Climate-denying ostrich greets U.S. Senate candidates Tim Kaine and George Allen

Climate ostrich and animal keeper news interview

This is a guest post from CCAN fall intern Norah Berk. Check out all the pictures from the ostrich action on CCAN’s flickr account.

Starting at around 9 a.m. today, demonstrators began to line Dolly Madison Blvd across the street from the Capitol One Center in McLean in anticipation of the debate between the two candidates that would take place just a few hours later. Amidst others holding signs for their favored candidate, CCAN staff and volunteers proudly stood holding the “STOP climate change” banner that Obama once set eyes on. At 10 a.m. special guest Cleopatra, The Queen of Denial (an 8-feet tall climate-change denying ostrich), appeared. Her presence called attention to both candidates’ denial of the urgent need for renewable energy in Virginia over dirty, yet so-called “clean”, fossil fuel options.

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Marylanders: Renewable Home Heating Rebate Program

By Melissa Bollman (Cross-Posted from Alliance for Green Heat)

On September 7, 2012 the Maryland Energy Administration (MEA) launched a pilot rebate program for some of the cleanest wood and pellet stoves available, marking the first time that a state has integrated wood and pellet stoves into a renewable energy rebate program.

The pilot program offers a $400 rebate for wood stoves and $600 for pellet stoves. Wood stoves must emit less than half the particulates that are allowed by the EPA to be eligible.

“We are thrilled that Governor O’Malley and Malcolm Wolff, the Director of the Maryland Energy Administration, extended the renewable energy grant program to appliances that low and middle-income families can afford,” said John Ackerly, the President of the Alliance for Green Heat.

 

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Elected official and activists launch campaign for strong MD fracking moratorium

For Immediate Release

September 12, 2012

Contact:
Kelly Trout, 240-396-2022, Kelly@chesapeakeclimate.org
Mike Tidwell, 240-460-5838, mtidwell@chesapeakeclimate.org

Elected official and activists launch campaign for strong MD fracking moratorium

BALTIMORE, MD — State Delegate Heather Mizeur (D-Montgomery) today joined a broad coalition of public health, environmental, faith, labor and civil rights groups to launch a campaign to pass a state moratorium on fracking, a controversial method of natural gas drilling.

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Talking climate and the state of the Bay at Hampton Bay Days

Bay

At Hampton Bay Days this past weekend, the high-jumping Dock Dogs weren’t the only ones who made a splash! Thanks to all our local volunteers, CCAN had two great days of outreach promoting clean energy and enlisting the help of festival-goers to bring clean energy to Virginia! As the only organization educating the public on the impacts of climate change to the Chesapeake Bay region, it was a perfect opportunity to talk about how to move clean energy away from fossil fuels and toward renewable solar and wind power for the sake of our waterways and our coast.

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CCANers to Ryan in Virginia: No KXL

The day after the Republican National Convention of 2012 concluded, Ryan appeared today at a rally in Richmond Virginia in stifling 100-degree August heat on an airport tarmac, and local climate activists greeted him with a clear message to pass on to his running mate Mitt Romney: No Keystone XL Pipeline.

While candidate Romney spent the day reaching out to Americans affected by flooding in the aftermath of Hurricane Isaac, recalling the damage done by Hurricane Katrina and the risk of stronger storms hitting the Gulf Coast and mid-Atlantic as the climate changes, Ryan addressed a sizable swing-state crowd. As he began to bring up the issue of energy and speak about Virginia’s coal reserves and the need to use it, local activists took a stand for the climate and unfurled a banner for the candidate to read.

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Barack Obama Drives Past CCAN Banner at Charlottesvile Rally

As excited motorists, bicyclists, and people on foot passed by, local citizens and I held up a banner telling the president that his “‘all of the above energy’ policy won’t stop climate change.” Even the air tingled with excitement, as the crowd’s cheers echoed from the pavillion and the ever-present security forces barely hid their anticipation. After getting politely removed to a nearby location on Market, I knew that the moment I was waiting for, when we would show the President our message for more clean energy, was near.

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Baltimore citizens challenge proposed incinerator's air pollution permit

For Immediate Release

August 30, 2012

Contact:
Diana Dascalu-Joffe, Chesapeake Climate Action Network, 703-772-2472
Leah Kelly, Environmental Integrity Project, 202-263-4448

150+ Baltimore Citizens and Environmental Groups Tell the Maryland PSC: Proposed Energy Answers waste-to-energy incinerator’s air pollution permit does not comply with the federal Clean Air Act

CURTIS BAY, BALTIMORE — A proposed trash-incinerating power plant in Curtis Bay does not meet standards required under the federal Clean Air Act, according to environmental groups and over 150 Baltimore residents in comments submitted today to the Maryland Public Service Commission (PSC). 

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Dominion’s latest greenhouse gas belcher = more extreme weather

Every minute of every day, as Virginians turn on lights and computers and air conditioners, the new power plant in Wise County will send on average 10 tons of greenhouse gases into the already overheated atmosphere. That’s 605 tons an hour, a fearsome 5.3 million tons a year. That’s because last month, Dominion Virginia Power turned on its massive new facility that burns coal but includes zero technology for controlling the carbon-dioxide emissions that contribute to heating the planet.

Estimates are that this 585-megawatt facility will increase Virginia’s output of carbon dioxide to more than that of New Jersey, which has 1 million more people than Virginia. The commonwealth will also have the odious distinction of having one of the last coal plants to come online in this country — odious because its emissions far exceed inevitable federal regulations designed to capture power plant pollutants that are baking the planet and wrecking the climate.

Dominion’s timing in firing up this plant couldn’t be more poignant or distressing for Virginians. Less than two weeks before the plant went online, more than a million homes and businesses in the commonwealth lost power for days after a sudden and deadly “derecho” that was fueled along its 600-mile course by energy from an intense heat wave that stretched from Illinois to Washington. No one storm or heat wave can be directly linked to climate change, but scientists say that burning coal and other fossil fuels traps heat in the atmosphere, which in turn can trigger record-breaking temperatures, droughts, forest fires and extreme storms like this summer’s deadly onslaught. In May, for example, the contiguous United States experienced the “warmest spring, warmest year-to-date, and warmest 12-month period the nation has experienced since recordkeeping began in 1895,” the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reported.

So, Dominion better hire more linemen and a bigger PR team, because more extreme weather and resulting outages are forecast in the years ahead.

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Take a bow big oil

Virginia is an important state in this year’s elections. On the presidential side, both President Obama and Governor Romney desperately want to carry the state. Virginia is also home to one of the nation’s most closely watched senate race as two former governors Kaine and Allen vie for the open seat.

Because Virginia is receiving so much political attention, numerous candidates for office are pandering, err, talking to voters on the campaign trail. In Virginia, energy issues are beginning to dominate the political sphere. Within that sphere, big oil is making its mark.

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ODEC Puts Plans for Coal Plant on Ice

Wise Energy for Virginia

Appalachian Voices ■ Chesapeake Climate Action Network ■ Sierra Club Virginia Chapter ■ Southern Appalachian Mountain Stewards ■ Southern Environmental Law Center

For Immediate Release: August 9, 2012

Contact: Mike McCoy, Appalachian Voices (434) 293-6373 | Beth Kemler, Chesapeake Climate Action Network (804) 335-0915 | Glen Besa, Sierra Club Virginia Chapter (804) 387-6001 | Cale Jaffe, Southern Environmental Law Center (434) 977-4090 | Laura Miller, Southern Appalachian Mountain Stewards (504) 874-1043

ODEC Puts Plans for Coal Plant On Ice
Clean energy groups rejoice but vow to stay vigilant

Dendron, Va. — On behalf of thousands of Virginians who opposed plans for what would have been one of the state’s biggest polluting power plants, the Wise Energy for Virginia Coalition today rejoiced at news that Old Dominion Electric Cooperative is suspending plans for its proposed coal plant in Hampton Roads.

Coalition member groups said they hope to work with ODEC to implement programs and projects that provide cleaner, more affordable and climate-friendly sources of energy for its customers, but pledged to keep a close eye on the utility to ensure it does not revive the coal plant idea in the future.

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