What if Virginia’s great coastal communities basically disappeared? No naval base in Norfolk. No tourism in Virginia Beach. No shipyards in Portsmouth and Newport News.
Why imagine this? Because scientists say it could happen. Six feet of sea-level rise from climate change could inundate the Virginia coastal region in coming decades, triggering a full-blown economic and human safety crisis that will affect the entire state, from Southside to Richmond to Northern Virginia.
But here’s the good news: We can fight back. This fall, CCAN is launching a brand-new campaign to pass a game-changing piece of legislation—called the Virginia Coastal Protection Act. This bill would reduce greenhouse gas emissions in Virginia while generating billions of dollars in funds to protect coastal Virginia and invest in clean energy.
Now we need you to tell your legislators in Richmond to support this common-sense, vitally important legislation.
Sign the petition: Call on your legislators to support the Virginia Coastal Protection Act, a bill that will cap statewide greenhouse gas pollution while funding vital coastal flooding solutions.
Did you know the Navy is trying to rapidly elevate its major piers in Norfolk due to rising water? Meanwhile, churches in downtown Norfolk are trying to relocate—rather than wade into Sundayservices—and engineers say the city needs $1 billion for floodgates and other measures to hold back the water.
Where will the money come from for Norfolk and other the other coastal cities and counties of Hampton Roads? Congress is in gridlock and the Virginia state budget is being squeezed.
That’s where the Virginia Coastal Protection Act comes in. The bill would direct Virginia to join a nine-state system for capping carbon pollution from power plants, called the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI), which is already in place from Maine to Maryland. By auctioning carbon pollution permits to power companies, RGGI would generate over $200 million per year for Virginia—while cutting planet-heating pollution.
No less than 50 percent of the revenues raised under the bill would fund coastal flood protection measures. The other half would be invested in other climate solutions—like solar power development statewide, as well as investments in energy efficiency and the retraining of displaced workers in areas like Southwest Virginia.
Sign the petition: Call on your state legislators to support the Virginia Coastal Protection Act, a bill that will cap statewide greenhouse gas pollution while funding coastal flooding solutions.
This bill is good for the entire state of Virginia. By reducing pollution from dirty power plants statewide, it will dramatically clean up our air. Plus, many observers believe that joining RGGI is the most cost-effective way for Virginia to comply with the new federal carbon rules issued last June, which mandate cuts in carbon emissions from power plants in all 50 states.
This is a win, win, win for Virginia. And now it’s time to make it reality.
Please help us pass the Virginia Coastal Protection Act. We’ll keep you posted as the bill advances, and we’ll let you know how you can stay involved.
After Maryland's election, we're going on offense
There’s no sugarcoating it: Tuesday’s election created new obstacles in our fight for climate solutions in Maryland. Governor-elect Larry Hogan questions the basic science of global warming. He also supports fracking and opposes key state policies promoting clean energy.
So what should we do? We could all have a long cry and feel sorry for our state. OR … we could raise our voices even louder and organize even harder for climate solutions. I say we double down on what we believe in. Here’s the truth: We still have big majorities of legislators in both chambers in Annapolis who understand the science of climate change and want to do something about it.
So why go on defense? Let’s go on offense!
Let’s DOUBLE our state’s commitment to carbon-free energy with new legislation in the next six months. And let’s keep reckless fracking out of our state at the same time—no matter who is our governor.
Sign this letter to Senate President Mike Miller, House Speaker Mike Busch and Governor-elect Larry Hogan. Tell them to work together to enact legislation in 2015 to double our state’s use of wind and solar power, and urge them to protect our land from dangerous fracking.
Here’s another truth: Despite Larry Hogan’s election, there’s plenty of room for optimism on energy policies in Maryland. That’s because we’ve been in this exact same position before—and won transformative victories—under the last Republican governor in our state.
Nearly ten years ago, under then Gov. Bob Ehrlich, climate activists like you helped pass the Maryland Healthy Air Act to dramatically reduce power plant pollution. And you helped pass Maryland’s original clean electricity mandate (a.k.a. the “Renewable Portfolio Standard”). Governor Ehrlich, who did not embrace global warming as a priority, signed both bills into law thanks to the commitment, sweat, and passion of people like you.
So what can we do under Governor Hogan? Again, let’s pass a transformative bipartisan bill to DOUBLE the state’s commitment to wind and solar power. Right now our state—by law—will require 20% of Maryland’s electricity to come from clean sources by the year 2022. Let’s double it to 40% instead by the year 2025. Such a bill, passed now, will create thousands of jobs and save thousands of lives while dramatically reducing carbon pollution across Maryland. And we can do it.
Sign this letter to Senate President Mike Miller, House Speaker Mike Busch and Governor-elect Larry Hogan. Tell them to work together to enact legislation in 2015 to double our state’s use of wind and solar power, and urge them to protect our land from dangerous fracking.
The fact is that no governor can afford to veto all or even most of the important bills passed by an opposition legislature. The most popular bills, supported by the most vocal advocates, are likely to get signed. Again, witness Bob Ehrlich from 2003-2007. And remember: legislators who have shown they are willing to act on climate change—including Democrats and some Republicans alike—still control the Senate and House in Annapolis by veto-proof majorities.
In other words, game on.
Finally, as Marylanders, we simply can not allow gas companies to frack recklessly across our state—no matter who is governor. Period. It’s bad for the climate. It’s bad for communities. Some of the most inspiring news from Tuesday’s elections is that cities and counties from coast to coast passed fracking bans and other restrictions that now inspire the rest of us to fight harder with every creative tool at our disposal.
Our planet continues to warm, regardless of who won on Tuesday. The latest report from the world’s top scientists warns that we will see “irreversible” impacts from climate change unless we do our part to fight back now!
In Maryland, it’s time to speed up, not slow down. Are you with me? Sign the letter to our state leaders and stay tuned for updates from CCAN as we prepare to make history in 2015.
Resources:
Forward with 40%: Double Maryland’s clean power by 2025.
Press Release: Wading into Baltimore’s rising waters, coalition launches campaign to pass nation-leading clean energy legislation. October 17, 2014.
Take Action:
Tell the Maryland Legislature: Let’s Double our Renewable Energy!
Sign Up to Volunteer: Fight for 40% Clean Power.
In the News:
Groups wade in to double Maryland’s ‘clean power’ goal. The Baltimore Sun. October 17, 2014.
Environmental Activists In Md. Pressing For Clean Energy. CBS Baltimore. October 17, 2014.
Dominion Admits the Truth: Cove Point Plant Could Explode, Trapping Neighbors
Finally, Dominion Resources is admitting the truth: Its massive gas export facility in southern Maryland could indeed blow up and threaten innocent nearby neighbors. In fact, Dominion is now planning to build an emergency evacuation road to help some – but not all – of the potentially trapped victims.
For the last couple years, Dominion has sworn up and down on its stack of documents that its Cove Point fracked-gas export plant in southern Maryland would pose zero threat to families nearby. In fact, in a brazen open letter to the community, Dominion wrote: “As the federal safety review found, in the unlikely event of an emergency at the terminal, it would pose no threat to those outside the facility’s boundaries.”
Now, however, just a week after federal regulators signed off on this titanic project September 29th (with court challenges to come), Dominion has announced an “enhancement” to its plans: a new escape road that the company would build for some of the vulnerable nearby residents of Lusby, Maryland. Totally voluntarily, of course. Just to be good neighbors.
This little road is a de facto Dominion admission that the vapor-cloud-fireball accident that can’t possibly happen could happen after all. In addition, a few days later, Dominion submitted a Cove Point evacuation plan, listing emergencies “with the potential for offsite impact” and “that could require an evacuation of the surrounding areas.” Those emergencies include an uncontrolled leak, fire involving natural gas product, and rupture of a gas pipeline.
VIDEO: Learn why Lusby residents fear for their safety
The company has been deceiving residents since Day 1 about the safety of this facility. Because, of course, Dominion can’t possibly provide assurances to residents living nearby. It can’t guarantee that an accident will stay behind the 60-foot-high wall that will go up around much of the plant. It refuses to conduct a full safety study requested by neighbors and it certainly can’t defy the laws of physics and contain leaking and billowing gases in search of a spark.
Not that this little road will create safe passage for those living southeast of the plant, as it is still within a half-mile of Dominion’s front gate. A 2006 study done for an expansion at the existing import plant found that a flash fire could incinerate people nearly a mile away. Dominion’s behind-the-scenes purchase on Sept. 19 of a $319,000 house to create a bypass south of the plant offers only false security while simultaneously confirming the very hazard the company denies.
Lusby residents have been right all along. They have turned their lives over to research. They have pleaded for protection from elected and appointed officials. They have pointed out that Dominion documents overlook 39,732 residents living in the area, including 8,000 within 2 miles of the company gates. For their efforts, they have received only platitudes about safety. With Dominion’s revelations about this road, residents know their fears for their lives and their homes are justified.
And shame on elected officials, including Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley, Rep. Steny Hoyer, U.S. Sens. Barbara Mikulski and Ben Cardin, for backing this Virginia energy company instead of Maryland residents. This little road shows that officials should have stood on the side of safety and of their citizens, just as many did in 2009. Then, Gov. O’Malley, Sen. Mikulski and Sen. Cardin were key to blocking a liquefied natural gas (LNG) import plant at Sparrows Point in Baltimore. They rebuked the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) for rubberstamping AES Corp.’s plans. Residents and officials alike were concerned about the risk of explosions, terrorist threats and harm to the Chesapeake Bay. AES dropped the project in 2013, just as Lusby residents were learning of Dominion’s plans for their community.
Lusby residents can be forgiven for their cynicism and sense of betrayal.
At this point, the most appropriate next step is a thorough investigation and analysis of all risks involved, something residents have long called for and FERC has so far refused to authorize. Otherwise, we will never know why Dominion, just days after FERC’s approval, is suddenly offering a limited bypass road — a gesture both distracting and utterly inadequate for an “offsite impact” from uncontrolled leaks, fires, and gas line ruptures.
Short of that, the only humane and ethical path forward is for Dominion to buy all homes within at least a mile of the plant — a solution that has precedent. Last year, Freeport LNG in Texas offered to buy, at market rate plus $25,000, all 73 homes in Quintana, a small beach town where escape is blocked by yet another FERC-approved export plant.
The Cove Point export plant is a disaster for the economy, the climate, the Chesapeake Bay, and communities in the way of fracking, pipelines and compressor stations. But the most immediate danger is to Lusby residents. This little road proves that residents have been correct and Dominion has been misleading all along.
Cove Point: Feds give flawed approval. We keep fighting.
On Monday, at 7:40 p.m., the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) announced its final order approving this radical, fracked-gas export facility proposed along the Chesapeake Bay in southern Maryland.
Despite mounds of testimony and scientific data showing this $3.8 billion facility would incentivize harmful fracking throughout our region and bring unconscionable safety risks to nearby communities, FERC refused to even conduct an environmental impact statement for the project. Despite a study from the U.S. Department of Energy showing that gas exports are likely worse than coal for global warming over the next 20 years, FERC didn’t even try to quantify the project’s climate impacts before lending its rubber stamp.
In other words, the FERC decision on Cove Point is a giant lie — and we will challenge it. In the same way that TransCanada lies about the harms of the Keystone XL tar sands pipeline, FERC lies about Cove Point. In the same way that Peabody Coal lies about the harms of mountaintop removal mining, FERC lies about Cove Point. The secretive, truth-hiding collaboration between FERC and its gas-industry partner Dominion Resources (the energy bully and would-be builder of Cove Point), is an affront to every child, parent, and grandparent on this planet.
Which is why we are NOT going to stop fighting against Cove Point — from the streets to the courts. We’re just moving to the legal phase now. And we’ll move to the next phase and the next after that. And how could we stop fighting anyway?
There were 400,000 people in New York City just ten days ago, with a roar and a mass so big I’m sure satellites picked it up in outer space. The People’s Climate March, with babies wearing windmill crowns and senior citizens wearing “Stop Fracking” buttons, signaled that a new day is dawning in America. We’re the movement we’ve always been waiting for! We’re here. We’re big. And we’re going to win. Which means we have no time for a worse-than-coal export facility for fracked gas in Maryland. The FERC approval is a momentary setback. It’s just a prelude to the legal battle just ahead. CCAN and our partners will likely sue soon, demanding a proper and thorough environmental impact statement as our right by law.
What can you do right away to keep fighting? Here’s what:
1. Join the rapid response demonstration that CCAN and our allies are planning outside the FERC headquarters in Washington, DC this Friday.
Or, if you’re a Southern Marylander, join a solidarity demonstration Friday outside the Dominion Cove Point site in Lusby.
And if you live in Maryland:
2. Mark your calendar and join a statewide conference call on Wednesday, October 8th at 7 p.m. We’ll plot next steps on Cove Point, including how to stop all gas exports by flooding our state – and soon the planet – with solar panels and wind turbines. Join the call October 8th and learn more.
Meanwhile, at a moment like this, it’s important to thank your friends and hold your opponents accountable. The FERC decision on Monday is a setback. There’s no hiding that. It’s a massive failure of federal regulatory responsibility. And it’s a failure of political leadership. That failure starts with President Obama who, despite a world hurdling past 400 parts per million carbon in the atmosphere, has embraced a ludicrous energy policy of “all of the bove.” That explicitly includes fracking and fracked-gas exports despite the science showing such gas dooms his own children. Are the gas-industry donations to Democratic Party campaigns really worth that?
The failure continues with Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley. Despite the pleas of Calvert County Maryand residents near Cove Point, the Governor never ordered a comprehensive safety study to protect local citizens from accidental explosions at Cove Point. In fact, O’Malley literally fell asleep during a hearing on safety with citizen witnesses testifying just 30 feet across from him. Shame.
The failure continues with southern Maryland congressman Steny Hoyer and US Senators Ben Cardin and Barbara Mikulski. All three refused to publicly oppose this economically and environmentally harmful project. Indeed, none of them even called publicly for an environmental impact statement despite the pleas of voters and newspapers like The Baltimore Sun. Shame.
But as much bad behavior as there’s been in this Cove Point fight, there has been good behavior from citizen angels all across this region. Among others, many thanks to: Citizen Shale, Sierra Club, Chesapeake Physicians for Social Responsibility, Calvert Citizens for a Healthy Community, Waterkeepers everywhere, Food and Water Watch, Maryland Environmental Health Network, Maryland League of Women Voters, 350.org, Labor Network for Sustainability, Environmental Action, Burks Gas Truth, and many, many, many more groups and individuals.
I can’t wait to work with you in the coming days and months to keep fighting for clean energy — not Dominion’s disaster at Cove Point — and to keep the spirit of the 400,000-stong New York City climate march alive and growing!
On we go,
Mike Tidwell
Director, Chesapeake Climate Action Network
Click here to read our joint press statement in response to FERC’s decision.
Letter from the Director: Why I'm an optimist
Dear CCAN supporters,
They say you have to be an optimist to be an activist. So I guess I’m an optimist. Despite the admittedly dark days and setbacks that come with fulltime campaigning on global warming, I know that a totally clean-energy world is within our grasp in our lifetimes. I believe this with every fiber in my body. So yeah, I’m an optimist. And you should be too! Read through to the end of my column to see why.
But first, let’s not sugarcoat things. After a long career in journalism, I founded CCAN in 2002 because I had come to realize that nothing else – nothing – was as important as fighting global warming. We could cure cancer tomorrow but we won’t have good health if malaria spreads and heat waves and droughts leave us malnourished. We could end all wars forever, and we won’t have peace if warming-induced Frankenstorms like Sandy and Katrina batter our coastal cities. A wise scientist once said, “Climate is destiny. Change your climate and you change everything.”
Each time I read or hear of some new natural-world weirdness I look for the fingerprints of climate change and they are almost always there. The massive algae bloom in Lake Erie that recently contaminated the drinking water of more than 400,000 people in the Toledo, Ohio region? It wasn’t the heat this time. It was, according to a state official, the incredible increase in “extreme rain events” that have recently plagued Ohio. Scientists confirm that measurable and growing extreme precipitation events are being triggered by global warming in much of the country. A warmer atmosphere holds more moisture. But what goes up eventually must come down. And we’re learning that it tends to come down in bursts. Those bursting rain events this summer have swept record amounts of livestock waste and agricultural fertilizer into Lake Erie during concentrated periods of time that have in turn triggered unprecedented algae blooms that knocked out the drinking water to nearly half a million Ohioans.
Of course, similar disruptive events related to climate change are happening worldwide. A draft report from the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, just released this week, states that climate change is now “severe” and “pervasive” and some characteristics of it are “irreversible.” The report is the scientific community’s starkest and most strongly worded warning yet of the dangers that lie ahead unless we act.
And so we must act. CCAN has never been busier in the fight to reduce carbon pollution in our region. We continue to battle the ridiculous and destructive proposal to build a fracked gas export facility at Cove Point in Maryland. We’re fighting drilling and new gas pipelines across the region. And we push just as hard for clean-energy solutions like offshore wind in Virginia and a mandatory doubling of clean electricity in Maryland.
But here’s the main reason — in addition to the historic People’s Climate March — that you should be an optimist despite the UN report and water contamination in Ohio and all the rest. On July 30th, prominent U.S. Congressman Chris Van Hollen (D-Md) introduced The Healthy Climate and Family Security Act of 2014. I’ve never seen a more just and affective piece of legislation aimed at “de-carbonizing” the American economy. The Van Hollen bill puts a strong and transparent cap on carbon emissions, forces polluters to pay for any harm they do to the atmosphere, and rebates the collected money on a quarterly basis to every single American with a social security number. This idea could WORK. The Washington Post and Baltimore Sun agree. Now it’s our job to build a climate movement that persuades Congress and our President to embrace this policy before it’s too late.
Learn more about the Van Hollen bill at www.climateandprosperity.org. And stay tuned for exciting action alerts from CCAN throughout the autumn.
Your optimist,
Mike Tidwell
Rite of Passage
This is a feature story in the summer issue of Orion magazine.
Sometimes travel is mandated, sometimes it is endured, but often it is undertaken for the sheer pleasure of seeing new places or visiting old friends. Sometimes we travel on foot, sometimes by plane, sometimes all it takes is a book or a good imagination to carry us away. What does travel mean, and how does it shape the course of a day or a lifetime? This spring’s double issue of Orion includes a special section exploring the idea of the journey, and we’re pleased to share one of the features with you here. To read the full special section, six features in all, subscribe to Orion and let the journey begin.
ABOVE THE ROCK canyon wall, the sun winks into morning view, drowsy and golden. The light pours onto the mute Rio Grande, soon finding our tent just yards from the bank. The slanting rays gradually find the sleeping face of my son, Sasha.
He’s fifteen years old. Not quite a man, but almost. We’ll be visiting colleges this time next year. He’s not a boy, either, although he looks consummately boyish in the innocence of slumber. I see the Little Leaguer in his face, and the kindergartener. In sleep we catch the last youthful poses of our children.
And at this moment, I wonder yet again why I brought Sasha to this wilderness place. Part of the answer is simple. I’ve traveled the world—the Amazon, the Serengeti, the Alps—and for me this is the most haunting and beautiful landscape on earth. We are in absolute backcountry: the Chihuahuan Desert canyons of “Big Bend Country,” literally that giant bend of the Rio Grande that separates west Texas from northern Mexico. The same sun washing over Sasha’s closed eyes is rousing the cliff swallows into song two hundred feet away. Around us, a million desert flowers go all electric in late-March bloom—red ocotillo, purple verbena, the magenta blossoms of cholla cacti. In the riverbank shallows, a longnose gar sloshes though the willow grass, hunting frogs.
Quietly, I slip out of the tent and catch a glimpse of a desert hawk winging hundreds of feet overhead, above the canyon. From up there, that hawk can see the nearby Chisos Mountains to the northwest, towering to nearly eight thousand feet with the deep-green cover of alpine woodlands. Below the peaks, that hawk can see the vast expanse of desert floor, all cactus and scrub, spreading north, south, east, west. And arching through it all is the pale green ribbon of the Rio Grande. But what that hawk doesn’t see are very many human beings.
I discovered the place fourteen years ago by accident. A newspaper editor asked me to visit Big Bend National Park, the twelve-hundred-square-mile jewel on the Texas side. The editor’s question: Why do so few Americans visit this most lovely of places? The reporter’s answer: It’s at the end of the earth, not on the way to anywhere, and surrounded on three sides by harsh and hostile Mexican desert.
But it’s beautiful. Shockingly so. And therein lies the problem in bringing my son—still-sleeping Sasha—to this place. It seems almost cruel. So many of the living things we’re here to celebrate, all across this landscape, are stressed out, dying, or migrating away from here. Like politics, all global warming is local. By roasting our common atmosphere with greenhouse gases, we bring chaotic change to regional ecosystems like the Big Bend region. Here scientists and fifth-generation ranchers and native people all tell the same story: unimaginable recent heat waves, freakish cold snaps and, above all, drought.
Just since I was last here—when Sasha was in diapers back home in Maryland—the place has changed. The pinyon pines in the Chisos range had not yet experienced “mass mortality” due to chronic lack of water. And the lechuguilla, a signature species of the desert, had not yet been flash frozen in huge numbers during the unheard-of cold spell of 2012. When Sasha is my age, fifty-one, this ecosystem will almost certainly be a distant memory, barring some global clean-energy miracle in the next few years, a rescue that seems less likely with each passing month of international inaction and domestic denial. So I struggle: Is this healthy? Is it right what I’m doing here, bringing Sasha to this place?
That morning in the canyon light, I’m bird-watching from the riverbank when the brightening day finally wakes up Sasha. “Hey, what’s for breakfast?” he asks. I hear his sleeping bag unzipping, his teenage voice turning to his favorite teenage subject: food. “Eggs and tortillas,” I say. “Outstanding,” comes the reply.
Within an hour we’ll be in a canoe, paddling through this still-rich land where the lechuguilla and pinyon pines are trying their best to recover and the roadrunners and tarantulas and mountain lions are all still here in good numbers, despite recent climate shocks. The Big Bend region, like the Amazon rainforest and the Great Barrier Reef, is an incomprehensively vast ecosystem still teeming with the life of the Holocene and our nearly twelve-thousand-year run of stable climate. Over 450 species of birds—more than in any other U.S. park—still live or pass through Big Bend National Park.
But we’re not voyeurs here, drawn to that shortsighted product of the global travel industry, see-it-while-you-can tourism. We’re here to see it, yes. While we still can, yes. And to bond in the delights of desert camping. But for me there are deeper, more elusive motivations. I have come to the place I love most in the world, with the person I love most, in order to . . . what? Apologize? Ask for forgiveness? Find some new hope in an unexpected fresh insight? All of the above? What, basically, do we say to our kids in the face of astonishing loss in the natural world? How much of that loss do we even want them to know about, to discover and love, as it changes and exits? What do we owe our kids? What do we owe these places? How do we even talk about all this?
WHEN SASHA WAS four years old, in 2001, I walked away from a twenty-year journalism career to become a full-time activist on global warming. The transition was not easy for him or me. I launched a nonprofit organization, raised money, hired staff, and worked nearly nonstop. Frequently reporters would call me at night or on weekends to discuss the latest terrifying scientific study on Arctic ice melt or rising storms. More than once I hung up the phone only to finally notice my little boy, fire truck in hand, looking up at me from somewhere in the room. “Are we all going to die, Daddy?” he’d ask.
“No way,” I’d say, swooping down for a hug. “No way. We’re going to fix this thing, I promise.” And off he’d go, building another Lego house, with windows and chimneys and always—always—lots of solar panels on the roof, just like our house. He assumed all homes had solar power. He assumed all dads talked on the phone about the end of the world, and then said not to worry.
It was a schizophrenic time, those early days of parenting and climate activism. I tried to manage Sasha’s relationship with nature, discouraging him from watching in-depth nature programs on TV, not wanting him to fall too much in love with all that. But we also hiked and camped and fished, a lot. I took him to the woods whenever I could. It’s my passion. And all his life Sasha heard me talk about Big Bend country. About this desert ideal in faraway Texas, and how I was going to take him there one day.
And then that day came. Sophomore year of high school. Spring break. Better go now before girls and college and career intervene. So we loaded up the backpacks, bought carbon offsets for the long trip, and boarded a flight at Reagan National. New sunglasses dangled from straps around our necks. High above the plains of central Texas, however, with nary a cloud below our plane, I realize something: I don’t have a plan for unspooling the big messages I had assumed—and hoped—would come from this trip. Thankfully, they began unspooling themselves.
“Look at that,” Sasha says, pointing to hundreds of pumpjack oil wells spread thousands of feet below us.
“Nineteenth-century energy,” I tell him.
“And what’s that?” he asks, pointing to an apparent matrix of rocket launchers.
“Fracking for gas,” I say. “Twentieth-century energy.”
And then, further west, I spot the series of awesome white lines, full of spinning giant blades. “Your century, Sasha,” I say, as the wind farms pass below our plane, working with haughty gracefulness in the Texas breeze. “Yours.”
We finally land in El Paso, along the northern edge of the Chihuahuan Desert, and head southeast by car. Tiny ranch towns soon give way to nothing but creosote bush and towering yucca, dust devils and lost burros. When the two-lane state roads finally run out five hours later, we enter Big Bend National Park. And it’s everything I remember.
“Did I exaggerate? Did I exaggerate?” I ask my son. He’s too busy shooting photos to talk much. The camera spoke softly, click after click, as giant agave plants float into view in golden, brittle poses. Then come the arroyos, violently beautiful in the distance, carved by a million flash floods. Then the Chisos Mountains, phantomlike, forested, painted in shadows. Click. Click. Click. And then swaths of red-blooming Indian paintbrush, punctuated with javelina tracks and the den doors of a strange desert rat that miraculously never, ever, drinks water. “You did not exaggerate,” Sasha says.
The camera’s clicking is a memory cue for me, reminding me of a speech Bill McKibben gave in 2005, addressing a group of climate activists gathered at Middlebury College. “Fight like hell,” Bill told us. “But be a witness, too. Go see the whales, the rainforests. There’s no guarantee we’ll save them all. Memorize this great world, the one we were born into. Tell others in the future. Their mistakes might be fewer if they know the greatness we once saw.” This had always been a central if unspoken part of this trip to Texas, of course. And it explained most of the trips to the woods during Sasha’s childhood. Be a witness, my child. Don’t forget these things.
And so on our first full day at Big Bend National Park, we race to the top of the highest mountain, Emory Peak, and toss off our backpacks. There, from nearly eight thousand feet, we look down on an absolute kingdom. It tumbles and flows below us, down from a crown of pinyon pines to a robe of scrub oaks and desert flowers to a labyrinthine floor of cactuses stretching to the Rio Grande and off into Mexico. We are at the summit, Sasha and I, at last, where mountain lions roam amid rare Carmen Mountain white-tailed deer.
And if only it had ended right there—if only the story had been exclusively about life that day, and not also death. But the path back down the mountain does not lie. It meanders past bright-orange metal signs put there by rangers: FIRE DANGER EXTREME and HIGH RISK OF WILDFIRE. Sasha photographs these too. Click. Click.
The first decade of the twenty-first century was one of the driest in Texas since record-keeping began. And 2011 was the driest single year of all for many parts of west Texas. Like a vise, the trend of severe drought, intensifying over the last half century, is clamping down here. Scientists say rising temperatures are to blame. The hotter it gets, the greater the evaporation, sucking moisture and life right out of the land.
I hear the sound of cracking twigs and crumbling pine bark under our boots as we walk through our first long stretch of dead woodlands that day. It is worse than a graveyard. The bodies are unburied: bleached pinyon torsos countless and eerie all around us. They fill narrow valleys and cover the tops of foothills in vast patches amid the still-green survivors. The dieback of these pines is happening all across the American West, affecting everything from black-chinned hummingbirds to black bears. At the edge of one maze of dead trees, we break for water. I had worked up a little speech for years. “Remember when you were little,” I say to Sasha, “and how I always told you we were going to solve global warming?”
“Yeah,” he says. I pause and then tell him, for the first time, about McKibben’s speech. Sasha is ready, I figure. Fifteen years old. “The wind farms just aren’t coming fast enough,” I say. “We’re going to lose a lot on this earth.”
But like Santa Claus and sex, we both know he’s understood the truth long before. It’s good to have it out of the way, nonetheless. “Yeah, I know,” he says, packing up his camera, ready for the final hike down to camp. “And I’ll remember,” he says. “I’ll remember.”
SASHA IS A WONDERFUL son: honor student, junior varsity baseball pitcher, Eagle Scout. Best of all, right now, he’s totally into this intense and adventurous trip west with his dad. But he’s still a teenager. Ten months earlier, right before turning fifteen, he told his mom and me not to bother getting him a birthday present if it wasn’t an iPhone. If we loved him, he said, we’d get him one. So we got him an iPhone.
After sunset, lying on our backs below a brilliant desert night sky, billions of stars above, the hallelujahs fill my ears as if from a choir. Sasha and I are side by side, stunned into silence by the celestial display. And his phone has no signal. None. Blessedly. For the entire week. Same with mine.
So we are able to float, undisturbed, into the infinity of outer space. That’s what it feels like on a moonless night in west Texas. It’s not stargazing here. A dense curtain of brilliant dots is pulled from horizon to horizon, each dot saying, “Touch me. Touch me.” At night, lying here on your back, you are in outer space. We spy a blinking satellite. We find Saturn, Orion’s belt, and Cancer. Ursa Major leads us to Polaris, the North Star. “Whoa!” I say, pointing to another impossibly long shooting star.
It’s midway through our journey, and this has always been part of the plan: to show Sasha the best star display in America and perhaps the world. It’s a counterweight—timeless, cosmic—to the earthbound challenges and intermittent sadness of this one desert expanse on a tiny planet in a lonely solar system. I can feel the cool sand against my back. “Is it bad,” Sasha asks, “that I wish I were watching March Madness basketball right now?” He pulls out his phone. “Don’t you wish we could know the scores?”
IF YOU WANT to take the long view of matters here and yonder, then Ten Bits Ranch is one of those word-of-mouth places worth wandering into. A self-styled eco-refuge just outside the western border of Big Bend, it’s run by two geologists who are also amateur paleontologists and off-the-grid enthusiasts. Solar panels power the whole ranch, including the lamps in the cantina that light up an amazing collection of dinosaur bones under glass. There are vertebrae from duck-billed hadrosaurs and tail bones from mammoth Jurassic crocodiles, all found on the five hundred acres here. We’ve come to Ten Bits to wash up between camping trips and to learn about low-carbon life in the desert. But mostly we’ve come to explore a mysterious cliff dwelling on the property, used by Apache, Comanche, and older Archaic tribes for millennia.
It’s another cool, blue-sky morning in the desert when we leave our cabin, walking past bleached cattle skulls nailed to fence posts. The ancient Indian settlement is a quarter mile away, up a gentle slope along the southern side of a low mountain. Our hearts are pounding as we scramble past the final few boulders and red-blooming ocotillo to arrive at this unmarked and little-visited place. The shelter is simple and primitive, consisting of a long, deep rock overhang. But evidence of habitation is everywhere, including cylindrical mortars in the rock floor, worn in from centuries of pounding grain with hand-held pestles.
We stand on the ledge, facing the distant Rio Grande, and imagine the people who once lived here. The south-facing overhang was for winter shelter, anthropologists believe, offering protection from the cold north wind. In summer, it would have been too hot here, too exposed to sun. I think of all those people. All those winters. They slept, daydreamed, argued, laughed, made love, belched, snored, and cried right here—for thousands of years, with only a crude shelter from wind, a bad shelter from rain, and no shelter from cold.
Reflexively, I begin looking for an arrowhead. I always do whenever I think I have any chance. I scatter small rocks with my toe. I peek under boulders. I talk while I hunt, trying to stay on message. “The thing is,” I say to Sasha, “this climate change we’re seeing worldwide is going to affect more than just plants and animals pretty soon.” His teenager impatience starts coming through. “You’re about to tell me life is going to get hard for all people soon, aren’t you?”
“Well, yes.”
“But that civilization will carry on somehow, even if it’s hard. These cliff dwellers endured under hard conditions.”
“Yes,” I say.
“Well here’s what I don’t understand,” he grumbles, standing on the ledge and pointing to Ten Bits Ranch in the distance. “See all those solar panels?” There were eighteen of them, polycrystalline, big, providing three kilowatts of power, enough to run a kitchen, lamps, a water well, iPods, all in the middle of nowhere. “Why,” Sasha asked, “can’t ExxonMobil just become the Exxon of solar? Can’t these companies make a profit building solar farms?”
“Yes.”
“So why don’t they do it and just get off of oil?”
“Because Exxon can make more money with oil right now. Bigger profits.”
“So this whole thing—Katrina, Sandy, drought—is about Exxon making slightly higher profits for a few more years until god knows what happens to the climate?”
“Yes.”
“Dad, how are you losing this debate?”
“We’re not losing it,” I say. “We’re just not winning it fast enough.”
“What’s it going to take?” he asks. “Just what in the world is it going to take?”
“I don’t know,” I tell him. “I don’t know.” I keep saying it. Until I stop saying it.
“Holy cow!” I shout. The stone in my hand is not an imposter this time. It’s not a mere triangle-shaped rock with coincidental sharp edges. It’s an arrowhead. Carefully worked. Chipped, flaked, pointed. I found an arrowhead.
THE WEEK, too soon, roams to a close as we head back toward El Paso, our dusty tent and backpacks stuffed in the trunk. I feel a restlessness lift from me. I’ve finally done it. I’ve taken my son to this place. And now I’ll never come back here again. I know it. Not me. I have my memories. I love those memories. Why risk them with another return?
“What?!” Sasha exclaims when I tell him this. He’s appalled. “You’re crazy not to come back. I’m coming back. And I’m staying longer. As soon as I can.” From the passenger seat, he’s shooting some final desert photos.
And then I see it in his face. He has the same bug I’ve had for a decade and a half, but in a different way. He just finished touring a beautifully imperfect place. A place in transition. But he’s not sad. He’s not bummed out, perhaps despite my best efforts. He has a different starting point than I do. Born in 1997, all he’s known is a fast-changing, impermanent earth. So the world seems less fragile to him, I think. More elemental. Rock, sky, sand, life. It will all be here whenever he returns. And, if pressed, I think he would call that hope.
All About Unity: THANK YOU and Onward from the Stop Gas Exports Rally
Wow. On Sunday, the heat scorching the streets of DC was palpable. But, even more so, was the passion and power of our movement. THANKS to everyone who turned out to say NO to fracking, NO to gas exports at Cove Point, NO to runaway climate change, and YES to real clean energy solutions.
Click here to check out all the photos on Facebook, and share them to spread the word!
We know the gas industry is all about division — blasting apart the rock beneath our earth, running pipelines through our towns, and further disrupting our fragile climate — now to ship the gas overseas for higher profit.
On Sunday, we showed that our movement is all about unity. We converged from New York, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Ohio, Virginia, Louisiana, and beyond. We marched as people living upstream, downstream, and everywhere in between along the chain of impacts that would come from exporting fracked gas. Together, we made local and national news headlines1 — and we made history: the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission has, hands-down, NEVER seen over 1,000 people protesting at their doorstep! We sent a loud and clear message to President Obama and FERC that climate leaders don’t frack — and that we’ll be back.
Then, early the next morning, 25 brave activists added their own punctuation mark. After peacefully blockading the entrances to FERC headquarters for two hours, they were arrested demanding that FERC reject the liquefied natural gas (LNG) export facility proposed at Cove Point.
After such an inspiring few days of action, what’s the next step? First off, you can join the families of Calvert County, Maryland and demand an independent “quantitative risk assessment” of the worst-case explosion dangers of Dominion’s proposed Cove Point facility. FERC has refused to do this type of standard human risk study. Add your name to the petition calling on Governor Martin O’Malley to step in immediately and order one himself.
Beyond today, the immediate Cove Point campaign is likely to get tougher. We know it will take more than one or two powerful protests — or the record affordability of wind and solar power — to change the status quo at FERC or convince President Obama to reverse course on gas exports. This fight will almost certainly land in the courts, and involve more direct action in the streets. Stay tuned.
Ultimately, as we keep fighting together — and rocketing more stones of justice in Goliath’s direction — we do believe that we are winning. Ruth Tyson, the youngest speaker from the stage on Sunday, perhaps put it the best:
When I look out into this crowd, I see something a million times stronger than any current. I see something that Dominion [the company proposing to build Cove Point] should be afraid of. I see passion, commitment, hope, and love. … And because we all chose to stand up to a system of bullies and doubters and cowards, the direction of our current is changing.
Keep our current moving today: Click here to spread the word about Sunday’s powerful protest. Click here to sign the urgent safety study petition to Governor O’Malley.
Finally, click here to pitch in today and support CCAN as we continue building this people-powered movement.
–Much love from Mike Tidwell, Shilpa Joshi, Ted Glick, and the entire team at the Chesapeake Climate Action Network
1. Check out news coverage in WUSA TV, Politico, The Nation, Al Jazeera America, Reuters, EcoWatch (including Sandra Steingraber’s powerful speech), the Baltimore Sun, DeSmogBlog, and more!
Fracked Gas Exports: A Climate Disaster
Even as the facts about liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports get harder and harder to ignore, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) continues to bury its head in the sand. Last month, a Department of Energy study revealed that — even when using conservative estimates of harmful emissions — exports of US fracked gas to Asia provide absolutely no climate benefits for decades, if ever. In fact, exporting natural gas is worse for the climate over the next critical 20 years than if Asian countries burned coal overseas!
FERC wants to ignore this fact and rubber stamp the gas industry’s proposed export projects, but FERC is being met with a sea of opposition. Next week, opponents of FERC’s traditional cow-towing to fossil fuel interests will raise their voices on FERC’s doorstep using a tactic successfully employed by past social justice campaigns, ranging from women’s suffrage to civil rights: The picket line.
Each day during the week of June 23-27, from noon – 1:30pm, groups of concerned citizens from the region will descend upon FERC’s headquarters in downtown DC, just a block from Union Station. With signs and chants, we’ll highlight FERC’s wrongdoing in a whole new, unavoidable way — by picketing directly at their doorstep.
Sign up to join the first-ever DC picket line protesting Cove Point! Pick a day or two from 6/23-6/27, noon – 1:30pm outside of FERC headquarters in downtown DC.
And the timing couldn’t be more crucial. Earlier this year, President Obama made it clear that climate change is here now, and its impacts are already being felt across the nation and around the world. Then, on June 2nd, the Environmental Protection Agency released some of the most significant climate regulations we’ve seen yet, laying out requirements for each state to limit greenhouse gas emissions from power plants. The new regulations are an important step forward that could help promote the transition to cleaner energy across our region.
To achieve that switch, however, we need to address the 800 pound gorilla in the room: fracked natural gas. The studies are clear: a global shift to reliance on natural gas fracked from deep below the earth could be equally as bad, if not worse, for the climate than continued reliance on coal.
The natural gas industry has been selling the public a bill of goods. For years, they’ve tried to sell their product as a “bridge fuel,” a clean alternative to coal and oil. But now data from the DOE itself shows this is not true, especially when the gas exported to Asia. And FERC has yet to change course.
Enough is enough.
Join thousands of climate and anti-fracking activists on July 13th in an historic march on Washington on to say NO to FERC’s tradition of giving the gas industry what it wants at the expense of our climate, economy, and safety.
It’s abundantly clear that solving the climate crisis will require keeping gas in the ground — along with the tar sands, the coal and the oil.
The gas industry spends billions on ads touting natural gas as 50 percent cleaner than coal.Gas is cleaner only at the point of combustion. If you calculate the greenhouse gas pollution emitted at every stage of the production process — drilling, piping, compression, shipment to Asia — it’s just coal by another name.
Earlier this week, Karen Feridun of Berks Gas Truth wrote a great piece about the attendant risks that come with the increased fracking we know will result if any of the more than 20 proposed natural gas export facilities are built. Fracking poses safety risks to local communities as harmful chemicals are released into the air and water. It also triggers the start of a chain of climate pollution.
In the process of fracking, piping, and liquefying natural gas, the Environmental Protection Agency estimates that about 1.4% of natural gas escapes as methane into the atmosphere. Methane is 84 times more powerful at trapping heat in the atmosphere than CO2 over a 20-year time frame. Gas exports will increase the demand for fracking and transporting natural gas, meaning more and more climate polluting methane will be leaking into the atmosphere.
When you add it all up, gas export facilities like Dominion Resources’ proposed Cove Point plant would trigger global warming pollution that spells disaster for our climate; the cumulative, planet-heating emissions triggered would be equivalent to building more than 100 new coal plants or putting 78 million more cars on our roads.
But real alternatives exist. While we’re saying no to dirty fracked gas exports, Americans want to say yes to increasing our wind and solar power consumption and adopting policies committing us to more clean energy.
It’s time for the US to decide. Are we going to stay the course to a safe climate with bigger and better clean energy development, or are we going to move backward to dirty energy with fracked gas exports?
On Sunday, July 13th, here’s what’s happening: Tim DeChristopher, Sandra Steingraber, the Reverend Lennox Yearwood Jr., and anti-fracking activists by the thousands will gather for an historic national rally at the Capitol building. We’ll then march together — noisily, creatively, insistently — to the disgracefully pro-fracking Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC).
We need you there, too. Join Tim DeChristopher, Sandra Steingraber, and citizens like you to protest fracked gas exports — July 13th in DC.
Our message to President Obama and FERC is simple: Fracked gas is not clean and exported gas harms our climate. It’s time to leave the gas in the ground and move on to real solutions like wind and solar power.
June 2014 Virginia
Dear Virginians,
As we fight back against big polluters and a government that too often caters to them, it’s always exciting when we can report some good news. Earlier this spring, CCANers helped bring about a major clean energy victory that has national implications. After receiving thousands of emails from people across the country, Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley vetoed a bill that would have killed the largest utility-scale wind power farm currently under development in Maryland, all because of totally resolvable military radar testing concerns. The veto clears the path for development of a $1 billion wind power industry across Maryland’s Eastern Shore region.
While we celebrate this move towards clean energy, we continue to resist a massive dirty energy threat: Dominion Resources’ proposed fracked gas export facility at Cove Point. Just two weeks ago, a federal study showed that U.S. gas exports to Asia would likely be worse than burning coal for the atmosphere over the next 20 years. Worse! But the White House and Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) still aren’t getting the message.
As decisions near this summer, we’re gearing up to send a strong message to Washington. Here are two actions you can take:
- On Thursday, June 26 at 8 pm, dial in to the National Call to Stop Fracked Gas Exports to learn more about the July 13th mass rally in Washington. Rev. Lennox Yearwood, scientist Tony Ingraffea, Pennsylvania no-fracking leader Karen Feridun, and more will join this conference call at 559-726-1200 and code 776632.
- Sign up to protest at the Capitol and march to FERC’s headquarters on July 13th. Join me and activists from across the mid-Atlantic and beyond for this first-of-its-kind national gathering against fracked gas exports.
Our movement is bigger than ever just as our action now is more critical than ever. In response to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s flawed Environmental Assessment for Cove Point, Americans submitted more than 150,000 comments to FERC saying no to Cove Point. That record number of comments for a fracked gas export project let FERC know that the public wants clean energy — not dirty, dangerous gas exports.
The major bright spot in recent weeks came when President Obama’s administration released the nation’s first mandatory limits on carbon pollution from power plants. While the rules aren’t as strong as the science shows is needed, they are a welcome shift toward meaningful climate action out of Washington. CCAN will be working to ensure they are implemented in a way that speeds the transition to clean energy — not more fracked gas — in our region.
Here are even more ways you can take action with CCAN this summer…
VIRGINIA: Join the Virginia Summer Activist Call with CCANers from around the state on Monday, June 30th at 7pm. We’ll recap our spring successes and talk about how we’ll push even further for climate solutions in Virginia this summer. From collecting thousands of petitions to the State Corporation Commission, to creatively exposing Dominion’s greenwashing at Earth Day festivals, to earning unprecedented investor support for climate resolutions at Dominion’s annual shareholder meeting, we’ve hit Dominion where the company is most vulnerable — its public image and it’s bottom line — thanks to activists like you. RSVP here for our first statewide call of the summer!
DC/NATIONAL: Join the Climate Ride! This year, from September 20th – 24th, 2014, CCAN board members and staffers will take part in a five-day bike ride from New York City to the Capitol steps in DC. Learn more about the ride and sign up here to join us!
MARYLAND: Join the conference call June 26 at 8 PM eastern time to hear from leaders in the movement to stop gas exports and learn the latest on the July 13th mass rally in Washington. Join in at the time of the call by dialing 559-726-1200 and using code 776632. Speakers will include scientist Tony Ingraffea, Pennsylvania no-fracking leader Karen Feridun, Hip Hop Caucus president Rev. Lennox Yearwood, Food & Water Watch leader Emily Wurth, and myself. You’ll be able to ask questions and learn more about the exciting role you can play in attending the rally in Washington.
These last few months have made it clear; we have a lot to do. That’s why, on July 13th, thousands of Americans will converge in Washington DC to send a strong message to FERC: Stop Gas Exports and Stop Cove Point. Learn more about the biggest event to date in the fight to stop Cove Point and sign up to be a part of it here.
Onward,
Mike Tidwell
June 2014 D.C. and National
Dear CCANers,
As we fight back against big polluters and a government that too often caters to them, it’s always exciting when we can report some good news. Earlier this spring, CCANers helped bring about a major clean energy victory that has national implications. After receiving thousands of emails from people across the country, Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley vetoed a bill that would have killed the largest utility-scale wind power farm currently under development in Maryland, all because of totally resolvable military radar testing concerns. The veto clears the path for development of a $1 billion wind power industry across Maryland’s Eastern Shore region.
While we celebrate this move towards clean energy, we continue to resist a massive dirty energy threat: Dominion Resources’ proposed fracked gas export facility at Cove Point. Just two weeks ago, a federal study showed that U.S. gas exports to Asia would likely be worse than burning coal for the atmosphere over the next 20 years. Worse! But the White House and Federal Energy Regulatory Commission still aren’t getting the message.
As decisions near this summer, we’re gearing up to send a strong message to Washington. Here are two actions you can take:
- On Thursday, June 26 at 8 pm, dial in to the National Call to Stop Fracked Gas Exports to learn more about the July 13th mass rally in Washington. Rev. Lennox Yearwood, scientist Tony Ingraffea, Pennsylvania no-fracking leader Karen Feridun, and more will join this conference call at 559-726-1200 and code 776632.
- Sign up to protest at the Capitol and march to FERC’s headquarters on July 13th. Join me and activists from across the mid-Atlantic and beyond for this first-of-its-kind national gathering against fracked gas exports.
Our movement is bigger than ever just as our action now is more critical than ever. In response to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s flawed Environmental Assessment for Cove Point, Americans submitted more than 150,000 comments to FERC saying no to Cove Point. That record number of comments for a fracked gas export project let FERC know that the public wants clean energy — not dirty, dangerous gas exports.
The major bright spot in recent weeks came when President Obama’s administration released the nation’s first mandatory limits on carbon pollution from power plants. While the rules aren’t as strong as the science shows is needed, they are a welcome shift toward meaningful climate action out of Washington. CCAN will be working to ensure they are implemented in a way that speeds the transition to clean energy — not more fracked gas — in our region.
Here are even more ways you can take action with CCAN this summer…
DC/NATIONAL: Join the Climate Ride! This year, from September 20th – 24th, 2014, CCAN board members, staff and friends will take part in a five-day bike ride from New York City to the Capitol steps in DC. Learn more about the ride and sign up here to join us!
MARYLAND: Join the conference call June 26 at 8 PM eastern time to hear from leaders in the movement to stop gas exports and learn the latest on the July 13th mass rally in Washington. Join in at the time of the call by dialing 559-726-1200 and using code 776632. Speakers will include scientist Tony Ingraffea, Pennsylvania no-fracking leader Karen Feridun, Hip Hop Caucus president Rev. Lennox Yearwood, Food & Water Watch leader Emily Wurth, and myself. You’ll be able to ask questions and learn more about the exciting role you can play in attending the rally in Washington.
VIRGINIA: Join the Virginia Summer Activist Call with CCANers from around the state on Monday, June 30th at 7pm. We’ll recap our spring successes and talk about how we’ll push even further for climate solutions in Virginia this summer. From collecting thousands of petitions to the State Corporation Commission, to creatively exposing Dominion’s greenwashing at Earth Day festivals, to earning unprecedented investor support for climate resolutions at Dominion’s annual shareholder meeting, we’ve hit Dominion where the company is most vulnerable — its public image and it’s bottom line — thanks to activists like you. RSVP here for our first statewide call of the summer!
These last few months have made it clear; we have a lot to do. That’s why, on July 13th, thousands of Americans will converge in Washington DC to send a strong message to FERC: Stop Gas Exports and Stop Cove Point. Learn more about the biggest event to date in the fight to stop Cove Point and sign up to be a part of it here.
Onward,
Mike Tidwell