June 2013 Virginia

June 2013 | Issue #65
Quick Links: Virginia | DC & National | Maryland | Students

FROM DIRECTOR MIKE TIDWELL

Mike TidwellDear Virginians,

When CCAN was founded in 2002, the level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere was 373 parts per million. Now, despite a growing clean-energy movement worldwide, scientists reported last month that the carbon level had reached a whole new stage of danger: 400 parts per million.

There hasn’t been this much heat-trapping CO2 in the Earth’s atmosphere in at least 3 million years. The result has been a marked increase in extreme and destructive weather. Listen to my NPR radio commentary concerning DC’s decision to spend $1 billion to put more power lines underground due to bigger storms. Imagine a world where we trap heat in the atmosphere equal to the energy of 400,000 Hiroshima bombs exploding every day. That’s what we are doing right now.

So despite the best efforts of CCAN and groups like us worldwide, we have much more work to do to fight dirty energy and promote clean power…

See the full note from Mike>>

Virginia

Dominion’s new solar program — Is it for you?
Dominion’s new pilot solar purchase program has just opened for applications. Under the program, the company will buy solar power and the associated Renewable Energy Credits (RECs) from customers, then sells the RECs to other customers. Check out our blog post explaining — How does it work? Is it good for consumers? Should you participate?

Chasing Ice Coming to Virginia
This summer, we’re bringing Chasing Ice, arguably the most stunning climate change documentary of the last year, to Virginia. It follows the story of a photographer struggling to document the melting of glaciers before they’re all gone. After seeing the film in DC in the fall, CCAN Virginia State Director Beth Kemler told the rest of the team that she wanted to change her Thanksgiving “what I’m thankful for” answer to “the fact that I got to see beautiful glaciers on a trip to Patagonia a few years ago, since they may be gone soon.” Watch the incredible trailer here. Interested in helping to organize a screening in your area? Contact Keith Thirion at keitht@chesapeakeclimate.org or 703-579-6645.

Greet VP Biden with a big “No Keystone XL!” message
Vice President Joe Biden is headlining a gala dinner in Richmond on June 29th, and we’ll be there to show him why Virginians need the administration to reject the Keystone XL tar sands oil pipeline. What would the pipeline mean for the commonwealth? Rising seas flooding Norfolk, hotter temperatures threatening our health and agriculture, more severe storms wreaking havoc on our communities. We’ll be outside the Jefferson Jackson dinner to highlight these climate consequences, which will only be more severe if the pipeline is approved. We need a huge group to show just how strongly we oppose Keystone XL. Sign up to bring a big #noKXL message to Vice President Biden on June 29th!

Success! Climate wake-up call reaches Dominion shareholders
Virginia shareholder activists had a breakthrough at Dominion Resources’s annual meeting last month in Richmond: A resolution on climate change written by CCAN received a record level of support!  InsideClimate News, which recently won a Pulitzer Prize for its investigation of a major tar sands oil spill, covered the vote. Read all about it here, including how Ruth McElroy Amundsen, a 51-year-old NASA engineer and mother of two, paved the way. Then, check out the recap on CCAN’s blog to see the “masterpieces” we displayed outside the meeting.

DC

Camp David to DC: See you on the trail to stop Keystone XL?
From July 19th-July 27th, scores of activists will embark on a week-long walk from Camp David, MD to Washington, DC. Camp David was named after Dwight D. Eisenhower’s grandson, and the march will pressure President Obama to reject the Keystone XL pipeline in favor of bold climate solutions — for the future of all our children and grandchildren. At the same time, activists all across the country will hold creative actions — like raising a wind turbine directly in the path of Keystone XL — as part of the “Summer Heat” campaign. The temperatures will surely be rising in the dog days of July. But so will we. Will you join us on the trail? Learn more and sign up here.

DC needs wind and solar power not black liquor!
Would you rather support clean wind turbines or dirty black liquor with your DC electric bills? Once you learn what black liquor is — a paper mill waste byproduct that pollutes on par with coal — the choice is clear. This summer, CCAN organizing fellows will be educating District residents about the massive black liquor loophole in our city’s Renewable Porftolio Standard (RPS) law and building support for City Council action to close it. First, sign the petition yourself. Then, email DC Organizing Fellow Shelby Brown at shelbyb@chesapeakeclimate.org to learn how you can help gather petitions. Let’s ensure our clean energy dollars are spent on real clean energy!

Students

Ready…set…register for Power Shift 2013!
Power Shift 2013 registration is now open! What could be better than joining more than 10,000 young leaders in the forward-thinking city of Pittsburgh to hatch the plans that will win back our future? This incredible weekend of trainings, actions, inspiration and power-building will take place from October 18th-21st. In order to represent the Chesapeake region, we need to send hundreds of students from our area to Pittsburgh. Together, we’ll build our campaigns to divest from fossil fuels, fight fracking and win clean energy solutions to the climate crisis. Click here to register for Power Shift 2013. On Facebook, you can also join the official Power Shift 2013 event page and share this graphic to spread the word. Join the biggest youth climate convergence of our generation. Sign up before August 10th and pay less!

Maryland

Tell Governor O’Malley: Keep your promise to get the facts on fracking!
As we keep fighting for a legislative moratorium on fracking, we must also watchdog the fracking review process underway at state agencies. Under Governor O’Malley’s 2011 executive order on fracking, our state has only a year and some pocket change left to determine the full extent of the risks drilling poses to our water, air, and climate. The clock runs out in August 2014. Click here to tell Governor O’Malley: Keep your promises. Hold the line against dangerous drilling and ensure our state has the time and money needed to fully study fracking’s risks.

Want the full update on how Maryland state agencies are carrying out the Governor’s order? Check out Megan’s blog post.

Dirty coal’s new scheme to keep afloat and keep polluting
As the United States begins to move away from coal, coal executives are scrambling to keep their profits high by other means: exporting coal overseas. The stakes are high in our region. Existing coal ports in Baltimore and Norfolk saw record levels of exports in 2012. CCAN is working to block this surge of coal exports for two reasons: 1) We need to keep this pre-historic fuel in the ground to avoid climate disaster; and 2) More coal exports mean more pollution problems at home — from mountains destroyed in Appalachia to coal dust coating homes near railways to toxic pollution in waterways near ports.

We’re fighting back by challenging the export companies as they apply for pollution permits needed to expand their operations. We have our first opportunity to take action in Baltimore: Submit a public comment urging the Maryland Department of the Environment to strengthen water pollution controls at the CSX coal export piers on Baltimore’s Harbor.

Meet A CCAN-er

 

Meet Maryland community activist Ann Marie NauAnn Marie Nau

Ann is a resident of Myersville, a small community in Maryland fighting a huge natural gas compressor sta
tion that Dominion Transmission wants to build in the heart of their town. Fights like these are happening more and more across our region, as fracking increases the need for gas infrastructure like pipelines and compressor stations. Learn how Ann is pushing back with her neighbors and CCAN…

Your age: 46

Where you live: Myersville, MD

Your profession: Self-employed (transcriber) and stay-at-home Mom

Why are you a CCAN volunteer? I became aware of CCAN while researching organizations to help with our local fight against Dominion Transmission’s proposal to build a16,000 natural gas compressor station within the town limits of our rural community and have been inspired by CCAN’s mission, hard work and the dedication of their wonderful staff.

What has inspired you most working with CCAN? CCAN staff and volunteers are tireless! I have seen them in Western Maryland fighting fracking, in Annapolis working on various environmental and energy bills, in Frederick fighting the incinerator and compressor stations, in Baltimore hosting conferences, and throughout the state working on climate issues. They have marched on D.C. and are active in Virginia. Being a member of Myersville Citizens for a Rural Community and seeing first hand how hard it can be to build coalitions, I have always been impressed with CCAN’s willingness to work with other environmental groups.

What are the impacts of climate change and/or the fossil fuel industry that hit closest to home for you? As unconventional drilling expands, the infrastructure needed to support it also increases. My beautiful rural community nestled in the scenic Middletown Valley is being bull dozed by big business and the federal government via the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) to place a huge natural gas compressor station in our town and within one mile of our elementary school. Despite the Town Council denying zoning approval, Dominion has been granted approval to proceed by FERC. If fracking proceeds in Western Maryland and if Dominion is granted the authority to export natural gas via the Cove Point facility, I am afraid Maryland will be faced with the same infrastructure development seen in Pennsylvania, which has turned much of the rural landscape into industrialized areas, polluting the land, water and air.

What do you hope to see happen to address climate change in the next year? On a local level, I am very concerned about the proposed Frederick incinerator and the prospect of fracking in Western Maryland as well as the proposed Cove Point Export Project.

What do you like to do when you’re not working on climate change? I enjoy bird watching, or nature watching in general. I’m a bit of a jack-of-all-trades (and master of none) so whatever project I currently have going, whether it be cupcake decorating for a party, sewing curtains, or working in my (mostly) native flower garden. I adore spending time with my nieces and nephews!

Who would you high five? I would most like to high five those people on the front lines who are negatively impacted by the coal and gas industry and who continue to fight, who continue to “speak truth to power,” and who refuse to be intimidated. It is their struggles that motivate me and remind me that I can no longer be silent.

 

Videos

Welcome from the director
Director’s Cut: Get the inside scoop from Mike on how you can fight for climate change solutions this summer.

Democracy Now on 400ppm
Watch: Climate scientist Michael Mann explains the danger of 400ppm carbon on Democracy Now!.

Chasing Ice trailer
Watch: See the trailer for Chasing Ice and look out for upcoming screenings.

Photo Album

CCAN staff 2013
Who’s on the other end of those calls and emails? See the “official” staff pics from CCAN’s June planning retreat.


Follow us on Twitter  Follow us on Facebook

YouTube    Flickr

Meet A CCAN-er

Ann Marie Nau

Meet Maryland community activist Ann Marie Nau.

Upcoming Events

–VIRGINIA–

Loudoun: Wake up to climate change
June 24
Leesburg

Rally to tell VP Biden: No KXL!
June 29
Richmond

–DC–

Tell the EPA: Protect Our Water from Power Plant Pollution
July 9

Washington, D.C.

Walk for Our Grandchildren
July 19-26
Camp David – Harpers Ferry – DC

Walk for Our Grandchildren: White House rally
July 27
Washington, DC

–MARYLAND–

Water Pollution Permit Citizen Comment Delivery
June 26
Curtis Bay, Baltimore

An Explosion of Fracking and the TPP
July 9
Ellicott City

Triple Divide Screening
July 14
Ellicott City

Full events calendar >>

 

Donate

 

Dominion's New Solar Program – Explained

Today, Dominion Power starts accepting applications for its pilot “Solar Purchase Program.” Under the program, homeowners and businesses with solar panels on their properties can sell both the power they generate and the associated renewable energy certificates (RECs) for a premium.
CCAN, along with other environmental organizations, was represented by the Southern Environmental Law Center in the case about the program before the Virginia State Corporation Comission. Environmental advocates saw some big flaws with Dominion’s design of the program. It has moved forward nonetheless, so here’s our guide to the program.
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Reactions to the 10th Vegetarian Festival by a CCAN Fellow

Last Saturday at the 10th Annual Vegetarian Festival in Bryan Park, Richmond, Virginia I experienced my first day petitioning with the Chesapeake Climate Action Network as we began our new campaign – Safe Coastlines. Throughout this campaign we will be collecting thousands of petitions and calling on Virginia policymakers and Dominion power to develop energy efficiency and clean energy, as well reducing the current climate impacts that were already noticing. I was excited to see that virtually everybody was as passionate about protecting Virginia’s coastline from climate change devastation as I am.  

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Shareholder Vote a Loud Signal to Va. Utility on Climate Concerns

InsideClimate News

By Maria Gallucci

A Dominion shareholder movement sparked by one woman provoked a record vote on one of its resolutions. ‘This seems like a climate wake-up call.’

In 2008, Virginia resident Ruth McElroy Amundsen took her first stab at using shareholder activism to spur action on climate change—she introduced a resolution that challenged Dominion Resources Inc., Virginia’s largest emitter of greenhouse gases, to get more of its electricity from renewables.

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Will Norfolk be the next New Orleans?

The 2013 hurricane season kicked off this weekend, and CCAN’s director Mike Tidwell has a must-read op-ed in today’s Virginian-Pilot: Will Norfolk be the next New Orleans?

As climate change brings higher seas and bigger storms, nobody in Virginia has higher stakes in facing the climate crisis than Hampton Roads residents. Mike wrote the piece to connect the dots between dirty fossil fuels, climate change, and the water lapping at coastal Virginians’ doorsteps.

Read a preview of the op-ed below. Then, click here to read the full piece, and click on the graphic below to share it on Facebook. We’re declaring “game on” for saving the wildlife, people and culture of this great Virginia coast, but we can’t do it without you.

“A hurricane is coming, and it’s going to wipe us out.”
Papoose Ledet, a Cajun shrimper, told me this as we rode on his wooden trawler just south of New Orleans. I was a visiting journalist, and it was the spring of 2001, more than four years before Katrina. How did Ledet – and millions of other Louisianans – know the Big One was coming prior to Katrina’s actual arrival in 2005?

Simple. They saw the ocean creeping steadily into their lives, for years, with their own eyes. They saw the tides grow higher and higher. They saw unusual and increasingly intense flooding of streets and homes. And they saw scientists issue study after study showing that the ocean was literally rising, an obvious threat to Louisiana’s flat, watery coastal region, where some areas were below sea level.

If you live in coastal Hampton Roads, take a deep breath and re-read that last paragraph. You live, right now, in a world eerily parallel to south Louisiana prior to 2005. Every time you take a different route to work – or miss work completely – due to newly flooded streets, you become more like a citizen of New Orleans.

Read on: http://hamptonroads.com/2013/05/will-norfolk-be-next-new-orleans

Click to spread the word on Facebook:

Ernest Moniz and the Growing No-Fracking Movement

It is very unfortunate that Ernest Moniz, the new Energy Secretary, is, like Barack Obama, an “all of the above” energy guy.

In his first week in office last week, he said some good things publicly about energy efficiency and solar, wind and geothermal energy.

The problem, however, is that Moniz is a big supporter of fracking. In the same interview linked above, he describes shale gas as a “bridge fuel,” giving us time, he says, to “develop the technology and lower the costs” of clean, renewable energy.

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Climate Activists Invade Dominion Riverrock

Riverrock dried up rivers t-shirt

What does global warming have in store for outdoor sports enthusiasts?

WHEEZING RUNNERS (from more intense allergy seasons)

DRIED UP RIVERS (from more intense droughts)

CODE RED AIR QUALITY (from more intense heat waves)

And who’s the top contributor of climate pollution in Virginia? Dominion Power.

Sponsoring events like Dominion Riverrock, Richmond’s annual outdoor sports festival, can’t erase the company’s huge contribution to the global climate crisis. If Dominion wants good PR, the company should not only sponsor community events, like Riverrock, but also make a real commitment to clean energy, like wind and solar power, instead of building more and more massive fossil fuel plants.

That’s the message we’re bringing to Dominion Riverrock on this weekend in Richmond. Sports enthusiasts who are also fans of a stable climate are wearing t-shirts bearing the message while participating in events.  

They’re even adding to the fun by entering photos with folks who agree with our message into the event’s Instagram contest!  How fun is that? Check out the photos:

Riverrock dried up rivers t-shirt

For an idea of how increased extreme weather, like droughts and floods, are already in the picture from climate change, check out this Huffington Post piece.

Climate studies have warned us to expect more frequent and intense extreme events, such as heavy rain and snow storms, along with heat waves. While weather variability is nothing new, the wild swings in weather — termed “weather whiplash” and that have recently occurred across the Midwest and South Central states during the past few years, from record flood to record drought and back to record flood — may be an example of what’s in store as global warming continues to alter the atmosphere.

To learn more about how climate change affects air quality, check out the recent report on the topic from the Union of Concerned scientists, which projected that Virginia would be one of the top 10 most affected states.

Ground-level ozone, the primary component of smog, is generated by chemical reactions between nitrogen oxides and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) triggered by heat and sunlight. Warmer average temperatures from a changing climate may elevate ozone concentrations in many parts of the country, especially in and around urban areas.

Warmer temperatures also are associated with stagnant air conditions that can cause ozone pollution to settle over an area and remain for extended periods of time.

The UCS analysis, which used the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) Environmental Benefits Mapping model, calculated national impacts and ranked the 10 states most likely to experience the worst health impacts and highest costs in 2020.

In terms of costs, it found that California would be hit hardest, followed by Texas, New York, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Ohio, Michigan, North Carolina, New Jersey and Virginia. These states are most vulnerable because they have a combination of the largest number of residents living in urban areas, large numbers of children and seniors, and high levels of nitrogen oxides and VOC emissions from vehicles and power plants.

And finally, for more information about allergies and climate change, check out this early spring Huffington Post piece.

The planet is getting warmer, and human behavior is responsible. The changing climate has brought early spring, late-ending fall, and large amounts of rain and snow. All of that, combined with historically high levels of carbon dioxide in the air, nourishes the trees and plants that make pollen, and encourages more fungal growth, such as mold, and the release of spores.

We will be paying a wretched price in the coming months for the behavior fueling the explosion of pollen, which are the tiny reproductive cells found in trees, weeds, plants and grasses. By all accounts, there will be more pollen this year than ever before.

Most trees release their pollen in the early spring, while grasses do so in late spring and early summer. Ragweed makes its pollen in the late summer and early fall.

And pollen production is only part of the impact that global warming is going to have on allergies and asthma — and our health overall.

In areas of the country experiencing prolonged heat and drought, dust will worsen air pollution, exacerbating asthma and other respiratory diseases. In other regions, climate change will affect the insect population — their stings and bites can provoke fatal allergic reactions in sensitive individuals — as well as the proliferation of such vines as poison ivy. Poison ivy thrives with increased carbon dioxide, and as a result, now makes a far more potent urushiol — the oil that causes poison-ivy-triggered rashes — than in the past.

Another Fracking Fire!

I should be a firefighter. I think I’d be great. When I retire from advocacy, I might pursue my true calling. Keep in mind that my faith in my firefighting abilities is almost entirely baseless. I have no training, no particular skills, nor the will or courage necessary to run into burning buildings to save lives and properties.

But in a sheer metaphorical sense, I’m already a firefighter. Every so often unexpected problems arise that need serious attention. Look no further than the George Washington National Forest, where natural gas companies appear to be on the brink of successfully convincing the Forest Service to overturn its 15-year ban on fracking. Sound the alarm. This is a fire that must be put out immediately!

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Climate Wake-Up Call Reaches Dominion Shareholders!

Today I attended my third Dominion Resources annual shareholder meeting, the company’s 104th. And woah! What a day! The company, which provides 2/3 of Virginia’s electricity, announced the results of voting on a resolution addressing the financial risks of climate change, which I worked with a shareholder to introduce. It received an unprecedented 22% of the shareholder vote! While that may not sound like much, in the shareholder activism world, anything over 10% is extraordinary. Resolutions are typically introduced not with passage as the goal but with the intention to educate board members and shareholders.

Outside of the meeting, which was held at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, about 20 activists volunteering with CCAN, Sierra Club and Appalachian Voices held their own “exhibit” of altered artwork to represent the unrecognizable future of rising seas, extreme weather disasters and destroyed mountains that Dominion is leading Virginia toward. The “masterpieces” included a Starry Night marred by mountaintop removal mining, The Birth of Venus submerged by rising seas — a reality all too close to home for residents of Hampton Roads — and Napoleon, with CEO Tom Farrell moonlighting as the emperor of climate pollution.

Birth of Venus on sea level rise

Dominion is Virginia’s biggest climate polluter and a major purchaser of coal from mountaintop removal mining. On the other hand, the company has yet to bring a single kilowatt of utility-scale wind or solar power online for Virginia customers.

group shot

Activists got a pleasant surprise when Delegate Peter Farrell, son of Dominion CEO Tom Farrell, wandered by. The Virginia General Assembly member stopped to check out the action, and listened as one of his constituents explained we were there to call attention to Dominion’s climate pollution and the impacts of the company’s fossil fuel-fired energy. Then he asked to take a picture of our artwork featuring his CEO father!

Delegate Farrell takes a photo of the artwork

Back inside the meeting, I presented the resolution (item 8 on the 2013 proxy) calling on leadership to report on risks posed to shareholders by climate change, especially extreme weather. The proposal noted that the three most costly extreme weather events in Dominion’s 104-year history– Hurricane Isabel, Hurricane Irene, and last year’s derecho– have all come within the last decade.  In presenting the resolution to the shareholders at the meeting, I talked about residents of coastal Norfolk whose houses have flooded repeatedly due to sea-level rise and increasing storm activity.  I pointed out that these folks who live in ground zero of the climate crisis are examining the risks posed by climate change and deciding what to do.  Some are literally raising their houses up on platforms to avoid the water, some are moving inland and some are buying solar panels to lower their contribution to the crisis.  Clearly 22% of Dominion shareholders agree with me that the company needs to take a cue from Norfolk residents and examine what’s coming and decide where to go.

Other proposals received solid support. A proposal to link executive compensation to sustainability metrics received 7%, one related to mountaintop removal coal mining received 6% and one related to nuclear power safety received 4%. In recent memory, the highest vote percentage received by a shareholder resolution that the Dominion board urged shareholders to reject — in other words, all of the environmentally focused resolutions — was 16%. That was received by a 2011 proposal related to the community impacts of power plant retirements.

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Dominion CEO Faces Growing Backlash Over Risks of Extreme Energy at Shareholder Meeting

Through resolutions and re-imaginings of classic paintings, Virginians urge Dominion to stop leading the way toward an unrecognizable future of climate disruption and marred landscapes

RICHMOND—Dominion Resources CEO Thomas Farrell is putting his own company and Virginians at risk by promoting dirty energy in a rapidly warming world, according to shareholders and grassroots activists protesting at the company’s annual meeting in Richmond today. While shareholders present reform resolutions inside, activists are exhibiting altered artwork outside to represent the unrecognizable future of rising seas, extreme weather disasters and destroyed mountains they say Dominion is leading Virginia toward. The company is Virginia’s biggest climate polluter and a major purchaser of coal from mountaintop removal mining.

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