Plus, what the new Labour Government must do to ensure a just transition away from fossil fuels
O N E A R T H
Friends of the Earth Scotland’s Members’ Magazine Issue 93 I Summer 2024
Friends of the Earth Scotland is:
> Scotland’s leading environmental campaigning organisation
> An independent Scottish charity with a network of thousands of supporters and active local groups across Scotland
> Part of the largest grassroots environmental network in the world, uniting over 2 million supporters, 73 national member groups and 5,000 local activist groups
Our vision is of a world where everyone can enjoy a healthy environment and a fair share of the earth’s resources.
Friends of the Earth Scotland is an independent Scottish charity SC003442
What on Earth is published by and copyright to: Friends of the Earth Scotland, 5 Rose Street, Edinburgh EH2 2PR
T: 0131 243 2700
E: info@foe.scot
W: www.foe.scot
Editor: Eilidh Stanners
Design: Emma Quinn
Cover photo: Colin Hattersley
The views expressed in What on Earth are not necessarily those of Friends of the Earth Scotland FoES accepts no liability for errors, omissions or incorrect data in advertisements
If you would prefer to receive a digital version of What on Earth please contact us: info@foe.scot
DIRECTOR’S VIEW
Florence Garabedian, Interim CEO
Welcome to issue 93 of What on Earth, your members’ magazine.
With a new government just voted in, our first Labour government in 14 years, now is an important time to push for change. Westminster retains a significant amount of control and influence over Scottish life, and our newly elected MPs will need to make crucial decisions to make the transition away from fossil fuels fair and fast.
In this magazine, you can read about the three key actions the UK Government needs to take to make sure the energy transition is fair for workers and communities. We need to see them working with the Scottish Government and commit to decisive action. This is a crucial decade for climate action and those now in power will shape how successful we are in limiting the impact of climate breakdown.
We held our AGM in June, and you can read more about that and the other big election of the summer – that of our board members - in this issue too. Thank you so much to those of you who attended. If you missed it, there are summaries of the brilliant exhibition on fighting coal put together by Ric Lander and the workshop held by Kate Whitaker and Alex Lee inside too.
You can also read updates on two of our key campaigns. The Scottish Parliament recently voted to approve the Circular Economy Bill, something we’ve been campaigning on for many years. The fight to stop the new gas-burning power station in Peterhead continues, and action is ramping up and it’s great to see the collective power being built.
If you have any thoughts on the issues in the magazine, we’d love to hear them. You can email info@foe.scot
Many thanks as always for being a member of Friends of the Earth Scotland. None of the work we do would be possible without your support.
In solidarity, Florence
Members elect new board and vote on crucial motion
Alison Ritchie, Head of Operations
Our 2024 AGM was held on Saturday 8 June, with 40 people in attendance in Glasgow. Thanks so much to those of you who made it along or joined online. For those who were unable to attend, here’s an update on what happened.
Our outgoing Chair Mark Ballard began by discussing our work over the last year, including the development of a new three-year strategy focusing on opposing new oil and gas developments, campaigning for transformative solutions, and building a stronger environmental movement. Interim CEO Florence Garabedian followed him and outlined operational changes aiming to improve Friends of the Earth Scotland’s internal culture and install modern, fit-for-purpose systems.
We were delighted by the election of five new board members, and of three current
board members. Coming from a range of backgrounds, they will strengthen and provide a diversity of opinion on our board In the board meeting following the AGM, Robin Aitken was elected as our new Chair, with Catherine Lyons continuing in her role as Treasurer. Ery McPartland, formerly of Young Friends of the Earth Scotland, was elected Secretary.
A motion calling on the Scottish Government to reject the application to build a new gas burning power station and carbon capture plant at Peterhead was unanimously agreed. Opposition to this new power station will be a major campaigning focus for our team over the next year. Building this new fossil fuel infrastructure would prolong our reliance on oil and gas and lock us into the associated climate-changing emissions for decades.
Some of the Friends of the Earth Scotland team
“
...together, we can build a fairer and greener Scotland.”
This project is built on the rotten foundations of carbon capture and storage, which has a long history of expensive failure. We know it won’t deliver.
The motion commits Friends of the Earth Scotland to work to build the broadest possible coalition against the building of a new gas power station at Peterhead. It commits us to mobilise and build support for the rejection of the application put forward by Equinor and SSE, to work for just transition for the workers employed at the Peterhead gas power station, and to take all steps possible to challenge the approval of the application, if Scottish Government so decides
After the AGM, attendees were able to view a display created by our Research and Development Manager, Ric Lander, on the
history of environmental activism against coal in Scotland and the UK, the need for continuing global resistance to the coal industry, and ways in which communities in Scotland have fought for a better future You can read more about this later in the magazine.
Along with thanking everyone who attended and contributed to making the day a success, we would like to take this opportunity to express our gratitude to all our members for your continuing support. It is critical in supporting our work opposing the fossil fuel industry, campaigning for transformative solutions, and building the strong, resilient and interconnected environmental movement that we need. Thank you – together, we can build a fairer and greener Scotland.
The new UK Government must put workers at the heart of the energy transition
Rosie Hampton, Just Transition Campaigner
As the fervour of election season dissipates, all eyes are on the new UK government to see how the first 100 days pan out.
Labour’s manifesto commitment to not grant new oil and gas licenses is imperative if we are going to achieve our legally binding climate targets, backed by science and the International Energy Agency. But we’re yet to see the crucial detail on what the just transition plans are for people who currently work in the industry and communities that are reliant on it, in the North East of Scotland and beyond Proper transition measures are essential for a fast and fair phase out of fossil fuels
Below, we’ve set out the three key actions the new Labour government needs to take to ensure that energy workers are supported throughout the transition away from fossil fuels to renewable energy sources:
1A UK-wide industrial strategy, including substantial investment in domestic manufacturing and skills, expansion of publicly owned energy, and reorganising the tax system for public good.
At the moment, there are simply not enough green jobs available for those who want to make the transition. Much of the manufacturing and fabrication of renewables and oil and gas decommissioning is carried out overseas. Scotland will need 19 significant fabrication sites for offshore wind components (e g blades, nacelles, towers, foundations, floating substructures, cables).
Currently, Scotland has no significant fabrication sites, with only two such sites currently in development, with approved locations and initial funding allocated
Workers are frustrated by the costly training needed to do their existing jobs, which is higher still for workers transitioning into renewable energy Currently offshore workers are often forced to duplicate their existing training in order to transition to renewables, largely out of their own pocket We’ve successfully campaigned for an Offshore Training Passport to standardise training qualifications required to work in offshore oil and renewable energy, but the companies involved have delayed this becoming operational. This has left workers paying the costs of transition training
No one knows the challenges of working in the offshore energy system better than the workers who have been doing it for years We need to see an industrial strategy that gives them a meaningful seat at the table to direct the progress and outcomes of the energy transition, that values their expertise and experience
Expanding sectoral collective bargaining across the energy industry and supply chain.
The weakening of unions in the UK has contributed to an environment where employers are able to impose increasingly untenable and precarious contracts and wages Oil and gas workers are increasingly casualised
While there is no official data on the employment status of workers in the industry, many are self-employed or off-payroll , which requires the worker to pay tax and national insurance as if they were the employer The renewables industry needs to be built on industry-wide collective bargaining agreements covering all workers, putting power back in the hands of rank-and-file workers to organise for better terms and conditions in their vital work
If these roles are more attractive then workers will be more inclined to switch away from fossil fuels.
Image: Peter Iain Campbell
A Jobs Guarantee that ensures every oil and gas worker can find equivalent alternative employment or funded retraining.
As we’ve seen with threatened closures by INEOS at Grangemouth and Tata Steel at Port Talbot, workers and communities cannot rely on private companies to provide good transition pathways for their workforce out of the fossil fuel industry. The government needs to implement a jobs guarantee that supports the conversion of entire supply-chain workforces to service genuinely zero-carbon industries where possible. It should also guarantee at least 90% of workers’ wages while they retrain, as they did with furlough.
Along with expanded collective sectoral bargaining, this stops new jobs in new industries being a race to the bottom with respect to terms and conditions Employers should also be obligated to facilitate workers’ redeployment through training, or else pay a levy.
People who work in the oil and gas industry, and the communities that are currently reliant on it, cannot afford to wait any longer for action to support them through the energy transition. We’ve seen a rapid decline in the number of jobs in the industry over the last decade, and the failure to properly plan has left workers adrift Decent green jobs can be created in renewables, but only if our politicians adequately support and invest in them.
We need to see politicians go beyond the empty promises and commit to the meaningful investment and planning needed to make sure our energy transition is truly fair. The new government has to act decisively to develop robust measures that put workers and communities at the heart of planning our energy transition.
Image: Peter Iain Campbell
Public pressure helps improve final circular economy law
Kim Pratt, Circular Economy Campaigner
In June, MSPs voted to approve Scotland’s new circular economy law. Parliament has taken over a year to scrutinise and review the new law, with two stages for amendments before the final vote took place.
Over the past year, we’ve been working tirelessly on pushing politicians to improve the law, and it’s thanks to the groundswell of public support that Scotland has made a big step forwards towards a better, more circular, future.
When the circular economy bill was first introduced to parliament , it was clear, whilst some of the measures needed to make Scotland’s material use more sustainable and fairer were included, there were also some big gaps which needed to be filled
Thanks to the pressure we’ve collectively put them under, we now have a law that recognises that Scotland’s consumption of materials has significant impacts globally, and commits to urgently reducing this while ensuring that change will happen in a way that’s fair.
We made this happen together
What we did
Over a thousand of you pledged to take action to help us pressure our politicians to improve the circular economy bill and over the course of the last year, that is exactly what we did together. You have raised the profile of the law and the problems with it by writing to your MSPs, sharing news on social media and taking part in events to showcase the importance of the circular economy for Scotland’s future.
We made this ha
We came together to learn about the impacts of overconsumption of materials at different stages of the supply chain, hearing from a campaigner in Zambia with first-hand experience of the destruction, experts in the impacts of mineral mining, and the Glasgow Tool Library
We gave evidence on the bill to the Net Zero, Energy and Transport committee alongside other NGOs and wider stakeholders. To back up our case, hundreds of you emailed the MSPs who sit on the committee.
We made sure MSPs understood the impact of our material consumption by staging a circular economy fashion show right outside the Scottish Parliament and piling electronic waste at their door.
The fashion show highlighted Scotland’s problem with plastic waste, how big fashion i i i h i h d
environmental harms, and the benefits of circular economy practices to ethnic minority groups living in Scotland We were wowed by the creativity of everyone who was involved
The electronic waste pile up starkly illustrated the huge issue of electronic waste in this country, and the precious materials that are getting dumped in landfill because there is a lack of reuse and recycling support.
And we came together at reuse organisations in Glasgow and Stirling to talk about what they want from the new law, and shared our vision for what the future could be with the MSPs who attended.
At each stage of the bill, those of you who pledged to take action continuously called on your MSPs to make the changes needed. It was this continued call for a better future which made so many of the important h i h bill ibl
appen together.
Improv
The earliest version of the bill had no mention of reuse, repair or even the waste hierarchy From Scottish workers and communities to people involved in international supply chains, it was clear the needs of people were not central enough in politicians’ thinking. The Scottish Government was not using the law to commit to reducing the environmental impacts of rampant overconsumption of materials or to close loopholes in our existing climate targets to make them more effective.
Now, Scotland’s circular economy law includes some of the main things that we have campaigned on since the start including a just transition for workers and communities, a commitment to the urgent need to reduce the environmental impacts of our consumption to sustainable levels and a recognition that Scotland’s consumption of materials has significant impacts internationally
We didn’t get everything we were hoping for - there is no independent body to advise and review the Scottish Government’s progress, for example - but we’re pleased with the final law and the positive change that it has the potential to make.
What happens next?
Friends of the Earth Scotland will continue to fight for the changes we need to see to create a truly fair and sustainable circular economy in Scotland as fast as possible. We will continue to work to ensure that the measures in the bill are turned into actions.
We want to say a big thank you to every one of you who have helped us take an incredibly important step on this journey I hope you, as a member of Friends of the Earth Scotland, are heartened to see the difference we can make collectively.
The end of new coal
Looking back at key moments in a major victory in the fight against fossil fuels
Ric Lander, Research and Development Manager
As Friends of the Earth Scotland rallies for a just transition away from gas at Peterhead, we took the opportunity to look at the role of the environment movement in ending Scotland’s coal age.
In 2008, Scotland was on the cusp of a new era of coal power with First Minister Alex Salmond declaring “coal is the future”.
A decade later the industry was dead, its last chimney stacks slated for demolition and Scottish money divested. It was the next First Minister Nicola Sturgeon who pushed the button to demolish Scotland’s last coal burning power station.
How could such a radical change happen?
New coal, branded essential by politicians and captains of industry, was defeated by the actions of a loose and largely accidental coalition of groups wielding direct action, civil disobedience, and sabotage, but also letter writing, lobbying, marches, media work and a lot of patient and dedicated community organising.
Carbon dinosaurs
This movement came together around the campaign to stop a new coal power plant at Hunterston, Ayrshire. The Scottish Government included this new ‘carbon capture’ coal plant in their national infrastructure plan and the proposal had backing from big energy firms and the UK Government.
A local birdwatcher, Marco McGinty, risked much by taking the Scottish Government to court over the proposals He was backed by “CONCH”: Communities Opposed to New Coal at Hunterston, who rallied local opposition and gathered a record number of objections. Pressure was applied through the new medium of social media and imaginations sparked by giant sand-art creations along the beach from Irvine. RSPB, WWF and Friends of the Earth Scotland provided national support.
Campaigners successfully turned the local council and eventually forced one, and then then both, companies out of the scheme before it was officially withdrawn. A clear defeat for coal and carbon capture
Digging in to resist opencast
As well as ending the use of coal, the environmental groups targeted supply. There was much at stake: in 2008, 5 7 million tonnes of coal extraction was being developed in Scotland, far more than in England and Wales combined.
Opencast mining requires the flattening and wholescale removal of land and soil, polluting rivers and soils, creating dust and noise, damaging human health and undercutting quality of life for local people.
In Douglas, South Lanarkshire, 700 out of 1,000 residents objected to a new opencast mine at Mainshill Wood, but were ignored. So direct action group Coal Action Scotland took to the trees to stop this new mine.
Lindsay Addison, Co-chair of the Douglas Community Council, said of the camp: “The community is really behind it simply because there is no other thing. It is there because this is the last straw… Noone wants this new mine.”
Owners Scottish Coal handed the camp eviction papers on day four of the camp. With the local community’s help the activists dug in for seven months, building tree houses and tunnels, blocking vehicles and immobilising machinery. Resistance was strong at opencast sites in Lanarkshire, Midlothian and Fife, and at Scottish Coal’s main rail terminal
Friends of the Earth demanded action on dirty coal in its 2003 ‘Carbon Dinosaurs’ report.
With demand for coal faltering and political support in short supply, direct action helped stem the tide of new coal and Scottish Coal went bust in April 2013, leaving in its wake a swathe of derelict mines. At that time, domestic coal supply was supplemented by imports from around the world requiring new networks of solidarity to oppose its extraction.
Activists came to Scotland from Colombia, Indonesia and the United States to protest how our use of coal was wrecking forests and waterways through practices like mountaintop removal and the forced eviction of entire communities
As Scotland’s use of coal dwindled these connections enabled us to follow the money to see how UK-based mining companies, such as BHP, and banks, such as RBS, were pushing the global coal frontier, and divestment victories followed.
Samuel Arregoces met campaigners in Scotland to share the story of how his community was evicted for coal export.
The Big Ask: a law for the climate
Coal power was not the only sector of Scotland’s economy that needed to radically change The climate crisis required deep and lasting transformation.
To bring it about, organisations working on climate issues formed a new coalition, Stop Climate Chaos Scotland, to demand a new climate law that would require all of Scotland’s climate emissions to fall. Faith groups, trade unions, environmental and social justice organisations and community groups took part in protests and rallies outside the Scottish Parliament while people lobbied their MSPs inside
Cross-party support for annual targets to cut emissions was achieved and the law was passed in August 2009. What’s more, this newfound commitment to climate emissions cuts made proposals for new fossil fuels look absurd.
Climate jobs in a crumbling economy
The Climate Change Act could have provided the framework for a just transition, spurring an industrial policy that enabled carbon-dependent communities and workforces to transition, but it did not turn out this way.
The 2008 banking crisis triggered one of the worst recessions in living memory, and UK Government austerity saw renewables subsidies cut and construction jobs lost.
The failure to achieve a just transition from coal was not for the lack of vision in the environmental movement.
Trade union climate groups created a manifesto for ‘One Million Climate Jobs’ and economic justice campaigners proposed the UK’s first ‘Green New Deal’ to fund new green jobs. Others built energy democracy from the ground up creating community-owned wind, hydroelectric and solar schemes.
Climate campaigners and trade unionists had a shared vision of a better world, with more power and better timing they may well have seized the moment.
The Edinburgh Community Solar Cooperative placed solar panels on offices, school, leisure centres
Transformation… and justice?
In 2021, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon pressed the button to detonate the iconic 180m chimney stack at Longannet power station in Fife. On its side Scottish Power projected the words ‘Make Coal History’, a slogan borrowed from the placards of all those who resisted new coal.
Burning coal is destroying our planet’s ability to sustain us and remains a globally powerful industry Resisting coal remains the focus of many of our partner organisations around the world.
In this light, Scotland’s transition from coal is a major victory in the fight against fossil fuels
Yet as with so many victories our attention is drawn to their shortcomings. There was no just transition from coal and the extractive nature of our economy remains deeply embedded. The same companies who supplied our power stations with coal now scour the planet for lithium and steel for our renewables industry and private energy firms remain firmly in control of our energy system.
Even so the story of coal’s demise shows clearly how we as campaigners can reshape our world. The banking crisis and austerity blocked pathways to wider change, but the environment movement still found a way to win, riding a wave of public concern about the climate crisis to reshape Scotland’s energy system.
We face a daunting task but there is hope that we will achieve future victories which bring about not only transformation, but justice as well – and it’s worth reaching for.
Local campaigners in Ayrshire hand in 22,000 objections to the new coal plant.
Credit: CONCH
People gathered at the beach near Hunterston to protest using the medium of sand art with artist Jamie Wardley. Credit: CONCH
Building on our movement to imagine a better future
Kate Whitaker, Movement Building Lead
At the Friends of the Earth Scotland AGM in June, we ran a workshop exploring how learning from the history of our movement, and visioning the future we are working towards, can strengthen our current campaigning.
When we talk about the history of social movements, many of us think of charismatic leaders, a particularly brave action that gained media attention, or moments where thousands of people took to the streets These individuals, actions and times of mass participation are important, but they are not the full story. Behind them all are many, many
people, organisations and communities who are starting conversations, trying out ideas, bringing new people on board, doing the administrative work and much more Often, when a social issue sparks public interest, it is this groundwork that allows that ‘moment of whirlwind’ to be harnessed effectively.
By looking at wider social movement history, our own experiences and those around us, we can learn so much about how to grow our movement We started the workshop by reflecting on what in our past had led us to be in that room – can you take some time to reflect now?
Ask yourself:
>
What was the first thing that brought your attention to climate and environmental justice?
> What made you join Friends of the Earth Scotland as a member?
> What does this tell you about how we might bring more people into the movement?
In the workshop, we then looked at an exhibition on the history of the end of the coal industry in Scotland. In groups, people discussed what lessons we can learn from the different elements and campaigns active at that time. You can read about this on page 12 to 16 – write down your main takeaways.
We reflected on the ways in which collective action and people power has had a huge impact. From stopping the development of the Hunterston coal power station to winning the fight against fracking, to halting the Cambo oil field - the history of our movement shows us that collectively we can, and we have, pushed back on the fossil fuel industry in Scotland.
The successes required a variety of organisations, communities and groups using a wide range of tactics From direct action, to legal challenges, to lobbying politicians – different approaches that were sometimes coordinated and sometimes acting completely independently enabled significant wins.
Despite this, the defeat of the coal industry in Scotland did not challenge the way our energy system functions There was no
coordinated just transition plan for workers and communities Private fossil fuel companies extracting and burning oil and gas continue to dominate our energy system while hundreds of thousands of families are in fuel poverty. The empty promises of carbon capture and storage technology for the Hunterston coal power plant in the 2000s, are being repeated almost word for word by SSE to justify their proposals for a new gas power station in Peterhead now
We need to resist new fossil fuels and campaign for a phase out of oil and gas, while also challenging the foundations of an energy system where our basic needs, jobs and the wellbeing of our communities are dictated by the profit margins of private companies
To close the workshop, we started to envision what this alternative future could look like. While the technicalities, policies and practicalities of this are important, we also need to find ways to connect this to our share values and emotions. In their book Emergent Strategy, adrienne maree brown writes, “In order to create a new world, we must first imagine it”.
Our vision, as developed from our creative writing exercise
Treat everyone like a friend
Warm, dry, comfortable homes
Community energy funding community projects
Well planned, insulated homes that create community
Community at the heart of the economic system
Shared land
Nourishing local food
Tech that works for us, not to make us work harder
People making conscious choices
Access to fresh air
No private vehicles
Clean water for all
Cultural change
Community decision making, for people not profit
Access to land in urban areas
Community focused
All struggles are connected
Animals are treated with care
Land owned by communities
Global fairness
Solar skins, green walls, no empty roofs
We used a creative writing exercise, where people wrote continuously, without thinking too much about what they produced This was to encourage people to respond to their gut feeling about how the world should be. We started with the phrase ‘in the future’ and added additional prompts along the way such as ‘travel’, ‘energy’ and ‘home’.
Take ten minutes to do this for yourself. What are the key things you feel should be different? How was the experience of allowing yourself to imagine a different future?
If you would like to share any of your reflections from these prompts I would love to hear them –send me an email at activism@foe.scot
Campaign to stop a new gas burning power station in Peterhead ramps up
Freya Aitchison, Oil and Gas Activism Officer
Our campaign to stop the new gas burning power station in Peterhead has gained traction and leapt into the public eye over the past few months. Both the decision makers and the developers of this project have been feeling the heat as the campaign has ramped up.
As the Scottish Government faced uproar after saying it would scrap its 2030 climate targets, it has become even more crucial to keep up the pressure on decision makers not to approve this new development.
Building new fossil fuel infrastructure at a time when Scotland should be doubling down on climate action to make up for its missed targets would be a huge step in the wrong direction.
In April and May, we ran workshops in Glasgow, Aberdeen and Edinburgh to bring together people from across the climate movement and discuss how we can collaborate to resist this new development. Stopping the new power station in Peterhead is a crucial part of the resistance to new fossil fuels in Scotland
We can do it again in Peterhead.
Organisations urge Scottish Government to reject Peterhead plans
A broad coalition of 44 organisations across Scotland, spanning grassroots climate groups, marine conservation and fuel poverty groups, signed an open letter calling on the Scottish Government to reject the plans for a new gas power station in Peterhead. The letter was sent to the Scottish Government in May and has gained a lot of attention in the media, including front page stories.
Signatories of the letter warned ministers about reliance on carbon capture, saying workers “should not be strung along with empty promises of jobs in fairytale carbon capture” and pointing out of the environmental and ethical risks of trying to store carbon under the North Sea in perpetuity
Equinor targeted on day of AGM
Equinor, one of the developers of the proposed new power station, faced protests on the day of its AGM from activists in Aberdeen, who gathered outside the company’s offices with a clear message: Scotland will be fossil free The transition
away from fossil fuels is both necessary and inevitable, and it will happen thanks to people power – not the oil and gas industry.
Protestors also brought messages for Equinor from others around the UK, sticking them on the windows of the offices using Post It notes. Amid chants of ‘Put fossil fuels to bed, stop the plant in Peterhead’, Equinor employees locked their doors and closed their blinds, literally blocking out people’s concerns about their polluting plans.
Equinor is expanding fossil fuel production all over the world, and faces resistance from activists in Argentina, Canada, Brazil, and their home country of Norway, to name a few
We stand in solidarity with our friends around the world who are also resisting Equinor’s climate-wrecking plans.
SSE accused of ‘pulling the wool over our eyes’
SSE, the other developer of the Peterhead power station, faced scrutiny from activists over its unfounded claims that the new plant would capture over 90% of the carbon it emits, and transport it for storage under the North Sea.
A group called the North Sea Knitters sat in the lobby of the SSE offices in Perth on the day that the company announced its £2.4billion annual profits, peacefully knitting until the SSE bosses agreed to come and answer their questions about the Peterhead development.
The activists pressed SSE bosses on how the plant at Peterhead could be expected
to capture this rate of CO2 when there is no precedent for this happening anywhere in the world, let alone in the UK. They couldn’t give them a straight answer.
SSE markets itself as a renewable energy company but in reality, 60% of its energy generation capacity comes from burning gas.
Next steps for the campaign
The campaign for no new gas in Peterhead will continue to put pressure on both the decision makers and the developers of the project. Keep an eye on the campaign page at Peterhead for upcoming workshops, protests and digital actions!