Protest API Thusday February 2nd

For Immediate Release – January 27, 2012

Environmentalists Confront Gas Industry’s Back Door Lobbying Campaign

Raleigh, NC – On Feb. 2nd Croatan Earth First! has called for a protest against the American Petroleum Institute (the largest gas industry lobbying group in the country which represents over 400 corporations ). API is presenting a shale gas workshop to legislators to encourage them to support hydraulic fracturing in North Carolina.  API spends millions of dollars lobbying, funnels money directly to legislators’ campaigns, as well as millions of dollars airing pro-fracking ads on television to convince the public that natural gas is “green.”  API has already been working closely with some legislators to construct industry friendly regulations which Earth First! member, John Connor, says “puts everyone at risk…industry has shown no desire to safe guard public and environmental health”.

The event has been billed as invite only, the public is not welcome.  Protesters are calling shadowy closed door meetings like this a clear violation of the democratic process that have no place in a free and open society.  “These rich out-of-towners have more access to our legislators than we do, but it’s us who will pay the cost” says Michelle Davies.  “Hydrofracking has caused dozens of earthquakes in Ohio over the past few months.”  Groups like North Carolina Sierra Club have launched campaigns against fracking, and the Southern Environmental Law Center has made the Piedmont one of the top 10 most endangered sites in the Southeast due to the threat of natural gas development.

In a recent symposium on hydrofracking at Duke University, Robert Howarth presented his Cornell study which reveals that natural gas extraction warms the planet faster than CO2 due to the emission of the greenhouse gas methane.  He then publicly called for a moratorium during the Q & A session.  However, the American Petroleum Institute and its front groups, such as Energy In Depth, continue to mislead the public and their legislators. Croatan Earth First! will be holding the protest starting at 9 a.m. outside the Marriot City Center Hotel at 500 Fayetteville St. in downtown Raleigh on Thursday, February 2nd.

###

Action Alert – Fight The Fracking PR

On February 2nd, oil interests with the American Petroleum Institute (the largest gas industry lobbying group in the country ) are presenting a shale gas workshop to legislators to woo them into supporting hydraulic fracturing in North Carolina.  They’ve even booked a room at a hotel just a few blocks away from the legislative building.  API spends millions of dollars contributing money directly to legislators as well as millions of dollars in putting pro-fracking ads all over television telling the public that it’s “green.”  This is supposedly an invite only event…unless we have it cancelled.  Call the Marriot City Center hotel in Raleigh and let them know that this meeting undermines any true democratic process where representatives ask their populace what they want to happen with their own land and water.  Instead, they are being wined and dined by industry.  Tell Marriot that unless they cancel this event we will be holding loud protest outside their hotel on February 2nd starting at 9 a.m.

Marriot number: 919-833-1120  Ask to speak with the manager,  Bill Hoffman, or the front desk manager, Michelle.

Fax number: 919-833-8912

if you’re online try using free fax resources like faxzero.com or myfax.com/free to send in your thoughts.

Or tell them in person at:

500 FAYETTEVILLE STREET Raleigh, NC 27601

Secrecy, Regulatory Gelding Taint U.S. Nuclear “Renaissance

In pushing toward design approval and licensing, captive regulators promote industry instead of taxpayers, ratepayers and public safety

Statement by NC WARN Director Jim Warren:

Durham, NC – Boldly voting again on controversial matters in the last hours before a holiday weekend, the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission tomorrow plans to complete what the agency and its industry cronies claimed was achieved exactly six years ago: certification of a standardized Westinghouse nuclear plant design as being suitably safe and economical for licensing.

With three of five NRC commissioners on record supporting the AP1000 re-certification, the question for Thursday’s 10am meeting is whether the NRC-Five will also breach regulations by granting industry’s demand for immediate approval of construction-and-operating licenses at Georgia’s Vogtle plant and SCE&G’s Summer plant – before the certification rule becomes effective in 30 days.  Even NRC Chairman Jaczko said his four colleagues are seeking to accommodate the interests of Vogtle owner Southern Company by pushing for immediate COL approval. Continue reading

Join The Anti-Fracking Pledge

Join the Anti-Fracking Pledge of Resistance

Want to step up the resistance to fracking? Then join the pledge of resistance! Also  the word from the hills is that the 2012 Earth First! Rendezvous is being held in the belly of the fracking beast in the Marcellus region this summer. Details TBA

In the hills surrounding the Susquehanna River and its tributaries,  rural Pennsylvanians have created a new campaign, called Occupy WELL Street, as a way to confront and speak out against the oil and gas corporations laying siege to our communities in their relentless pursuit
of natural gas. Participants of Occupy Well Street have been working side by side with several Earth First! groups in the region to create a Pledge of Resistance to hydraulic fracturing and the promises of gas royalties at the cost of ruined land, toxic water, polluted air, and  divided communities. Continue reading

2012 Earth First! Organizer’s Conference and Winter Rendezvous: February 16-20, Monroe, UT- Anyone wanna go?

Re-posted from Earth First! Newswire

Canyons of wind-carved rocks filled with ancient voices call to earth warriors to gather for the 2012 Earth First! Organizers Conference and Winter Rendezvous. Come explore Utah’s wild raw beauty that is under constant threat from the ever-hungry beast of progress! Join us for early Spring in the desert, the breath between the departure of the snow and the blooming of the flowers to soak your bones in the ancient waters of Mystic Hot Springs. In the quiet between winter and spring we honor our past, examine the present, and create a vision for a wild and free future.

The OC will kickoff with the Night to Howl featuring Earth First!’s own Warrior Poets. The Organizers Conference, Thursday thru Saturday afternoon, is a meeting of earth warriors to strategize on how we most effectively create a world where the Earth comes First! Then Saturday night, after three days of meetings, it’s time to stretch and play at the Winter Rondy. It kicks off Saturday with fire and music (yes, that means you should bring your inspiration and instruments!) with Sunday and Monday filled with workshops, action planning, and … well, you know what comes after action planning.

A few notes on the site: Mystic Hot Springs is welcoming Earth First! with minimal compensation that includes work trade. For those of you who want to do something besides sit in meetings and go to workshops there will be a need for folks to care for the place we gather. If you are interested in being part of the work trade crew contact Stan at permipreacher@gmail.com or volunteer on site. Also, everyone should bring a little extra cash to further support our host in his efforts to care for this magical site.

Monroe, UT is a small, fairly conservative community that we should be mindful of. Please treat those you encounter with respect. Always remember, regardless of what you may think of their politics or beliefs, we are guests in their home. It will be in the low 20′s to 30′s at night and 40’s-60’s during the day. Dress appropriately and bring good bedding. A pad and/or ground cloth is essential. For those in need there are a few rustic indoor sleeping places. Please contact us if you would like one of these and, if possible, be prepared to give a little extra for indoor digs.

Website for the OC will be up soon

The website for the place hosting the OC is: mystichotsprings.com

For questions and other communication email: skillstour@gmail.com

And if you are not email/computer friendly (aka luddite) and need information call: (406) 721-8427.

Fracking Moratorium Urged

This is re-posted from Jan. 9 (Bloomberg Business) — The U.S. should declare a moratorium on hydraulic fracturing for natural gas in populated areas until the health effects are better understood, doctors said at a conference on the drilling process.

Gas producers should set up a foundation to finance studies on fracking and independent research is also needed, said Jerome Paulson, a pediatrician at George Washington University School of Medicine in Washington. Top independent producers include Chesapeake Energy Corp. and Devon Energy Corp., both of Oklahoma City, and Encana Corp. of Calgary, according to Bloomberg Industries.

“We’ve got to push the pause button, and maybe we’ve got to push the stop button” on fracking, said Adam Law, an endocrinologist at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York, in an interview at a conference in Arlington, Virginia that’s the first to examine criteria for studying the process.

Fracking injects water, sand and chemicals into deep shale formations to free trapped natural gas. A boom in production with the method helped increase supplies, cutting prices 32 percent last year. The industry, though, hasn’t disclosed enough information on chemicals used, Paulson said, raising concerns about tainted drinking water supplies and a call for peer- reviewed studies on the effects. The EPA is weighing nationwide regulation.

Longstanding Process

“We need to understand fully all of the chemicals that are shot into the ground, that could impact the water that children drink,” Representative Ed Markey of Massachusetts, a senior Democrat on the House Energy and Commerce Committee, said in a phone interview. The industry is trying “to block that information from being public,” he said.

The gas industry has used hydraulic fracturing for 65 years in 30 states with a “demonstrable history of safe operations,” said Chris Tucker, a spokesman for Energy In Depth, a Washington-based research and advocacy group financed by oil and gas interests, in an e-mail. Drilling in shale deposits in the eastern U.S. began in 2004.

Gas drillers have to report to the U.S., state and local authorities any chemicals used in fracking that are “considered hazardous in high concentrations” in case of spills or other emergencies, Tucker said. Those reports don’t include amounts or concentrations, he said.

The industry created a public website last April for companies to voluntarily report lists of chemicals used in individual wells, including concentrations. Colorado and Wyoming have passed laws requiring drillers to file reports to the website, Tucker said.

Hazards Unknown

Despite those disclosures, U.S. officials say they don’t know all of the hazards associated with fracking chemicals.

“We don’t know the chemicals that are involved, really; we sort of generally know,” Vikas Kapil, chief medical officer at National Center for Environmental Health, part of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said at the conference. “We don’t have a great handle on the toxicology of fracking chemicals.”

The government has found anecdotal evidence that drilling can contaminate water supplies. In December, the EPA reported that underground aquifers and drinking wells in Pavillion, Wyoming, contained compounds that probably came from gas drilling, including glycols, alcohols, benzene and methane. The CDC has detected “explosive levels of methane” in two wells near gas sites in Medina, Ohio, Kapil said.

He said he wasn’t authorized to take reporters’ questions after his presentation.

Chemicals Used

Fluids used in hydraulic fracturing contain “potentially hazardous chemical classes,” Kapil’s boss, Christopher Portier, director of The National Center for Environmental Health, said last week. The compounds include petroleum distillates, volatile organic compounds and glycol ethers, he said. Wastewater from the wells can contain salts and radiation, Portier said.

U.S. natural gas production rose to a record 2.5 trillion cubic feet in October, a 15 percent increase from October 2008.

A moratorium on fracking pending more health research “would be reasonable,” said Paulson, who heads the Mid- Atlantic Center for Children’s Health and the Environment in Washington, in an interview. His group is funded in part by the CDC and Environmental Protection Agency, he said, and helped sponsor the conference with Law’s organization, Physicians Scientists and Engineers for Healthy Energy.

Tucker called the CDC’s participation in the conference “disappointing,” saying the conference is “a closed-door pep- rally against oil and natural gas development.”

Representatives of Chevron Corp., Exxon Mobil Corp. and the American Petroleum Institute, a trade group, registered to attend the conference.

–With assistance from Katarzyna Klimasinska in Washington. Editors: Adriel Bettelheim, Reg Gale

To contact the reporter on this story: Alex Wayne in Washington at awayne3@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Adriel Bettelheim at abettelheim@bloomberg.net

Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/g/a/2012/01/09/bloomberg_articlesLXJW7C0YHQ0X.DTL#ixzz1j13gAv00

Activists Block Well Injection Site in Ohio After Fracking Causes Earthquakes

Oberlin Students Protest Fracking, Get Arrested in Youngstown

by Phoebe Flaherty and Nora Graubard

reposted from The Oberlin Review

Dec. 5, 2011

Five Oberlin students and one alumnus were arrested last Wednesday, Nov. 30, for their involvement in blocking an access gate to an injection well in Youngstown Ohio, owned by energy company V&M Star. The action was in response to the YOUNG 2011 Conference and Expo, the first natural gas and hydraulic fracturing industry conference in the state of Ohio, that was taking place in Youngstown that day. The group of 14 Oberlin and Youngstown community activists attempted to prevent trucks carrying toxic fracking wastewater from entering V&M Star’s wastewater injection site.

Annie Lukins

Frack This:

Oberlin students joined community activists in Youngtown to protest energy company V&M Star’s use of fracking, a method used for extracting oil and natural gas from the ground. Read the full story here.

“There is no guarantee that these toxins don’t migrate into drinking water, only a guarantee that these companies put profits before our health and safety,” said anti-fracking activist and member of the blockade Ben Shapiro, OC ’08.

Protestors carried banners reading, “Ohio Is Not for Sale” and “Stop Toxic Earthquakes,” while singing chants such as “Hey hey, ho ho, Ohio fracking’s got to go!”

The activists claim that fracking, a method used for extracting oil and natural gas that involves pumping highly pressurized fluid into rock layers, has polluted drinking water supplies in communities all across the country.

ProPublica, an independent, non-profit newsource that produces investigative journalism concerning the public interest, has identified more than 1,000 documented cases of water contamination near drilling sites. Anti-fracking activists also maintain that the injection of brine into deep rock formation can lubricate faults and is thought to be the cause of the seven recorded earthquakes with epicenters in Youngstown and the Mahoning Valley.

V & M Star is currently planning to expand its Youngstown site and insists that the plant provides critical employment opportunities in the area, which has an unemployment rate of 11 percent. The Associated Press reported Sunday that their $650 million expansion would provide 350 Youngstown jobs as the mill will produce pipes and materials used in the fracking process.

College first-year Jackson Kusiak, another protester, said, “We want to make it clear to the natural gas industry and to our representatives that fracking is unsafe and irresponsible and not the solution for our country’s energy problems.”

Also in response to the YOUNG Conference, hundreds of activists and community members participated in a march and rally organized by No Frack Ohio in downtown Youngstown to protest hydraulic fracturing in locations across Ohio. The injection well protestors were not affiliated with No Frack Ohio.

Kusiak, College sophomore Jeremy Bingham, College junior Annie Lukins, College first-year Ben Marks and College sophomore Lindsey Schwartz, along with Shapiro and 61-year-old Youngstown resident Sean O’Toole, were arrested later that afternoon for their participation in the blockade. They were arraigned Thursday morning and released after posting bail.

Lukins said, “A country where our most toxic waste is put in the same place as our drinking water is a country where our human bodies are used as waste disposal and that is illogical, inhumane and we can’t allow it.”

Tell NC DOT: “NO to the 70 Bypass!”

NC Department of Transportation is attempting to build a 10-mile long, 4 lane bypass through rare habitat inside of Croatan National Forest as a part of their “Super 70“  project catering to commuters in bypassing small towns, this one being the town of Havelock. The areas in which they propose building the road traverses rare, longleaf pine forest in which the endangered Red-cockaded Woodpecker depends on to survive. Citing that three families of these endangered woodpeckers live within the area, the US Forest Service has already communicated concerns about construction hindering their recovery plan for the bird, which requires intermittent forest burns to maintain required habitat. The road would also cause forest fragmentation, further dividing habitat into smaller sections, which Cornell University ornithologists believe harms woodland birds “by increasing their susceptibility to predation and nest parasitism.” A black bear sanctuary and game land are also nearby the proposed site, which may increase chance of traffic accidents with animals attempting to pass to the other side of their now fragmented habitat.

We say, “No more roads!” The building of the 70 bypass will shave off a few minutes for commuters rushing to Raleigh and, in return, we would have fewer long leaf pine forests, fewer wild areas, and possibly ruin recovery of the Red-cockaded Woodpecker whose numbers are already low. The SELC has stated that longleaf pine forest only covers 4% of the original range in North Carolina.  Preserving long leaf pine habitat for this bird should be top priority.

NC Dot held a public hearing regarding this issue on December 6th and over 100 people attended the meeting including environmental groups and local landowners who are opposed to the project. Plans for construction do not begin until 2013. NC Dot is still taking comments, so please take a minute to write contact them at:

Eileen Fuchs, NCDOT- Human Environment Unit
phone at (919) 707-6067 or via email at eafuchs@ncdot.gov.
Additional written comments regarding the proposed project may be submitted to Ms. Fuchs until Jan. 6, 2012.

Mail can be sent to:
Public Involvement & Community Studies
Attn: Eileen Fuchs
1598 MAIL SERVICE CENTER
RALEIGH, NC 27699-1598

(919)707-6000
FAX: (919)212-5785

Winter Solstice

Today the sun was reborn and a new year is on the horizon.  We have done much this past year and we are alive with our gratitude. The care and drive for the fate of this planet has been immense. We have seen many step beyond comforts to speak out for our suffering Earth.

Still there is much work to be done. Much action is required from us. For the wolves, water, mountains and sky, for all life on this planet. The brutal war against the land wages on. Let us be Warriors for our earth, our life-giver. Let this winter be one of strengthening. Let us nourish our bodies, our spirits and bonds and relationships we have built. Let our resolve be made of mountains and deep roots.

May 2012 be a year of action, of strength and bravery. We are of this land. We are this Earth. It is time we fight back.

for the Earth,

No Comprimise!

Croatan Earth First!

Keep The Ban: No To Uranium Mines!

For Immediate Release –  December 19, 2011

Virginia & North Carolina Residents Say: Keep The Uranium Ban!

Richmond, VA – An hour North of Chapel Hill, in South Central Virginia, energy companies are planning to mine for uranium for use in nuclear energy within the community of Coles Hill.  They are pushing for the lifting of a 30 year ban on uranium mining that has existed in Virginia and industry is pushing for legislation to be introduced as early as January 2012. On Monday, December 19th, environmental groups are demonstrating outside the General Assembly building at 901 E. Broad St. at 1:00 p.m. in downtown Richmond at the Uranium Mining Subcommittee of the Coal and Energy Commission meeting where the National Academy of Sciences presents their findings on the viability of lifting the moratorium.

The Cole’s Hill community is vehemently opposed to the plan and the group, Virginian’s Against Uranium Mining, has said “If the ban were lifted, processed uranium would be shipped out of state. Left behind for centuries would be huge volumes of radioactive and toxic waste, disposed near farmlands and local waterways. Exposure to this waste has been linked to increases in leukemia, kidney disease and other severe health problems. Uranium mining in the U.S. has typically occurred in dry, sparsely populated climates in the arid Southwest.  Virginia, on the other hand, has wet weather and is prone to extreme flooding and storms. Communities downstream from the first proposed site in Pittsylvania County (including Virginia Beach and Chesapeake) worry that a large storm, like Hurricane Irene, will overwhelm operations putting their drinking water at risk of radioactive contamination.”

Sierra Club will be present inside the meeting to present a statement against lifting the ban and Croatan Earth First! from North Carolina will be demonstrating outside.   Their banners read, “You Can’t Drink Money,” and  “Down With Empire, Up With Spring: No To Uranium Mining!”  Earth First! believes that this is an extremely dangerous type of extraction and is a great risk the region’s water table, the Roanoke River Basin.  The area in which the mining happens feeds into waterways that go to Virginia Beach, Eastern NC, Durham, Chapel Hill and Raleigh which are all downstream.  “Uranium extraction could contaminate our entire bioregion and water supply, says resident of Chapel Hill, Michelle.  “Until recently, uranium mining has only been done in very remote areas.  Mining inside of a community and right next to a waterway is inexcusable.  This would be the first uranium mine East of the Mississippi River.”  Furthermore, “There are no viable ways to dispose of nuclear waste or even to store it permanently,” says John Bower of Earth First!, “There could be long-term and disastrous repercussions of allowing uranium mining next to the Roanoke River.   The process of mining alone unavoidably contaminates everything around it with toxic solid, liquid and gaseous wastes.”  In 2008, US Congress approved a five-year project of cleaning up hazardous waste and contaminated land, water and buildings inside the Navajo Nation reservation in the Southwest where residents had worked in a uranium mine.  They also paid compensation to those suffering from radon induced cancers caused by the extraction process.

For more information, see:

Virginians Against Uranium Mining

www.KeepTheBan.org

Uranium Free Virginia

Piedmont Environmental Council