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12,000 surround White House to protest tar sands pipeline Jeremy Hance mongabay.com November 07, 2011 ![]() Around 12,000 protestors surrounded the White House, some carrying a symbolic pipeline. Photo by: Clayton Conn.
"[It] would be another dirty needle feeding America's fossil fuel addiction," Jamie Henn, spokesperson with Tar Sands Action, which organized the protests, and co-founder of climate organization 350.org, told mongabay.com last month. "The pipeline would carry tar sands oil from Alberta to the Gulf of Mexico. Along the way, it would cross the Ogallala Aquifer, risking an oil spill over one of our largest sources of fresh drinking water and the source of 30 percent of the irrigation water for America's crops. [...] for the climate. Politically, the pipeline is also a bad call: it's a hand out to Big Oil and people like the Koch Brothers who have consistently used their profits to corrupt our political system." At the rally protesters, from young to old, chanted 'yes we can stop the pipeline'. Signs ranged from 'No Oil in Our Soil' to 'What would Sasha and Malia say' to reprinting past quotes of President Barack Obama, such as, 'Let's be the generation that finally frees America from the tyranny of oil'.
For many activists, the crux of the issue is climate change. "From a carbon perspective the project is filthy and the last thing in the world a rational person would approve," one of those attending, Paul Rosolie, told mongabay.com. "I attended the rally because I think it is important to remind President Obama that he was elected by people who want change, to move away from fossil fuels. Not everyone can take the time out of their lives to travel to Washington to remind the President, but still 12,000 people came, each one of them a representative of millions—both around the world and in generations to come." In terms of carbon emissions, Cambridge Energy Research Associates (CERA) estimated the greenhouse gas emissions of the tar sands was 5-15 percent higher than conventional sources, while the International Energy Agency (IEA) found that emissions were 20 percent higher. Others have given higher numbers. Climatologist, James Hansen, has stated that if the full-extent of the tar sands are exploited along with the world's coal reserves 'it is essentially game over' for the climate. Opening up the tar sands to foreign markets through the Keystone XL pipeline would increase expansion in Canada, while canceling the pipeline would force TransCanada to seek another route, a problem that could stall expansion indefinitely. Proponents of the pipeline say that it will allow the US to have a secure source of oil coming from a friendly nation and will create thousands of jobs. "What these millionaire actors and professional activists do not seem to understand is that saying no to Keystone means saying yes to more conflict oil from the Middle East and Venezuela filling American gas tanks," TransCanada spokesman James Millar said, referring to Hollywood actors, such as Mark Ruffalo, who spoke to the crowd yesterday. TransCanada initially estimated the pipeline would create around 5,000 jobs, but since then has boosted that to 20,000, though opponents say this job figure was pulled out of thin air. The tar sands issues is controversial in Canada as well. The exploitation of the region has led to water pollution, political conflict with First Nations people, and large-scale deforestation in the Boreal. In addition, the rising emissions from exploiting the tar sands have forced Canada to back-off its climate goals. Conflict-of-interest?
In addition, the New York Times recently reported that TransCanada hand-picked the consulting firm that oversaw the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA), which environmentalists criticized for not addressing the issues of greenhouse gas emission at all, and for painting a rosy picture of possible oil spills. "The State Department should recuse itself from the Keystone XL decision and the whole permit process should be scrapped. [...] President Obama pledged to have "the most transparent government in history." This runs completely contrary to that promise," Henn said of recent revelations. Climate failure Many environmentalists have long been frustrated with the Obama Administration for its failure to take serious steps to tackle climate change. The agreement reached in Copenhagen with Obama's last-minute arrival was considered by most as lackluster; then, after losing a bid to enact federal climate legislation, the administration appeared to drop climate change as a priority. President Obama appeared reluctant for a time to even mention the words 'climate change'. Meanwhile, warnings from scientists regarding climate change have become graver. A study in Nature last month found that nations are running out of time in their pledge to keep temperatures from rising above 2 degrees Celsius, while a leaked report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) found that there is a 2-in-3 chance that climate change is already worsening severe weather worldwide, perhaps contributing to the number of bizarre weather-related disasters over the past few years, including unprecedented drought in Texas, a killer heatwave in Russia, and record flooding in Thailand to name just a few. Still global greenhouse gas emissions continue to rise, with recent data from the US Department of Energy (DOE) revealing a 6 percent rise (564 million additional tons of carbon) worldwide in carbon emissions connected to burning fossil fuels from 2009 to 2010. Emissions in 2010 amounted to 33.5 billion metric tons of carbon dioxide. Protestor Rosolie said that Bill McKibben, one of the rally's organizers and a hugely-influential climate activist, argued in a speech that in order for the US to have influence worldwide on climate change and the environment, it must finally address these problems at home. "In the wake of his words was the realization that our precedent would impact our ability to affect change for so many other struggles," Rosolie said. "I thought of the Belo Monte dam, the Serengeti highway, the Trans-Amazon highway, the Mekong, the mountain gorillas, the Sumatran rhinos, the Kayapo... [McKibben] was right; this issue is make or break on so many levels, both nationally and internationally, today and for the future." For its part the Obama Administration says it is well aware of the pros and cons of the pipeline, and the president will weigh these in his decision. But until the protests started in late summer, many considered the approval of the pipeline a foregone conclusion. ![]() Protestors included kids. Photo by: Amy Dewan.
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Tags: tar sands oil sands oil oil spills energy fossil fuels activism activists protests obama administration and the environment obama united states canada boreal forests boreal forest corporate environmental transgressors climate change greenhouse gas emissions green environment jeremy hance pollution politics environmental politics environmental activism indigenous people indigenous groups indigenous rights forests climate change politics temperate forests carbon emissions Environmental news index | RSS | News Feed | Twitter | Home Advertisements:
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