Tag Archives: climate change

Center for Biological Diversity: Obama Allows Dirty, Dangerous Keystone Tar Sands Pipeline to Move Forward

ImageWASHINGTON–(ENEWSPF)–March 1 – The Obama administration today took the next step toward approval of the 1,700-mile Keystone XL pipeline, despite the heavy toll the pipeline and its oil will take on the climate crisis, wildlife and the environment. Some 50,000 people protested outside the White House last month in opposition to the pipeline. Today’s announcement came in the form of a supplemental environmental impact statement on Keystone XL. Continue reading

Urgent Call to Action – Support the Treesitter blocking Tennessee Gas Pipeline

Image

Reposted from hudsonvalleyearthfirst

Tree clearing has already begun for the Tennessee gas pipeline in Milford, PA where a base of local support has already been organizing. We’re asking folks to come throw down! – Let us know of your availability, the sooner the better.

If you can come down to help out on the ground or make a donation of anything on the list, it’d be greatly appreciated…we are especially in need of folks with medic or direct action experience, but these skills are not necessary to help out.
Below is a list of supplies that we might need:

  • Warm clothes (wool stuff, socks, gloves, hats, scarves)
  • Food
  • Legal Funds (click here to donate)
  • Climbing Gear (new prussiks, ropes, carabeeners, harnesses)
  • Outdoor store(s) gift cards (gander Mtn, cabellos, eastern mountain sports, etc
  • Rain Gear
  • tarps
  • Camping GearU-Locks, Bike Locks, handcuffs
  • Cement
  • PVC Pipe
  • Chicken Wire
  • 55 gallon drums metal or plastic
  • Water Filtration
  • A Truck or other vehicles for donation (junk cars ok)
  • very long aluminum poles or logs
  • banner materials (sheer or parachute material)
  • truck rope
  • small bed frames
  • Yurtsrocket stoves

For more info visit: http://www.notennesseepipeline.blogspot.com

or contact us at: notennesseepipeline@gmail.com or 845-542-7541

PDATE 2:13 pm: Ground supporters are released from detention by Police officers.

UPDATE 12:24 pm: Ground Support for Gifford have cooperated with police to leave the park and are being detained by two officers who had placed them in their vehicle handcuffed, but indicated that they are not under arrest. Gifford remains in the tree and is strongly committed to staying and protecting the area from fracking and the Pipeline.

UPDATE 9:24 am: An independent contractor,Mike with TGP’s Michle has informed protesters that law enforcement has been called but no felling would take place unless “it’s safe.”

UPDATE 8:15 am: Protesters contacted by surveyors,

Milford, PA, February 19 2012 – Neighboring Orange County, NY resident Gifford Pinchot, has erected a tree stand to prevent the designated clear cutting required to for construction of the Tennessee Gas Pipeline (TGP) Upgrade between Foster Hill and Cummings Hill roads.

The Northeast Upgrade would transport additional Marcellus Shale gas west to east  from hydraulically fractured wells along Pennsylvania’s Northern Tier. Hydrofracking, or fracking, has become a controversial method of extracting natural gas due to its reputation for contaminating local waterways, dangerously disposing of ‘frack’ waste, and other social, economic, and environmental concerns.

Pinchot said, “I’m concerned that the TGP ‘s project  is set to go through six sensitive wetlands on its way to Cummins Hill, clearing through mature forest and important ecological habitat, including endangered species.” Cummins Hill is a cultural icon for Milford, being home to at least one bald eagle’s nest as well as being an economic resource for ecotourism. Pinchot added his frustration with the statement, “These gas executives just want to extract from our communities- take what they can and leave us to deal with ecological devastation.”

Simultaneously a large banner reading, “No Pipeline!” in bold black and red lettering was dropped in solidarity, over the interstate 84 overpass on Cummins Hill Rd to display support for the blockades that have been ongoing since Monday. A  lock down on Monday and Tuesday to a Delaware State Forest gate that blocked access to the slated clear-cut is now in it’s third day with Alex Lotorto and Cornelia Pinochot. Trained Emergency Medical Technicians are on site for both actions.

These actions are part of a campaign opposing the Tennessee Pipeline in the Delaware River Basin. The direct action campaign is taking place after nearly two years of local political leaders and grassroots opposition in the courts, public comment, and protest.

This week will culminate with family friendly events, including a vigil on Friday at 5PM at the traffic light in Milford (intersection of Broad and Harford, also Rte 6  and Rte 209, where the Yale School of Forestry was founded and a sidewalk march Saturday afternoon  from the Milford traffic light  across the Milford Bridge, over the Delaware River, to Montague NJ. All are welcome to attend.

At 1pm-3pm Deleware River Keeper is hosting a public meet-up at the Water Wheel Cafe in Milford to help residents watchdog TGP Pipeline tree-clearing activities.

###

Contact:

Alex Lotorto, Pike County, PA Resident 570-269-9589 / alotorto@gmail.com

USGS study shows climate change having catastrophic effect on ecosystems

Image by Pique NewsBy United States Geological Survey

Plant and animal species are shifting their geographic ranges and the timing of their life events – such as flowering, laying eggs or migrating – at faster rates than researchers documented just a few years ago, according to a technical report on biodiversity and ecosystems used as scientific input for the 2013 Third National Climate Assessment.

The report, Impacts of Climate Change on Biodiversity, Ecosystems, and Ecosystem Services, synthesizes the scientific understanding of the way climate change is affecting ecosystems, ecosystem services and the diversity of species, as well as what strategies might be used by natural resource practitioners to decrease current and future risks. More than 60 federal, academic and other scientists, including the lead authors from the U.S. Geological Survey, the National Wildlife Federation and Arizona State University in Tempe, authored the assessment.

“These geographic range and timing changes are causing cascading effects that extend through ecosystems, bringing together species that haven’t previously interacted and creating mismatches between animals and their food sources,” said Nancy Grimm, a scientist at ASU and a lead author of the report. Continue reading

Just Do It! A tale of Modern-Day Outlaws Screening June 21st

7 p.m. @ Internationalist Books 405 W. Franklin St. Chapel Hill

“>http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=zavTd31qxho]

Just Do It lifts the lid on climate activism and the daring troublemakers who have crossed the line to become modern-day outlaws.  Documented over a year, Emily James’ film follows these activists as they blockade factories, attack coal power stations and glue themselves to the trading floors of international banks despite the very real threat of arrest. Continue reading

Massive Natural Gas Spill Ongoing

DBA / ABACA

You wouldn’t know it from the news, but there’s a major fossil-fuel spill ongoing in the North Sea off the coast of Scotland. A leak from a gas platform operated by the French energy company Total SA was first detected on March 25 and has been spilling around 7 million cu. ft. (200,000 cu m) of natural gas every day since. Of course gas, unlike oil, doesn’t have a devastating — or visual — effect on the marine environment, which is one reason the Elgin gas field, where the spill is taking place, hasn’t become as infamous as the Deepwater Horizon site in the Gulf of Mexico. But the leak is a disaster for the climate all the same; natural gas is mostly made up of methane, a greenhouse gas that has 25 times the warming power of carbon dioxide. Engineers working for Total estimate that it may take half a year to shut the leak, and if all of the methane released in that time reaches the atmosphere, the spill would approximate the annual global warming impact of putting 300,000 new cars on the road. Continue reading