2022 Camp

The 2022 Climate Camp was held from 3rd - 7th August in Tarbert, Co Kerry

Why Kerry?

There were three general motivations for the Climate Camp in Kerry:

  • Firstly, we wanted to engage in determined resistance to plans to build the Shannon LNG terminal in Tarbert, North Kerry;

  • Secondly, we wanted to bring together different groups from across the island and beyond, helping to build a strong and radical movement concerned with addressing climate change and its driving force, capitalism;

  • Thirdly, we wanted to create a space that contributes to building the society that we want (and need) beyond capitalism.

The week was full of family-friendly workshops, talks and cultural activities on the camp, as well as actions targeting the development of the gas terminal.

Climate activists spell out "Frack Off LNG" with their bodies during a mass trespass of the site of the proposed Shannon LNG fracked gas import terminal on the Shannon Estuary in north Kerry today, Sunday, 7th August 2022. Over 150 people from around Ireland took part in the two-hour occupation which organisers described as a “show of strength and a warning” to project developer, US corporation New Fortress Energy and the Irish government. The direct action was the culmination of a six-day Climate Camp on nearby farmland. Photograph: Michael Higgins

Our aim

The 2022 camp was the first Climate Camp in Ireland since 2010, and it took place on farmland close to the site of the controversial fracked gas import terminal. It was a family-friendly gathering, a welcoming, safe space created by activists from across Ireland and local campaigners – a space that is a model of the kind of society we want, and need, beyond capitalism. We can’t solve the climate crisis without dismantling capitalism.

The camp was also a base for direct action targeting Shannon LNG. We wanted to send a loud and clear message that if the government allows this disastrous project to go ahead, it will meet with determined resistance.

To avoid total ecosystem collapse and the deaths of hundreds of millions of people, we must rapidly transition away from burning fossil fuels. And yet governments including Ireland’s are not taking the threat seriously – they are fast-tracking new gas-burning power stations and allowing power-hungry data centres to grow and grow. And now the gas lobby is successfully exploiting the war in Ukraine to strengthen the case for an LNG terminal in Ireland.

We hope that these together will contribute to building a strong and radical movement concerned with addressing climate change on the island of Ireland, and that the camp will ultimately help with a transformation away from fossil capitalism and empire, towards a more just and sustainable world.