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Bjork Protests Geothermal Energy Company Sale In Iceland

Bjork

The Huffington Post   First Posted: 01/23/11 12:23 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:25 PM ET

Singer Bjork joined fellow Icelanders in protesting the sale of a geothermal energy company this week, according to a recent Reuters report. In what seems to be a disturbing act of "parliamentary oversight," a deal was approved to sell Iceland's HS Orka to Magma Energy Corp, a Canadian-based geothermal firm. Since the deal was made, the public has been fighting it, demanding a vote on the privatization of the country's natural resources.

Geothermal energy is considered an intriguing sustainable resource, produced by drilling into the earth and extracting heat, which is then converted into usable energy.

This week, Bjork presented Prime Minister Johanna Sigurdardottir with a petition signed by 47,000 people. Considering that the entire population of Iceland is less than 320,000, this is a remarkable number of outraged people. According to The Canadian Press, the petition stated that "For 100 years, good people protected our natural resources and public interest. [Then] the sale of natural resources and irresponsible access to them began. Now it is time to stop that unfortunate development."

Sigurdardottir invited Bjork and other activists to discuss the issue in her office. After the meeting, Bjork reported that "basically we are in agreement on the issue, but it's always a question of methods. In plain language, it's a question of how to deal with the system, the bureaucracy."

Meanwhile, Magma reported that the government has not contacted them, and Monday was "business as usual." Although perhaps actions speak louder than words in this case - Monday afternoon, Magma's shares apparently dropped 2.9 percent on the Toronto Stock Exchange.

Earlier this month, Bjork staged a karaoke protest against the Canadian firm, where she gathered signatures for the petition.

This is not the first time that Bjork has taken on an activist role. Following the 2004 tsunami in Southeast Asia, Bjork created the charity remix record Army of Me to raise money for UNICEF. In 2005, she participated in the Live 8 concert series, headlining the Japan show. In 2008, Bjork ended a performance in China with a shocking call to free Tibet. That same year, she wrote a letter to the Times discussing the role of natural resources in the Icelandic economy, encouraging a shift away from aluminum smelters and towards a more sustainable future. She created the Bjork fund to invest in creative businesses with the goal of boosting Iceland's economy. And now, Bjork is throwing herself into the fight against Magma Energy Corp.

It seems that Bjork's hard work may be paying off, as Prime Minister Sigurdardottir joined in with singing protestors and accepted the petition "with great pleasure."

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Singer Bjork joined fellow Icelanders in protesting the sale of a geothermal energy company this week, according to a recent Reuters report. In what seems to be a disturbing act of "parliamentary over...
Singer Bjork joined fellow Icelanders in protesting the sale of a geothermal energy company this week, according to a recent Reuters report. In what seems to be a disturbing act of "parliamentary over...
 
 
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06:43 PM on 01/26/2011
Wow... they don't want a private company to deliver energy at reduced costs because they know the government can't do it better?
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jasonedward
All ways are my ways.
08:09 PM on 02/04/2011
A private company won't be able to do it for a reduced cost. They must make a profit, so the rates will inevitably go up, or the resources will be rationed. I'm always amazed at how a nation can give up its natural resources, which rightfully belong to the people, to private industry who then reap all of the profits of the resource in question at the expense of the taxpayer.
03:20 AM on 01/26/2011
Let Bjork lead Iceland, the other ones are polluted with red-tape.
09:04 PM on 01/25/2011
What ? They don't want to become a colony ?
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Rachel O
11:49 AM on 01/25/2011
One of the greatest artists of our time.
09:04 PM on 01/25/2011
True
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Steve41
Never insult anyone by accident. R.A.H.
11:02 AM on 01/25/2011
Don't understand what the protest is about. Iceland is bankrupt and needs cash, so sells a geothermal plant. Ultimately its a big island, if they want to build another plant they certainly can once they are financially stable.
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maslin
At 6 bn km, it's mostly small stuff.
11:14 AM on 01/25/2011
Nobel Laureate Halldor Laxness wrote this book which answers your question to some extent just in the title:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Independent_People

This is how Icelanders see themselves.
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maslin
At 6 bn km, it's mostly small stuff.
12:55 PM on 01/25/2011
Just in case you don't click the link, it took a very long time (centuries) for Iceland's small holders to break out of what was essentially debt slavery, so to some extent they are in the grip of a national nightmare to a degree that we cannot appreciate. I'm trying to imagine what an equivalent American nightmare might be, and aside from the British invading us and taxing us without representation for a few decades, I can't really.

I'm not going to argue it's necessarily rational, but in this situation there might be a large contingent of them who would prefer to head into the hills and farm sheep rather than do something like this for money.

Not that I have anything against sheep farming mind you. I'm just talking about their self-conception as a culture.
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trojoe
Veteran
02:19 AM on 01/25/2011
I
09:19 PM on 01/24/2011
Wow. Good for Bjork. Ubercool and smart.
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richnerd
Retired Imagineer, soon to be a goat herder in NM
03:45 PM on 01/24/2011
Sounds like Bjork bjassically found a way to bjeat the bjureaucracy and although Magna was bjack to bjusiness as usual today, my bjet is that the bjad sale will bje rescinded.
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maslin
At 6 bn km, it's mostly small stuff.
12:56 PM on 01/25/2011
That was the bjest post I've bjeen aware of today.
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richnerd
Retired Imagineer, soon to be a goat herder in NM
01:48 PM on 01/25/2011
Thanks bjuddy!
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Max Shaw
My micro-bio is no longer empty.
03:12 PM on 01/24/2011
Hope she wore a crazy shirt to the meeting.
09:13 AM on 01/24/2011
Iceland is "the tip of the spear" or "the blade of the sword". If they can succesfully resist the IMF, World Bank and the bond raiders of wall street, the template for resistance by the rest of the people would be laid out. Debt jubilee!
The "commons" for the benefit of mankind should include food, shelter and clothing. Food and water, shelter and utilities, clothing(?) and should never be the property of bankers or corporations. This is where I most disagree with the constitutionalist, or libertarians, they are excessivley concerned with property rights of the individual when many things should never be property.
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01:10 PM on 01/24/2011
take a tour , even a google tour,of the outer ring in Moscow to get an idea of what that's going to look like. Glad that would be you.
Social Democrats and the IMF have always been rubbing eachothers backs in the same hotspring.
11:57 PM on 01/23/2011
Bjork is awesome. remember when she beat that reporter down for taking a picture of her kids?
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Amadahy
loves peanut M&Ms and Whippoorwills
12:34 PM on 01/24/2011
Yeah, remember when President Obama did cocaine? Some of us may be closer to perfection than others AS, but none of us are perfect.
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JScott
John Galt's last name is McGuffin-Smithee
04:19 PM on 01/24/2011
And GWB did cocaine and booze
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VintageMary
11:37 PM on 01/23/2011
Privatizing resources is almost never a good idea. For 47,000 to speak out against it is substantial. When does that citizens panel take effect? Perhaps they can effect some sway?
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12:11 AM on 01/24/2011
hopefully! the really disapointing part is privatisation should NOT be happening on the left's watch. the pm is a social democrat! tsk to her for bowing to imf pressures.
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VintageMary
12:54 AM on 01/24/2011
Iceland has the capacity to be a really forward thinking, modern democracy if they can avoid falling under their creditors. I think thats surely the motivation driving this, and its a shame.
09:22 PM on 01/24/2011
Well then. The US has been privatizing water for decades. German, French and other countries own much of the nation's water supplies. Don't believe it even if your water company has the name "America" in it---it probably is foreign owned.
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VintageMary
10:05 PM on 01/24/2011
I live in Pennsylvania, and our outgoing mayor sold portions of our turnpike. Now I know a turnpike isnt a resource, but it just goes to show - anything for a profit.
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10:54 PM on 01/23/2011
Bjork was invited to discuss the issue, that's hilarious.
09:22 PM on 01/24/2011
That's awesome.
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12:42 AM on 01/25/2011
Why?
BlackbirdHighway
Brawndo's got electrolites!
10:49 PM on 01/23/2011
The shock doctrine at work. Normally this would never even be considered. Along comes a financial crises and boom, it goes right through.
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tjconkster
Occupy the Voting Booth 2014
11:34 PM on 01/23/2011
Isn't it amazing how it all plays out....that book was one of the best pieces of work I've read in a very long time....it was scary good....
09:23 PM on 01/24/2011
Oh, yes! Well done blackbird.
barrada nicto
Optimism is necessary.
07:54 PM on 01/23/2011
" Geothermal energy is considered an intriguing sustainable resource, produced by drilling into the earth and extracting heat, which is then converted into usable energy. "

Intriguing? Geothermal is THE most sustainable, THE most bountiful, renewable energy on the planet. Geothermal energy holds thousands of times the energy necessary to power the whole planet.

It outdistances all other currently producing sources by a country mile in terms of potential.
10:43 PM on 01/23/2011
It's not a universal solution by any means. There are very few areas of the world (Iceland being one of them) that have the conditions necessary for these plants. On top of that, most areas tapping into geothermal report diminishing returns and more seismic activity.

Renewable energy production is the way to go but geothermal is not THAT great.
BlackbirdHighway
Brawndo's got electrolites!
10:47 PM on 01/23/2011
Ironically West Virginia, one of the world's largest producers of coal, has vast potential for geothermal.
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Earthling1125
Respect Nature - we are lost without her
08:26 AM on 01/24/2011
Actually, that IS true of geothermal!

There are two different types of geothermal energy we can tap into - the "high heat" geothermal, which derives its energy directly from volcanic sources (such as those in Iceland), and "low-heat" geothermal, which utilizes the heat retained in the earth (world-wide). Beneath the surface (at different depths for different climates), the earth is a constant temperature year-round. The "low-heat" geothermal is used by individual households where the heat energy of the earth is extracted via heat pumps and circulating environmentally-friendly fluid through long tubes placed under ground (or under water). This same energy can be used to provide unlimited hot water and cool a house in summer too. I live in an area of no volcanic activity and 6-month long winters. Installing a geothermal system in a house up here is the most sustainable, renewable, efficient, and money-saving energy way to go - bar none!