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Forth Road Bridge closed after Greenpeace abseil protest

Forth Road Bridge closed after Greenpeace abseil protest

BBC News2 days ago
The Forth Road Bridge has been closed after environmental protesters began abseiling off the side in a demonstration against a tanker carrying fracked gas.Greenpeace said 10 activists were taking part in the protest against the Ineos ship Independence, due to arrive at Grangemouth on Friday.The group accused the firm, and its owner, Jim Ratcliffe, of attempting to sabotage a global plastics treaty due to be voted on by UN member states in Switzerland next month.Police Scotland have urged drivers and pedestrians to avoid the area.
Images from the scene show protesters on wires holding red banners displaying a number of slogans decrying Ineos' influence in the plastics industry.Shipping data shows the tanker, which sails under the flag of Malta, arrived in the Firth of Forth in the early hours of Friday.
Greenpeace said the "climbers" were being supported by a rescue team on the bridge and a boat below and would remain suspended 25m (82ft) above the Firth of Forth's main shipping lane.An RNLI boat was dispatched to the scene from a nearby station.Police Scotland said they were "engaging" with those involved.The bridge has been closed to private transport since 2018 following the opening of the Queensferry Crossing and is now used as a public transport corridor.
In a statement, Greenpeace claimed Ineos, the UK's largest manufacturer of plastics, was planning to send "hundreds of lobbyists" to the meeting of UN members in Geneva between 5 and 14 August.The organisation has called on governments to commit to cutting global plastic production by at least 75% by 2040.More than 200 nations met in South Korea in December last year for what was scheduled to be the final round of negotiations on the treaty.However, those talks collapsed after a group of oil-producing nations rebelled.
Greenpeace programme director Amy Cameron said she was concerned Ineos and owner Ratcliffe, who also owns a minority stake in Manchester United, would "do everything they can to stop" an agreement being signed.She added: "Ratcliffe tries to distract us with sports teams and sponsorships, but we're not going to let him fill our planet with plastic, so he can fill his pockets with profit."Ratcliffe is trying to block a strong Global Plastics Treaty, so today we're blocking him."Ineos has been contacted for comment.
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