Mark Ruffalo and Greenpeace US Executive Director team up to say no to fracking

By Phil Radford & Mark Ruffalo

Originally posted to CNN

A Pennsylvania family shows their tap water from their contaminated well due to fracking

Even the heads of fossil fuel companies read the polls.They know the majority of Americans see global warming as an imminent threat and a clear sign that the way we use energy must change. But instead of offering the solar and wind choices America wants, fossil fuel companies like Shell, Exxon and Duke are offering what might be their most disastrous bait and switch yet: natural gas.

The bait? Burning natural gas is “clean” because it produces less carbon pollution than burning oil and coal. The switch? The catastrophic pollution caused when companies like Exxon fracture the earth — commonly called fracking — to get natural gas out of the ground. Continue reading

Greenpeace’s take on the movie Promised Land: the truth about fracking is worse than fiction

The film Promised Land, directed by Gus Van Sant, deals with exploitation of rural America by oil and gas corporations, made possible by the process of fracking. Fracking has become a highly controversial topic in the last few years, due to both its unchecked and unregulated expansion, and because of the environmental destruction this expansion has brought with it. The film in turn has attracted its own controversy, enduring full throated attacks from the oil and gas industry and their shills. So, how accurate is the film? Continue reading

Dubious LNG exports study was conducted in secret by contractor with ties to coal and oil industries

File:Methanier aspher LNGRIVERS.jpg

A study on the economic effects of exporting gas fracked in the US has opened the door for what Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR) and Congressman Edward Markey (D-MA) have called “a transfer of wealth from consumers to oil and gas companies.”

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After Sandy, Global Warming Should Be the Top Priority in Obama’s Second Term

Greenpeace activists hold a banner in front of the United States Supreme Court in Washington, DC, April 19, 2011. The banner was in reaction to the Obama administration taking the side of polluters in a case before the court, AEP vs Connecticut.

Americans went into the voting booth yesterday with horrific images of the fallout from Superstorm Sandy fresh in their minds. Pictures of homes ripped from their moorings, stories of children whisked away by rushing waters, reports of elderly people trapped on top floors of buildings — the true cost of ignoring science’s warnings about global warming are now all too vivid. Continue reading

Students Pressure University of North Texas President to Embrace “Green” Slogan and drop fossil fuels

Students stand for clean energy

Down in Texas, a region that is notorious for its oil and gas men, the idea of switching to 100% renewable energy isn’t exactly an idea that is catching on real quickly for individuals or organizations with the power to make it happen; even at a university that prides itself on being a “Green Light to Success”.

The University of North Texas (located in Denton, Texas) likes to pride itself on just how green it is, what they truly are is guilty of greenwashing. This university still uses 47 percent coal energy and 12 percent natural gas energy. This university also has a fracking site right on campus that borders a dorm! Yet they still plaster this image of being such a green school all over the place.

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Climate change concerns majority of Americans. Response from country’s leaders: “Meh.”

Greenpeace climbers rappel down the face of Mount Rushmore in 2009 to unfurl a banner challenging President Obama to lead on global warming.

Our leaders appear mum on the issue, yet the majority of Americans now think climate change is worsening extreme weather events such as the record-breaking heat and hazardous storms this summer, according to a recent survey. Where has climate change been in this election?  Will today’s debate between the vice presidential candidates actually address the environment, a topic not even mentioned in the presidential debates? Continue reading

Why Is Governor Cuomo Letting a Climate Science Denier Regulate Fracking?

A Pennsylvania resident displays evidence from the impacts of hydraulic fracking from a nearby well

Read this original Huffington Post blog from Greenpeace’s Executive Director Phil Radford.

Governor Cuomo relies on Bradley J Field – a climate skeptic — to head New York’s Department of Environmental Conservation’s Division of Mineral Resources. Unfortunately, Mr. Field has proven to be out of sync with the scientific community on the environmental issue with the greatest scientific consensus — climate change. And despite this, he is responsible for making sure that New York’s regulation of fracking is based on good science. Continue reading

Greenpeace Semester Students Draw Inspiration from Ohio Activist

Ohio activist Elisa Young, center, talks with Greenpeace Semester students, including author Miles Goodrich (in red hat) during the students' trip to moblize Cincinnati residents against Duke Energy's proposed rate hikes.

 

Written by Miles Goodrich, Greenpeace Semester Summer 2012

Because students proved a critical force in sustaining the social movements of the last century, Greenpeace has developed its own semester long program – the Greenpeace Semester – to train young adults in mobilizing for the environment.  Each semester, students go on a trip to work on a critical environmental issue with Greenpeace.

This session, our class went to Cincinnati to protest Duke Energy’s rate hikes, which the company proposed soon after the city switched to renewable energy credits after a successful grassroots organizing campaign to stop buying power from Duke – a move which cost that company close to 100 million dollars.  Despite being dropped in Cincinnati, Duke still owns that cities grid and is working to charge residents more to use it in and attempt to make up for that lost revenue.

On the drive out there, we stopped outside the dilapidated town of Cheshire, Ohio to speak with local anti-fracking and coal activist Elisa Young.  At first glance, Elisa’s warm smile suggests she’s a kindly neighborhood everywoman.  And indeed she acts with the sweet disposition of a grandmother—offering the fifteen students of the semester both homemade salsa to eat and homemade rocking chairs to relax in—but her warmth only extends so far.  To local fracking companies, Elisa is the worst kind of neighbor: a nosy citizen meddling in corporate affairs by demanding transparency regarding the supposedly public exploits of businesses.  “When they’re essentially writing the laws,” said Elisa of the energy companies with enormous influence over local governments, “you have to do your best to keep them honest.”

Despite her dedication to taking on a powerful industry, Elisa is a reluctant activist.  She survived the same cancer that claimed the lives of many of her friends and family—innocent casualties of the poisonous coal plants that have desecrated her ancestral home.  Elisa has experienced firsthand the damage the fossil fuel industry wreaks.  She knows what she is up against, but that does not stop her from doing her best to protect her homeland.

Elisa’s best work consists of trawling through hundreds of pages of obscure legal language and navigating her way around corporate bureaucracy—all in the name of staying an informed citizen.  “She was so inspiring as a grassroots organizer,” student Mackenzie Greisser said of Elisa, “fighting such a difficult fight for so long, but with success.”

Rather than chaining herself to every fracking well in Ohio (“I would do it if I thought it was how we’d win”), Elisa prefers to take on the industry by forcing them to abide by the law: registering the correct permits, filling out the proper paperwork.  Through this citizen-empowerment activism, Elisa has made a name for herself as the persistent, annoying gadfly, always double-checking the reports that energy companies file.  She understands the importance of participating in democracy beyond voting every four years.

Though Elisa stayed behind in Cheshire as we moved on to Cincinnati, we all took a bit of her and her citizen-hero mentality with us to the city council on Tuesday during a public hearing on the issue of allowing fracking waste to be stored within the city limits. We witnessed plenty of Elisa-like gumption and conviction among the nearly twenty citizens who all called upon the council to ban injection wells—sites where fracking waste is forced into the earth.  Echoing Elisa’s story, Mackenzie described how her family’s susceptibility to cancer makes the toxic byproducts of fracking a disturbing means of energy acquisition.  “Elisa fighting for her hometown inspired me to fight for mine by standing up against fracking,” Mackenzie said, “and the council thanked me for being an active student.”

So as much as anything, the Greenpeace Semester’s trip to Cincinnati to mobilize support against Duke Energy’s rate hikes is an experiment in democracy: government by the people.  And not corporate people, but living, breathing people who fight for their right to live on stable earth and breathe clean air.  People with the tenacity of Elisa Young and the drive of Mackenzie Greisser.  People who still believe in democracy.

This blog was written by me, Miles Goodrich – Greenpeace Semester student.  You can read more about my class trip experience here: renewthefuture.tumblr.com and go to www.quitcoal.org to learn more.

Twitter: @GPSemester

Facebook: Greenpeace Student Network

Petition: https://secure3.convio.net/gpeace/site/Advocacy?cmd=display&page=UserAction&id=1023

Ohioans take a stand against fracking

Something big happened in Ohio yesterday. After four days of movement building, networking and preparation we shook Columbus with the biggest action against fracking Ohio has ever seen, Don’t Frack Ohio.

Taking our message to the sky with a wind powered banner

1,000 strong, we took over the statehouse and passed a people’s resolution to end fracking.  “We the people have come together to put and end to fracking for a healthy and sustainable future.”

Ohio is the latest of many states coming under attack from the natural gas industry.  Gov. Kasich has received $350,000 from the industry making it much easier for them to pump chemicals into the ground destroying our land, polluting our air and poisoning our water. Last week Gov Kasich signed SB 315 turning one of the worst fracking bills in America into law.

Through out the we weekend heard from 350.org founder Bill McKibben, Gasland Director Josh Fox, Mary-Clare Reitz from Ohio Alliance for People and the Environment and many other local leaders. Of all the stories I heard this weekend Jamie Frederick’s hit me the hardest.

Jamie lives near Youngstown, Ohio in a small rural town. Following an alarming set of health problems that put her on the threshold of death, she finally figured out what the core of her problem was — contaminated well water. Her neighbor signed a contract with a gas company shortly before she moved into the home. A water test revealed that Jaime’s well water was contaminated with chemicals associated with drilling, things like barium and strontium.

“If they would have installed solar panels and wind turbines near outside my home instead of drilling rigs I would not have gotten sick and would be called mom now” Jamie Frederick.

Words cannot express how moved, inspired and hopeful I am from the weekend.  It was amazing to see people from all over Ohio and neighboring states of all ages come together to fight for our right to clean air, clean water and our right to say NO to fracking. Ohioans have risen up and found their voice. The fight against fossil fuels has not been an easy one but now more than ever, I am confident that we will win.

Don’t Frack Ohio

Don't Frack Ohio

The fracking industry is causing destruction and pollution across the country and now they’re trying to ramp up their efforts in Ohio.

It’s time for the people of Ohio to stand up and protect their state from the dangers of this practice, and set a precedent for the rest of the country. Join groups such as 350.org, Ohio Alliance for People & Environment, Buckeye Forest Council, Ohio Student Environmental Coalition, Food and Water Watch, and Greenpeace as we come together for the Don’t Frack Ohio movement from June 14-17, in Columbus, OH. Continue reading