og energidirektorat(NVE)ga i firevedtak av 7.juni 2010 konsesjon tilfølgendevindkraftanlegg på Fosen". Translated - Norwegian water and energy directorate gave the concession in june 7th 2010.

https://www.regjeringen.no/globalassets/upload/oed/pdf_filer_2/fosen/vindkraft_og_kraftledninger_pa_fosen_klagesak.pdf

Verdict:

https://www.domstol.no/no/hoyesterett/avgjorelser/2021/hoyesterett-sivil/hr-2021-1975-s/

8

djokov t1_jac5006 wrote

No, they can’t. The smaller their available terrain, the more likely disease outbreaks become. Worst case is that entire herds must be put down to stop the spread of disease. This is already an issue for the South Sámi herds which are operating in narrow corridors of nature that are being suffocated by infrastructure.

The reason why Greta and Norwegian environmentalists are against this is because it represents the exact type of careless mentality towards nature which has caused the global climate crisis in the first place.

4

Ants_r_us t1_jac6vkm wrote

Wouldn't it be cheaper to just compensate them with a 100 million or something rather than dismantle the whole park?

−4

SpaceTabs t1_jac8svs wrote

Environmental review is supposed to occur before construction. Obviously very few occurrences where governments go back and change this. This stopped being about the environment when the price tag came in. If Norway was serious about eating €300 million to compensate the owners they should vote on it, pay for it, and move on.

5

irk5nil t1_jacb1v2 wrote

> wind turbines put a bunch of micro and nano plastic

Say what? Any plastic in wind turbines is just pee in the ocean compared to the rest. Like, we're talking less than 1%. How about we get rid of nondegradable packaging materials first?

3

Pitch_Queasy t1_jacsrgl wrote

I was born and raised in the area where theese windmills are. The 18 years of me living in that are i have never seen a single sami person, and at worst maybe a couple reindeer. The windmills are closer to the coast, and the thing they are complaining about is that some reindeer might occasionally wander close to that area. But of all the people in Oslo having a protest. Not a single one of them is from that area. My view on the matter is that im pro windmill, im pro progression of the norwegian infrastructure and renewable energy. Norway is going through a energy price crisis because the government decided to sell more energy to neighbouring countries. But that part of norway and further north still has relatively cheap power because it is not connected to the same powerlines as south norway, and most of the power generated is from wind and water.

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KpcAu t1_jad1uz1 wrote

I know you're joking but "indigenous people should pay for land they've always been on, and give up their lifestyle for the sake of non-indigenous people's convenience" has resulted in too much real-life genocide behind it to be funny

Edit: Read it wrong, haven't had my coffee yet, crossed out the incorrect part

0

KpcAu t1_jad4pji wrote

I've thought about this problem for a while. If x doesn't work and y doesn't work and z doesn't work, what's left?

I think it's because the problems started earlier, and go deeper, than western industrialized society.

1

beaverbait t1_jad5dit wrote

That's not at all what I even joked about. I said the shitty company should pay them 150-200m if they are going to go against court rulings and build there anyway. Which would give them the option of moving and buying expensive properties which may be better than this will be, since they'll likely be forced out.

Again, I was joking but the joke wasn't that they should move and pay for their land but that they should be paid for it if it's being taken and not given back.

It's a ridiculous situation to have in 2023, but sadly not surprising.

1

FoxHaunting6257 t1_jadz6im wrote

Human rights, such as nut-job environmentalists right to fly around the world to demand everyone else stop flying.

2

LogReal4025 t1_jae6blj wrote

Because unchecked climate change certainly won't affect reindeer herding traditions.

facepalm.gif

We need progress! Also we need to protect tradition!

Fuck.

2