AGAINST MASS TOURISM, POLLUTION AND CAPITALISM, PIRACY IS NEVER OVER
~ from Contre Attaque ~
On Saturday, September 21, 12 kayaks blocked access to the port of Marseille;
three cruise ships and a ferry were blocked for hours by the flotilla, off the
southern French coast.
Around 7am, the AIDAstella ship had to turn around, as the kayaks had positioned
themselves to prevent it from entering the port. It is a ship with a capacity of
two thousand people. Two other cruise ships, the MSC World Europa, the sixth
largest cruise ship in the world with more than 2,600 cabins, six thousand
passengers, thirteen restaurants and a shopping centre, and the Costa Smeralda,
were also due to dock. The ships had to wait offshore, as did a ferry from
Corsica.
The 21 environmentalists from Extinction Rebellion and the “Stop Cruises”
collective, equipped with life jackets, unfurled banners from their small boats
with the slogans “it smells like gas” and “we are very angry with MSC Cruises”.
All the pirates were unfortunately arrested by the police at the end of the
action.
The engines of such large ships alone can burn up to 250,000 litres of fuel per
day. “These ships burn as much fuel as entire cities. They burn much more energy
than container ships and, even when they burn low-sulphur fuel, it is 100 times
worse than road diesel”, explained one captain in an investigation by the
British newspaper The Guardian on cruise ships. Not to mention the road and
cargo traffic needed to supply such floating cities.
According to a study by the NGO Transport and Environment, cruise ships sailing
in European waters in 2022 will have emitted more than 8 million tonnes of CO2,
the equivalent of 50,000 Paris-New York flights.
On July 6, a squad of 18 kayaks organized by the collectives “Stop Croisières
BZH” and “Extinction Rebellion” implemented a sea barrier to block a cruise ship
Concarneau, in Finistère. The liner, a sea monster measuring 206 meters long and
able to accommodate almost 1,200 people – 700 passengers and 447 crew members –
answering to the name of Seven Seas Voyager, had to cancel its stopover in
Concarneau.
These cruise ships are an integral part of the mass tourism economy, polluting
the air of coastal cities, generating real estate speculation, damaging the
coasts and destroying local ways of life. In 2021, even the very touristy Venice
was forced to ban cruises from its port. The city of Amsterdam followed suit
shortly after.
In 2022, the port of Marseille welcomed 1.5 million cruise passengers and 2.5
million in 2023. In France’s second city, anger is growing against these giants
of the seas that pollute the air for the sole profit of the tourism industry.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Photos: XR and Stop Croisières
The post Marseille: Kayak flotilla blocks cruise ships appeared first on Freedom
News.