A climate activist and museum curator, , delivered his $50 court levy inside a bag of coal.
Bruce Mahalski, 61, was one of six protesters who were arrested following a 2021 protest that blocked a coal train in Dunedin and unintentionally caused the cancellation of an excursion train.
All five protesters were charged and convicted of trespass at the Dunedin District Court last year, three with the added conviction of obstruction, and sentenced to 40 to 70 hours of community work.
The judge declined to discharge them without conviction.
Mahalski said the delivery of his $50 court fee packaged with coal was a protest against the wording of the 鈥渙ffender levy鈥 which states: 鈥淥ffenders pay to help address the harm that their crimes cause鈥.
鈥淚 do not regard myself as morally culpable for 鈥榗ausing harm鈥, as the very reason for committing this trespass was not to commit harm but to try to prevent a person鈥檚 actual physical death.鈥
Climate activist Bruce Mahalski paid his court levy within a bag of coal as a form of protest. Photo / Ben Tomsett
鈥淗ere you go, you love coal so much - let鈥檚 keep getting your hands dirty.鈥
The coal was not bought but found at the bottom of a house and given to him by a friend, along with the plastic bag, Mahalski said.
Mahalski, also the curator of the Dunedin Museum of Natural History, has taken part in multiple protests against New Zealand鈥檚 continued reliance on coal, accusing the Government of failing to address the climate emergency it declared 2020.
鈥淭he Government declared it in 2020, and we started doing these protests, trying to back up the Government with the climate emergency by addressing the fact that their carrier KiwiRail was still carrying huge amounts of coal.鈥
The 2021 protest attempted to stop KiwiRail train transporting 500 tonnes of coal from Bathurst Resources鈥 Nightcaps mine to Fonterra鈥檚 Clandeboye milk-processing plant, inadvertently causing the cancellation of Dunedin Railways鈥 Victorian excursion to Oamaru.
Mahalski also pointed to the Government鈥檚 partial ownership of Genesis Energy, which continues to burn coal at its Huntly power station.
鈥淭he Government is knee-deep in coal,鈥 he said.
He pointed to global disasters such as fires in Los Angeles, flooding in South Dunedin, and extreme weather events in Spain and Pakistan as evidence of a worsening crisis.
Despite the Government鈥檚 climate emergency declaration, Mahalski argued that little has been done to address emissions.
鈥淣ew Zealand is number 41 out of 63 countries in the International Climate Performance Index,鈥 he said.
鈥淚f we don鈥檛 halve our emissions by 2030, we鈥檒l have to buy around $20 to $30 billion worth of overseas carbon credits.鈥
He called for significant changes in policy, including ending coal transportation on KiwiRail and phasing out its use at Genesis Energy鈥檚 Huntly station.
After paying the fee, Mahalski said he would bury the coal under a tree on a friend鈥檚 property.
鈥淎s far as I鈥檓 concerned, my hands are clean. The Government鈥檚 hands, however, are just dirty.鈥
鈥淚f I could I would block another coal train, but they run them in the middle of the night now.鈥
Ben Tomsett is a multimedia journalist for the New Zealand Herald, based in Dunedin.
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