Climate Insider: IPCC Report, Virginia Climate Commission, Anti-Wind Bill

The biggest climate news of the past few weeks came when the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change released its first comprehensive report since 2007. Although the information wasn’t surprising, the urgent tone of the report and its claim that the worst impacts of climate change are still to come caught the world’s attention. According to the New York Times, the report “concluded that ice caps are melting, sea ice in the Arctic is collapsing, water supplies are coming under stress, heat waves and heavy rains are intensifying, coral reefs are dying, and fish and many other creatures are migrating toward the poles or in some cases going extinct.”
The report highlighted, among other threats, the devastating impacts climate change will have on the world’s food supply, a crisis that will adversely impact developing nations.
“There are those who say we can’t afford to act,” Secretary of State John Kerry said in a statement. “But waiting is truly unaffordable. The costs of inaction are catastrophic.

In order to mitigate these impacts, the US and other major energy consumers must transition to renewable, clean energy sources. Although progress is slow, it is noticeable.
So far in 2014, new wind energy construction has broken records as demand for renewable power has risen. “Now the cheapest means of generating electricity in many parts of the country, net power generation from wind energy was up 19 percent year-over-year in 2014, meeting 4.13 percent of U.S. grid demand, according to ACORE and the American Wind Energy Association (AWEA).”
Congress is still debating extending the wind power Investment Tax Credit (ITC) and Production Tax Credit (PTC), which would further boost new clean energy investments. Last week, the Senate Finance Committee voted to pass a tax extenders package that included both the ITC and PTC. Read more about this important development in the Virginia section of this post.
The Southeast US isn’t usually synonymous with clean energy generation, but we’re starting to see significant progress. Currently, half of the solar currently installed in South Carolina is on one roof at a Boeing factory. But the hesitance to develop renewable energy is fading. “We now have three of the major energy providers in South Carolina recognizing the benefits of solar energy, which is a huge shift from just five years ago,” according to Andrew Streit, a former board member of the South Carolina Solar Council. Although the political climate of many southern states is hostile to renewable energy development, South Carolina utility SCE&G’s plan to go from 4 to 20 megawatts of solar is a step in the right direction.

Perhaps an argument that will help renewable energy thrive in these traditionally conservative states is the potential for renewable energy to create jobs for veterans. Compared to other industries, there is a relatively large number of veterans working in solar power: they make up 9.2 percent of the almost 143,000-member solar-power workforce compared to just over 7 percent of the national workforce. “Veterans view climate change as a threat to national security. Working in solar is one way for them to continue in their service as defenders of our nation.”

News in Virginia:
After a fruitful legislative session, we bring you more good news for renewable energy in the commonwealth. Community Housing Partners (CHP) and the town of Blacksburg are initiating a program that makes rooftop solar power a huge money-saver for town residents. “It works like this: If a site looks promising, one of two local solar installers working with the program will do a thorough assessment and provide an estimate for a system to meet the homeowner’s needs. The town and CHP will provide information to the homeowners on the federal tax credit, financing for their systems and other details.” More than 230 people have signed up for the program since its launch last month. The program will help homeowners save on their monthly electricity bills, and also potentially generate income by selling their renewable energy certificates to utilities looking to offset their own energy use.

This week, Governor McAuliffe announced plans to reactivate a commission to advise him on what can be done to protect Virginia from the threats of climate change. He focused on Hampton Roads and other coastal Virginia communities, saying, “It rains a day or two or three, and their roads are shut down. That’s just rain … We cannot afford to ignore this. We’ve got to prepare our coastal communities to deal with climate change and all natural disasters.” The climate commission hasn’t met in over four years, largely, according to McAuliffe, because the former attorney general of the state of Virginia didn’t believe in human-caused climate change. Governor McAuliffe acknowledges climate change as a serious threat to the commonwealth, and ran for governor on a platform that included a commitment to addressing that threat. He has a real opportunity in his first year in office to set a tone of action on climate change, and Virginians across the commonwealth are holding him to his promises.
Last week saw an important step in encouraging new wind power development. The Senate Finance committee voted to pass a tax extenders package that included an Investment Tax Credit (ITC) and Production Tax Credit (PTC). According to Tom Kiernan, CEO of the American Wind Energy Association, “This provides a critical signal for our industry, which has created up to 85,000 jobs and has a bright future ahead, as we grow from 4 percent of the U.S. power grid to an expected 20 percent and beyond, so long as we have a predictable business climate.” Both Virginia Senator Mark Warner and Maryland Senator Ben Cardin supported extending these important tax credits. Virginia needs a strong climate champion in Senator Warner, so click here to let him know you appreciate his vote.

News in Maryland:
Farmers rally against HB 1168The Maryland legislative session has come to a close, and not all of the results were positive for Marylanders concerned about the climate and environment. You can see the Baltimore Sun’s take on the “good and bad” of the 2014 session in this slideshow. Of note, HB 1168, the so-called “anti-wind bill” is included in the “bad,” along with this call to action: “Governor O’Malley, who appears somewhat perplexed by this legislation, should veto it.”

The legislation in question would put a hold on offshore wind development in all or parts of 12 Maryland counties for thirteen months, a move that would kill the Great Bay wind farm under development now on the Eastern Shore of Maryland and threaten to scare off future wind development in the area, which the Maryland Energy Administration estimates is worth $1 billion to the state economy. While backers of the bill claim they were acting on radar testing concerns at the Patuxent River Naval Air Station, the wind farm developers and the U.S. Navy have been negotiating for over a year and have nearly finalized an agreement that would ensure the project does not interfere with “Pax River.”
Opposition to the anti-wind bill has come from Marylanders of varying backgrounds, including labor union activist Joe Uehlein, who wrote this piece in the Baltimore Sun, and Mary Anne Peterman, the owner of a 100-acre farm in Somerset County. According to this interview on WYPR, Peterman planned to have a wind turbine installed on her property to power “the homes of about 500 neighbors without any pollution,” but the project is put on hold because of the bill. “It would generate extra income so our children would have the income. Our house was built in the 1840s, we’d like to keep that for our kids.” Peterman isn’t the only Eastern Shore landowner to feel this way. Last week, 25 Marylanders, including two farmers who rode a pair of tractors rallied in Annapolis to show their opposition to HB 1168. You can see pictures of their rally here.

After last week’s explosion at a liquefied natural gas (LNG) processing facility in Plymouth, Washington, the fight to stop a proposed liquefied natural gas export facility at Cove Point in southern Maryland has taken on even more urgency. The explosion occurred at 8:30 am on Monday, March 31st. Four hundred people who live within a two mile radius of the facility had to be evacuated from their homes, and five workers at the facility were hospitalized. According to the Benton County sheriff’s Deputy Joe Lusignan, it’s “a little bit of a miracle that no one was killed.”

This Reuters piece points out that the Plymouth explosion could emphasize the “risk of storing massive gas supplies near population centers.” When the “processing vessel” exploded, it sent “chunks of shrapnel as heavy as 250 pounds as far as 300 yards.” One of those pieces pierced an LNG storage tank causing leakage.
The incident has left Marylanders living in the vicinity of Cove Point to ask if their safety should really be left up to a “miracle.” The Bay Net reports that, “The citizens group is calling on FERC to complete ‘an objective and transparent quantitative risk assessment for Dominion’s proposed LNG export facility.’” You can read the full text of the press release here.

In this letter to the editor, Sarah Bur makes the compelling case to stop the Cove Point export project. She sums up the concerns of Quakers (Friends) from nine Quaker Meetings in central and southern Maryland:

“The Cove Point project has far-reaching potential impact on human health and environmental quality in every phase of the process — extraction, transportation, liquefaction, shipping, re-gasification and distribution of the natural gas abroad. We are especially concerned about the impact Dominion’s proposal will have on climate and air quality in Maryland. The proposed 130 megawatt power plant required to liquefy the natural gas would be Maryland’s fourth largest greenhouse gas emitter, just behind our three major coal-fired power plants.”

The conclusion is simple: “For the sake of future generations, Cove Point must be stopped.”

 

Climate Insider: Climate Report, Calling on Obama, Green in Virginia

Climate change is a serious global threat. Ok, you already knew that. But a new report from the American Association for the Advancement of Science hopes to convey that not only does climate change pose a dire threat to life as we know it, it’s a threat we have to address right now. It contains language that is “sharper, clearer and more accessible than perhaps anything the scientific community has put out to date.” The report is only one component of a campaign to dispel climate myths and spread the truth far and wide. “The report warns that the effects of human emissions of heat-trapping gases are already being felt, that the ultimate consequences could be dire, and that the window to do something about it is closing.”
On the international stage, President Obama is joining EU leaders in Brussels in an effort to tackle climate change. The US and EU will pledge to cut emissions in the first quarter of 2015 in an effort to set an example ahead of the 2015 UN summit in Paris. That summit’s “aim must be to limit any global average temperature increase to less than 2 degrees Celsius compared with pre-industrial levels ‘and should therefore include ambitious mitigation contributions, notably from the world’s major economies and other significant emitters.” The EU has talked about increasing their emissions reductions targets to a 40% reduction from 1990 levels by 2030, up from a 20% reduction by 2020 which they have very nearly achieved. “The United States by contrast has said it will reduce carbon by 17 percent by 2020 compared with 2005, which equates to a fall of 3.5 percent below 1990 levels.” 

This week, the White House launched its climate change data website, aimed at making climate data available to researchers, businesses, and governments working to adapt to climate change. You can check out the early phase of the website here. “The project includes the introduction of a climate-focused section of the federal government’s open data platform at climate.data.gov; an innovation challenge to solicit ideas from the private sector to demonstrate coastal flooding; and collaboration with companies like Google and Ersi to provide technological support.”

Speaking of the White House, 16 environmental groups wrote a letter to President Obama on Tuesday calling on the administration “to reverse course on this plan [to expand natural gas extraction] and commit instead to keeping most of our nation’s fossil fuel reserves in the ground, in line with the recommendations of most of the world’s leading climate scientists.” The letter called on the President to demand an Environmental Impact Statement for Cove Point as a good faith first step. You can read the full letter here. The letter was announced in a tele-press conference with CCAN director Mike Tidwell, 350.org director and world renowned climate activists Bill McKibben, and Sierra Club Director Michael Brune. It generated press coverage across the country. Read articles from the Wall Street JournalWisconsin GazetteChicago Tribune, and local Baynet. The arguments against exporting American natural gas aren’t just environmental; the costs to our wallets and ur daily lives of exporting our energy sources are often very high.

National Geographic has entered the gas exports conversation, pointing out that gax exports would mean that “Not only would Americans pay more for heating fuel, but manufacturers, who use natural gas not only for power but as a feedstock for a wide array of plastic products, would see higher costs as well.” The article also points out that there is strong opposition to natural gas exports from industry leaders, including Dow Chemical, who oppose the price increases that would accompany exporting American natural gas.

Cove Point isn’t the only big environmental issue in Maryland. As the General Assembly session is wrapping up, we bring you news from Annapolis. CCAN’s DC and Maryland Policy Director, Tommy Landers, is quoted in this piece about the House committee’s failure to pass a bill to exclude dirty “black liquor” from maryland’s clean energy standards. “As a result, Maryland ratepayers will again send over $20 million in 2014 to out-of-state paper mills that have been burning this carbon-intense industrial waste called black liquor for decades and, for the last seven years, selling the power back to us as ‘clean’ energy,” Landers said. Bill supporters will return to Annapolis next year to build on existing momentum and ensure that the black liquor bill passes in 2015.

Environmental groups are still fighting in Annapolis against a bill that would kill wind turbine projects in Maryland. The bill would put height restrictions on wind turbines and would “essentially kill a wind turbine project in Somerset County.” While supporters of the Cove Point project claim it would create jobs that negate the serious environmental risks involved, this anti-clean energy bill doesn’t toe that party line on job creation; Adam Cohen, vice president and founder of Pioneer Green Energy points out that this bill would “deprive the poorest county in Maryland of a $200 million investment doesn’t seem to be a solution.”
Now that Virginia’s legislative session is over, the Commonwealth’s primary energy and climate news relates to its biggest polluter, Dominion Virginia Power.
Every two years, Dominion is required to submit a 15-year plan called an Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) to the State Corporation Commission. This year’s IRP significantly increases Dominion’s fossil fuel dependence and carbon emissions, and it ignores our state’s potential for clean energy and energy efficiency. The State Corporation Commission is tasked with making sure our state’s energy plans are reasonable and within the public interest, so we’re telling them to demand clean energy from Dominion. Submit your public comment now, and tell the SCC that Dominion needs to develop a plan that serves the public interest and invests in clean energy.
For more information on how Dominion is standing in the way of energy progress in Virginia, listen to the first installment of Sandy Hausman’s Going Green series.

Climate Insider: Stop Cove Point escalates, KXL nearing decision time, #Up4Climate

The past three weeks have been busy ones in the climate movement. Right here in Virginia and Maryland, citizens have been fighting to pass critical clean energy legislation even as we fight to stop a potential climate disaster in our backyard — the proposed Cove Point liquefied natural gas export facility. Across the country, students, farmers, and environmentalists continue upping their game to stop Keystone XL, as the Obama administration’s decision time nears. And we’ve seen a show of support from U.S. senators, who delivered an all-nighter of speeches about the urgency of climate action.
We begin with updates from the Cove Point fight, which has moved into high gear with a series of protests leading to peaceful arrests across the state. On February 27th, four activists were arrested for blocking the entrance to the Allegany County Courthouse in Cumberland. They were released a short time later with misdemeanor charges. This was the first time any Cove Point protest had ended in an arrest, and the media took notice. The Associated Press picked up the story and it made impressions around the country.
That weekend, the Maryland Public Service Commission held a public hearing in Lusby about the Cove Point project. After seven hours of testimony, the PSC had heard from 85 speakers, the majority of whom spoke in opposition to Cove Point gas exports. In a setback the day before the hearing, a state appeals court ruled in Dominion’s favor in the company’s ongoing legal battle with the Sierra Club over its right to export gas from Cove Point. But Dominion still needs a series of permits, including from the PSC, before it can move forward with any construction. The company will almost certainly face additional legal challenges, too. To have an impact right now and add your voice to the fight, submit a public comment to the Maryland Public Service Commission. They need to hear from you that Dominion’s Cove Point project is NOT in the interest of Maryland’s public — and comments are due by April 2nd.
The week following the hearing, four more activists were arrested in a protest in Frederick. They carried signs reading, “FERC: We Demand Justice for Myersville,” and, “FERC: Don’t Bully Frederick County,” while chanting against both Cove Point and Dominion’s plan to build a compressor station less than a mile from the elementary school in nearby Myersville, MD. (You can submit a comment to the Maryland Department of the Environment here to let them know that a compressor station polluting the air of Myersville’s kids is not acceptable.) Like in Cumberland, the “Frederick Four” were released after a short time with misdemeanor citations.
Senators Cardin and Mikulski have taken notice of the momentum building against Cove Point. They wrote a letter last week to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission calling on them to respond promptly to a request from environmental, faith, health and community leaders to hold statewide public meetings about the proposed project. FERC has yet to respond to their request.
This past Wednesday, however, FERC “announced it will issue its environmental assessment on the proposed Dominion Cove Point liquefied natural gas export project May 15 and will issue its decision by Aug. 31.” A coalition of Maryland faith, health, and environmental groups responded to FERC’s announcement, calling it “a slap in the face to citizens and leaders across Maryland who have repeatedly called for a full Environmental Impact Statement (EIS)—a type of review most protective of public health and safety and customary for a polluting project as huge as Dominion’s.”

The next day, six more protesters were arrested in Calvert County as they peacefully protested the facility outside the courthouse in Prince Frederick. The activists specifically highlighted recent revelations that a six-story high and three-quarters of a mile long wall that Dominion plans to build around its facility would also be part of an apparently untested system to contain potential releases of flammable vapor clouds. They were held for over eight hours before they were finally processed and released with misdemeanor charges.

Protests have also been happening across the country in the final weeks before President Obama makes his decision about the Keystone XL pipeline. The project, which has been stirring up fierce resistance for more than three years, would transport filthy, climate polluting tar sands from Alberta through the American plains, to be exported from the gulf coast. However, citizens from every walk of life and all along the political spectrum see the pipeline as a dire threat to our climate and way of life. They point out that the tar sands oil moving through the pipeline would be shipped overseas and have little to no impact on American energy security. Additionally, the jobs estimates for the project are thought by many, including President Obama, to have been overstated.
The deadline to submit public comments to the State Department has passed, and an estimated 2 million-plus comments against the project were delivered last Friday.

Some of the vocal student activists opposed to the plan converged on the White House on March 1st for XLDissent, and 398 youth were arrested in what is being called the largest youth sit-in of this generation. The protests aren’t just coming from students; a coalition of tribal communities, farmers, and ranchers, Canadian First Nations and others are coming together in Washington for “Reject and Protect,” a week of actions to send a clear message to President Obama: Reject Keystone XL now. You can sign up to join Reject and Protect here.

A number of United States senators took up the anti-Keystone rallying cry earlier this week during #Up4Climate, a night of floor speeches about the urgency of action to address climate change. Thirty-eight senators took the floor, including Virginia’s Tim Kaine and Maryland’s Ben Cardin. Sen. Kaine emphasized moving forward to a cleaner energy future, saying, “We can solve the problem of climate change for the good of the economy and the good of the planet. The story of American innovation is a story of solving the hard problems and I know we can solve this one.” You can read Senator Kaine’s full remarks here. Senator Cardin emphasized that federal facilities “are being jeopardized because of the climate change that’s occurring in our communities.” He also highlighted the economic benefits of growing clean energy, emphasizing that, “Green energy will give us more jobs than the fossil fuel industry, and we need good paying jobs, and we can leave our children and grandchildren a cleaner planet and a better future.” You can watch his full speech here.

The legislative session is over in Virginia, and we made some great progress. Governor McAuliffe officially signed repeal of the hybrid tax into law two weeks ago. As of July 1st, this arbitrary and unfair tax on Virginians doing their part to reduce carbon pollution will be wiped off the books. Two other significant clean energy bills — to eliminate tax barriers to solar power development (SB 418/HB 1239) and to fix a major loophole in Virginia’s renewable energy law (SB 498/HB 822) — are on their way to the governor’s desk for his signature. If you’re a Virginian, click here to thank your legislators and Governor McAuliffe for their action this session. 

Why Six Marylanders Risked Arrest in Calvert County to Stop Cove Point

Today marks the third group of arrests in a series of peaceful Cove Point protests that have crossed Maryland — from Cumberland to Frederick to Calvert County — over the past few weeks. Six Maryland residents were peacefully arrested today outside the Calvert County courthouse in Prince Frederick protesting Virginia-based Dominion Resources’ plan to build its Cove Point liquefied natural gas export facility in nearby Lusby. The protesters, led by a retired nurse and former Air Force reservist from Lusby and including five students, blocked the courthouse entrance to demand justice in the federal handling of Dominion’s controversial $3.8 billion plan.
This demonstration comes shortly after Dominion publicly admitted for the first time that a six-story tall and three-quarter mile long wall—previously referred to only as a “sound abatement wall”—is part of an apparently unprecedented and untested barrier wall system that would be constructed to protect nearby residents from vapor gas clouds. Local citizens said this revelation only underscores the need for federal regulators to hold Dominion’s plans to the highest level of scrutiny by completing a full Environmental Impact Statement.
In the following statements, the six Marylanders explain why Cove Point threatens our communities, and why they engaged in peaceful civil disobedience to stop it. (Click here for a PDF of their statements.)


David Hardy
David Hardy Lusby, Maryland
My name is David Hardy. I’m a retired Registered Nurse and retired Civil Engineering Craftsman from the Air Force Reserves. I live in Chesapeake Ranch Estates about 3 miles from the proposed Dominion Cove Point LNG Export Facility.
Personally, I have a lot of concerns regarding this project.
I’m concerned about Little Cove Point Road and the traffic on this small state road with buses hauling construction workers in and out and large construction trucks hauling equipment, materials and supplies. I feel sorry for the folks who live in this area who will have large lowboys rumbling through in the middle of the night while they deliver the generators and compressors. Dominion promises to deliver the heavy equipment during the night to cut down on traffic problems. But they haven’t promised to repair the road after the oversized and overweight trucks tear it up. Looks like the State Highway Administration will foot the bill for keeping it repaired since it is a state road.
I’m concerned about the dust and emissions from the construction. It’s going to take an awful lot of truckloads of dirt to build the noise barrier. My rough calculations, figuring a 3/4 mile by 60 foot high dirt monument, comes to roughly 533 thousand cubic yards of material. That’s about 53,000 dump truck loads of dirt. Where is that coming from and how is it getting to the site?
I’m concerned about the perpetual noise from the compressors running night and day. The carbon dioxide from the 4th largest power plant in the state that is going to be built to provide power to the compressors and refrigerators that are needed to cool the dirty gas down 300 degrees to make it a liquid.
I am worried sick about the hazardous chemicals that are going to be removed at Cove Point, that come from the ‘fracking’ process, that now have to be disposed of. Where??? At Sweetwater Road landfill? There will be a lot of things like mercury, benzene, and heavy metals that will have to go somewhere.
I am concerned about the danger of explosion of all of the volatile gasses that will be coming through the pipeline from the gas fields. There have been some recent gas pipeline explosions and fires causing destruction and death in neighboring states. Do we want this in Calvert County? I am concerned about the emergency evacuation route that passes through Chesapeake Ranch Estates. Our roads can’t handle a mass evacuation of Cove Point residents added to our own.
This export plant is planning for 100 ships a year to export this gas to Japan and India. And they have a permit for 200 ships a year. Why?? We need the gas right here in the USA to power our homes, factories and power plants.  We don’t need the gas to be shipped overseas halfway around the world to keep our gas prices inflated at home.
I’m concerned about pipeline leakage contributing to more and more greenhouse gasses in our atmosphere causing more and more global warming.  It was recently reported that gas pipelines leak over 3% of their capacity. Dominion is projecting 5 million tons of production a year. That’s 15,000 tons a day! A 3% loss would be 450 tons of methane and ethane and other volatile gasses lost into the air we breathe each and every day. As if we don’t have enough asthma, COPD and other breathing problems now. And this is a very conservative estimate of pipeline losses. Some reports have the number at twice what I’m saying.
I’m frankly frightened by the prospect of a LNG plant being 3 miles from a nuclear power plant. I sure hope there is some of that tax money spent on increased security offshore for both facilities. We could have our own Armageddon if an LNG ship was to explode at the nuclear plant.
I’m concerned about the offsite areas that Dominion needs just for construction of the plant. About the pier within yards of the Thomas Johnson Bridge; our only evacuation route in case of an accident. One misdirected barge carrying large compressors could close down this vital highway artery.
I’m concerned with the ballast water that the ships from Japan and India will be delivering to waters in or near our beloved Chesapeake Bay. Water that is contaminated with radiation from the Fukushima nuclear plant disaster. The water from the inbound India ships will be contaminated with Vibrio and other disease forming microbes and Pfisteria and other algae which can produce toxic blooms. We don’t need more invasive species in the Bay to destroy our valuable fisheries and recreation resources.
Those of us who live in Southern Calvert County are really concerned about our quality of life being degraded by a large industrial facility being built so close to our homes, schools and churches. Several of our homeowner associations have already gone on record to protest this invasion of our quiet enjoyment of our property.
We need jobs in Southern Maryland, but please let them come from other enterprises that do not harm our environment or force people to listen to constant noise or breathe polluted air or drink hazardous water.
Thank you for listening to my concerns.


Ashok ChandwaneyAshok
St. Mary’s City, Maryland
My name is Ashok Chandwaney. I’m a second semester senior at St. Mary’s College of Maryland and I live in a world that is on the cusp of a global climate catastrophe. With reckless disregard for our health or safety, companies like Dominion are trying to construct export facilities from coast to coast, including near where I was born in Washington State.
These fights all have something in common: radical companies, bent on profiting off fossil fuels no matter how it affects the local community and the world at large. In Washington, they want to run asthma-causing coal trains through densely populated areas. Here, Dominion’s proposal makes it quite clear that they aren’t concerned with health or safety either. They’re concerned their stockpiles of chemicals may produce “fireballs,” a risk they plan to “mitigate” with an untested and skyscraping concrete wall. What if the wall fails?  Who gave them the right to put local families at risk?
But even if they weren’t planning on explosions at Cove Point, the expansion Cove Point will affect the people who live nearby. This proposal is an environmental nightmare: it will poison the air and soil that over 300 families breathe and live in. Dominion’s own workers will be exposed to these dangerous airborne chemicals too, and facing (along with local families) high risks of asthma and heart disease.
Once Dominion builds this gargantuan facility, they’re going to want more natural gas to sell from it to make their profits. That means building more leaky natural gas pipelines across the state, which means seizing people’s back yards and farmland with eminent domain and then tainting them when their pipes inevitably leak. That means starting to frack here, bringing earthquakes and flammable tap water to Maryland.
I want a future with clean air and water my children can swim in and safe jobs so families can have both their health and food on the table. I want a future where St. Mary’s hasn’t been inundated by the rising sea levels that Cove Point would accelerate. I want a future with clean energy, not Cove Point — and that’s why I participated in a civil disobedience today.


Ruth TysonRuth
St. Mary’s City, Maryland
As a local student and passionate environmentalist, I don’t see any other way to stress the urgency of raising awareness about this plan. This is something worth fighting for. Dominion has their voice being heard. They have funds to make sure their story is shared. I don’t have money to buy radio commercials or place fancy posters all over the state with the full story. What I do have is my body and a right to express myself. I’m willing to put everything on the line if that will make people pay attention.
Cove Point expansion will jeopardize the health, economies, land, and water of local people affected by the fracking gas that is processed as well as communities surrounding the facility. Are a few jobs really worth our health? How do you put a price on the future generations affected by climate change that Cove Point’s greenhouse gas emissions will greatly contribute to? What is the cost of clean air and water? We should be investing our resources in clean, renewable energy. Liquified natural gas isn’t the answer to anyone’s energy crisis. I want legislators, Dominion, and most importantly, the people, to see that this isn’t a wise decision. We value our environment and our people’s health. This isn’t a time to be passive and accept business as usual. We’re speaking out because we can’t sit back anymore and it’s time for Dominion to start listening.


Emily TannerEmily
St. Mary’s City, Maryland
I am one of the students being arrested at the courthouse this Thursday in opposition to the proposed LNG Export Facility at Cove Point.
I did not grow up in Maryland. I grew up on the coast of Virginia, and I did not know much at all about Maryland until I came to St. Mary’s College in the fall of 2011. I grew up on the Chesapeake Bay and now I live by the St. Mary’s River and it always feels wrong to me when I’m away from the water. Growing up, I watched the Chesapeake Bay deteriorate as more and more pollutants were shuttled in to the precious estuary and I heard about the endangerment of the blue crabs, sea birds, and oysters that call the Bay home. I watched as more and more trash washed up on protected beaches and every time I heard about a new oil spill far away, I worried that it would one day be my home.
My friends in Virginia make fun of me now because I’ve fallen so deeply in love with Maryland and all that the state represents. Now I see a new threat to my new home on the horizon. The Cove Point LNG Export Facility would be located about 20 miles away from St. Mary’s College of Maryland and any problems on the site would undoubtedly create problems here. The potential for disastrous spills, air pollution, and water contamination is undeniable. The site is a high risk area and, as we know, pipelines leak so a pipeline carrying gas across the entire state seems like a pretty bad idea if you ask me. I am worried about Maryland, I am worried about St. Mary’s, and I am worried that we are soon to follow in the United States’ new legacy of oil spills, fracking, and the careless treatment of our precious Earth.
Cove Point will open Maryland to Fracking, in addition to the multitude of other issues it would bring to the state. What we have been told is that the natural gas basins in Maryland (with the exception of the Marcellus Shale in the West) are too deep to frack, but the Marcellus Shale was once too deep for drilling too. If Fracking is profitable for gas companies, it will find its way into Maryland and Cove Point is setting that dangerous precedent for us right now. With fracking comes destruction and I don’t want to see my new home go the way that so many others have. I want our water to be drinkable, our air to be breathable, and our world to livable. Cove Point has the potential to take all of that away from me and from you. It’s time to stand up and say no to Dominion.


Ori GutinOri
College Park, Maryland
People often think that activists, environmental or otherwise, enjoy getting arrested. People on the periphery of environmental or social movements think activists get some type of pleasure, or high, from engaging in civil disobedience. Well, to those people I say, you could not be more wrong. No child grows up wanting to be arrested or to engage in civil disobedience. However, children do grow up loving the planet around them, the trees, waters, fresh air, bugs in the dirt, birds in the sky, and fish in the sea. In fact, I was one of them. I also grew up naively thinking that no one would ever try and take away those things that I loved. Unfortunately, childhood is fleeting, reality is stark, and money is powerful. The truth is there are many people out there who are constantly trying to marginalize the things that I and many others love in the name of profit.
Dominion Resources is the perfect example. They are an out of state company that wants to come into my beautiful home state of Maryland and build a 3.8 billion dollar environmental catastrophe. Why? To boost their profit, and don’t let anyone tell you otherwise. They are not here because they want to help Maryland’s economy, provide jobs, or even provide LNG to foreign markets. They are here to make money. Dominion is willing to compromise the health of the bay, the air quality of the surrounding community, and not to mention the climate because they want money, plain and simple. And after they’ve made their money and have left Maryland, who will be left with this damage in a few years? Me. My brothers and sisters. My friends. My classmates. My entire generation. This cannot happen.
I have spent countless hours fighting against this facility. I have petitioned, written op-eds, rallied, testified in front of the Public Service Commission, gotten the UMD Student Government Association to officially oppose this project, made phone calls to Senators, met with Senators, written letters, and more. And to some extent it is making a difference, but not nearly enough, and not nearly quickly enough.
So, no; no activist wants to get arrested. We don’t get a high or take pleasure in it. But when an issue like Cove Point arises that is so potentially damaging to all the things you love in this world, and nothing else seems to be making a big enough difference, how can you not do absolutely everything in your power to stop it? So today, I will put my body on the line to physically plead with lawmakers and regulators like FERC and PSC to stop siding with corporate profits, and start protecting the planet and the people on it by saying no to Dominion Cove Point. I pray that they listen.


Gabriel McKinneyGabe
St. Mary’s City, Maryland
As a Christian, my morality is based on the Love of God whom I believe created all things. In my Love for him I find my love for all of his creation, be it the Earth or the Animals or plants or Humans. That love which I hold forbids me to destroy this glorious, beautiful, and nurturing creation. While I do not believe that the fight to save this creation from those who wish to destroy it for their own personal gain is The End, I do believe that The End is Love, and that I therefore must participate with all of my power to make sure that That End is achieved. And towards this End of Love, I must fight with all radical, peaceful, and Loving ways to preserve this thing given to us by a God whom I know to be Loving, radical, and peaceful.
In the building of a structure which will destroy the habitats and livelihoods of the humans and of the wildlife in that area known as Cove Point, I do not see any Love. In giving wealth and power to a few while subjugating many others to depravity and the destruction and perversion of this, our World, home, and all our material sustenance, I do not perceive any Love. In justifying this action of the destruction of the wealth and homes of those, plant, animal, and humans by saying that we are giving jobs to other Americans and strengthening our nation, not only do I fail to glean where Love might reside in this action but I fail to perceive the logic. What use is it to wrench the livelihood of one man from his hands to place it into another? How does destroying the very ground on which we walk, the air we breathe, and the water we drink, build the Nation in which we live? To achieve this End, Love, I wish to use any peaceful power at my disposal towards preventing this heinously unloving action.

Why Four Marylanders Risked Arrest in Frederick to Stop Cove Point

Today, one week following a peaceful sit-in by four activists in Cumberland, four central Maryland residents were arrested outside the Frederick County Courthouse protesting the proposed Cove Point fracked gas export facility. The four protesters—including a county commission candidate, an asthma sufferer, a mother, and a Frederick resident who grew up playing baseball in Cove Point Park—blocked the courthouse entrance to demand a full and fair federal environmental impact review of Dominion’s controversial $3.8 billion plan.
In Frederick County, the citizens of Myersville are fighting Dominion over a 16,000 horsepower gas compressor that the company wants to build–despite unanimous opposition from the town council — less than a mile from the only elementary school. The Myersville compressor station is part of the web of fossil fuel infrastructure that Dominion could use to pipe gas from fracking wells across Appalachia to southern Maryland, where the gas would be liquefied and exported to Asia
In the following statements, the protesters explain why Cove Point matters to central Maryland, and why they engaged in peaceful civil disobedience to stop it. (Click here for a PDF of their statements.)
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Why Four Maryland Citizens Risked Arrest in Cumberland to Stop Cove Point

Today, a Unitarian minister, two students native to western Maryland, and another local resident engaged in a peaceful sit-in outside the Allegany County Courthouse in Cumberland to protest Cove Point. This massive $3.8 billion project, proposed by Virginia-based Dominion, would take nearly a billion cubic feet of gas per day from fracking wells across the Appalachian region, liquefy it on the Chesapeake Bay, and export it to Asia.
The four Maryland citizens were arrested after blocking the courthouse entrance to demand justice in the controversial federal handling of Cove Point. Despite the potentially region-transforming fracking, pollution, and climate impacts of Dominion’s plan, federal regulators have thus far refused to conduct a full and fair Environmental Impact Statement — the type of review most protective of public health and safety and customary for a polluting facility as huge as Cove Point.
In the following statements, the protesters explain why Cove Point matters to Western Marylanders, and why they engaged in peaceful civil disobedience to stop it. (Click here for a PDF of their full statements.)
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Cove Point Makes National Headlines

Six months ago, few average Marylanders had heard of “Cove Point,” let alone understood the stakes for our communities and climate. Now, the fight to stop Dominion Resources’ proposed fracked gas export facility on the shores of the Chesapeake Bay in southern Maryland is making state and national headlines.
The issue broke onto the national scene in January when national climate leader and 350.org co-founder Bill McKibben coauthored A Big Fracking Lie in Politico Magazine with CCAN’s director Mike Tidwell. The opinion piece was a big (anti-)fracking success and, at more than 10,000 shares, it was one of the most shared Politico pieces in January. The piece explained in detail why Cove Point would be a disaster for our climate, spurring a new wave of fracking in the mid-Atlantic and causing climate polluting emissions equivalent to burning coal, and challenged President Obama to abandon his support for fracked gas exports.

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Is The Cove Point Liquified Natural Gas Terminal The Next Keystone XL?

The Huffington Post
by Caroline Selle
There was a time when “Stop the Keystone XL!” seemed like an unlikely rallying cry for the U.S. environmental movement. After all, plenty of pipelines receive permits every year without much outrage, so why would TransCanada’s request be any different? Plus, the fuel was coming from Canada, the country’s friendly northern neighbor. What could be the downside?
Plenty, according to environmental advocates. From the First Nations people who live near extraction sites in Canada, to Nebraskan farmers and ranchers concerned about the pipeline crossing a major aquifer, to families who live in Texas neighborhoods polluted by refineries, lots of people have a stake in the fight. And for climate activists, the pipeline is a test of the Obama administration’s seriousness about cutting greenhouse gas emissions and ending reliance on fossil fuels. The pipeline quickly became a symbol of resistance and the center of the fight over climate policy.
If the Keystone XL is approved (an answer is expected as soon as late May), what will the U.S. environmental movement rally around next? The power plant rules that the Environmental Protection Agency is working on will be an important step in reducing greenhouse gas emissions, but there’s no clear “ask,” as organizers like to say, other than “please finalize them.”
Enter the Cove Point liquefied natural gas (LNG) terminal. Located in Lusby, Md., Cove Point sits on the western shore of the Chesapeake Bay, only a 90-minute drive from Washington, D.C. Local environmental groups want to make Cove Point the next Keystone XL when it comes to organizing opposition.
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Environmental Groups Call For Rejection Of Cove Point Expansion

WAMU 88.5
By: Jonathan Wilson
The Maryland Public Service commission is in the midst of deciding whether Dominion can move forward with a $3.8 billion expansion of its Cove Point Liquefied Natural Gas facility in Calvert County and environmental groups continue to put pressure on state officials to reject the plan.
Hundreds of protesters gathered on War Memorial Plaza in downtown Baltimore, many holding signs with anti-fracking slogans, or mini cardboard windmills to show their support for energy alternatives.
Mike Tidwell, director of the Chesapeake Climate Action Network, compared the current fight to stop Dominion’s natural gas export plans to the battle, decades ago, to get the truth out about the health risks of tobacco.
“And that’s why we need an Environmental Impact Statement, because it is the equivalent of a Surgeon General’s report,” Tidwell said. “We need a Surgeon General’s report for Cove Point, when that comes out, Marylanders will be appalled and repelled by this idea and it won’t get built.”
But Dominion maintains that voices like Tidwell’s are simply a vocal minority, and point out that exporting more natural gas is part of the President’s clean energy agenda.
Jeff Guido is a spokesman for the Maryland state pipe trades association — a union whose members would get many of the thousands of construction jobs that would come with the project. He says the economic benefits of Cove Point would ripple across the state.
“We need it, we need it bad,” Guido said. “You’ll see that when a construction worker goes to work, and he knows he’s got some employment in front of him — they’re all gonna go out and buy a new pick up truck, it’s just what we do.”
After this week’s evidentiary hearing, the Public Service Commission will gather input from residents close to Cove point at a public hearing in Lusby on March 1.

Hundreds rally to oppose Cove Point project

The Baltimore Sun
By Jamie Smith Hopkins
An estimated 500 people rallied Thursday in Baltimore against plans to export liquefied natural gas from a Southern Maryland facility, chanting and carrying signs past the office tower where state regulators were considering one aspect of that proposal.
The authority to approve or reject the project lies with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission. But Maryland’s Public Service Commission has the say over a 130-megawatt power plant that energy company Dominion says it needs for the export operation.
The proposal has drawn powerful support — including from Rep. Steny Hoyer, a Southern Maryland Democrat — as well as opposition from the Sierra Club and other groups, largely on environmental grounds. Both sides used this week’s hearings as an opportunity to get their message out.
Dominion, which owns the Cove Point complex, held a news conference Wednesday with supporters, including a construction union official and a Maryland manufacturer. They characterized the project as an economic boon and said exporting natural gas to replace coal would help the environment.
The rally against the project drew people from across the state — many opposed to a controversial technique known as “fracking” used to extract natural gas — and temporarily closed streets in downtown Baltimore at lunchtime. Speakers included Del. Heather Mizeur, a Democrat who is running for governor.
“I’ve been doing this for 12 years,” said Mike Tidwell, executive director of Chesapeake Climate Action Network, which helped organize Thursday’s event and estimated the crowd at about 700. “I’ve never been at an environmental rally … this big.”
A police spokesman could not provide a crowd estimate Thursday. Dominion spokesman Chet Wade said it counted fewer than 300 people.
Opponents contend that exporting natural gas from Cove Point would increase demand for hydraulic fracturing, a method of extracting the gas that environmentalists say pollutes groundwater and air but that the industry says is safe.
Dominion officials said the project should not be seen as a “proxy” for fracking, including whether to allow the method in Maryland. Cove Point exports could come from as far afield as the Gulf Coast through the country’s network of pipelines, said Pamela F. Faggert, the company’s chief environmental officer.
“Nor would stopping the Cove Point project likely reduce fracking elsewhere,” Faggert said. “Cove Point exports would account for only a small sliver of the gas that could be produced in the United States. Without Cove Point, the only question is where the natural gas would go instead.”
That argument didn’t fly with rally participants. Paul Roberts, who runs a winery in Western Maryland and sits on the state commission studying fracking, said he’s concerned the state will be under far more pressure to allow the technique if natural gas interests can export from Cove Point.
“It would be very terrible if all the work we’ve put in is undermined,” Roberts said.
Cove Point is an import facility for liquefied natural gas. The market for bringing that product into the country has dwindled as fracking fueled a natural gas boom in the U.S.
Expanding Dominion’s Calvert County complex to allow exporting would cost as much as $3.8 billion. The company would pay an additional $40 million in annual property taxes for five years, then receive a tax break of 42 percent for nine years.
Drew Greenblatt, president of Marlin Steel Wire Products, a Baltimore manufacturer, is among those who spoke in favor of Cove Point at Dominion’s news conference.
“A thriving natural gas industry, one with access to all potential markets, including overseas markets … will mean more demand for our products in America,” he said. “We should take advantage of it, and we’re very lucky that this has happened to our state.”
Hearings in the Public Service Commission case began Thursday. A hearing for public comment is scheduled for March 1 at Patuxent High School in Lusby, near Cove Point.
The agency must make a decision on the power plant by May 30. The FERC has not set a timeline for a decision, Dominion said.
The early hours of Thursday’s hearing revolved around the project’s impact. Sierra Club attorney Joshua Berman, highlighting reports suggesting that exporting would cause domestic natural gas prices to rise and promote the use of coal, asked a Dominion executive whether he agreed with those conclusions.
Michael D. Frederick, vice president of LNG operations at Cove Point, said the U.S. Department of Energy — which gave Cove Point its OK to export — is charged with ensuring that the move is in the country’s interests.