Climate Movement Monday: declare a national climate emergency

Welcome back to another Movement Monday in which we discuss the climate crisis and take a quick action on behalf of people and planet. I don’t have a formal request for an action today, but suggest making phone calls and/or emailing Biden plus your two Senators and one Representative to report on what June has been like where you live. Is it hotter than usual? Windier than usual? Have there been wildfires, floods, tornados, tropical storms, drought, hail storms, etc.? How’s your air quality? Have you had to curtail physical activity? Have you lost insurance coverage due to climate risks?

A Bloomberg article from April stated “White House officials have renewed discussions about potentially declaring a national climate emergency, an unprecedented step that could unlock federal powers…” I don’t have a subscription so could only read that opening, but it seems like a good idea to let Biden and the Democrats know there’s broad support for the declaration of a climate emergency that would unlock all sorts of powers to take action.

When I made calls today, I reported that despite it still being morning, the temperature in the Denver metro area was already above 90 degrees. I went on to say that while those elected officials possessed considerable power that could be used to mitigate the climate crisis, they were instead using that power to enable and support a genocide in Gaza, and total destruction of infrastructure via 262 days of nonstop bombing that was also accelerating the climate crisis. I pointed out that the majority of people do NOT want their tax dollars used to kill and destroy, and would prefer a climate emergency declaration that would get everyone working together to ensure the planet remains livable.

On a related note, last week organizer Kelly Hayes shared the link to a Truthout article Climate Refugees Are Occupying Abandoned Buildings in Southern Brazil. This not only ties in with Rosaliene Bacchus’s recent blog post, but also gave me a boost. People coming together to care for each other in time of tragedy.

“This is our lifeboat,” says Liziane Pacheco Dutra. She wears a thick black jacket. Her hair is pulled back in a pony tail. “We lost everything to the flood. We have nothing. We have no bed. No food. We were disrespected at the shelter, and here we have found a connection, care and open arms. We’ve made friends. The kids play together and we are looking after each other.”

People were not treated well in the shelters which are mostly run by middle and upper class people who show the working class little respect. Instead, people are forming communities in abandoned buildings.

It’s a profound sentiment and a symbol of what the occupation means for the nearly 60 families that live here.

I recommend reading the entire article which shows what happens when people come together for the common good. Reading it warmed my heart and filled me with hope for the many possibilities available to us. Shared humanity for the win!

Wherever you are, I hope your local temperatures and weather are moderate. I’d love if you shared details of your June in the comments and/or comments made to your elected officials. Either way, please take care and stay safe. Solidarity! ✊🏽

Climate Movement Monday: MVP update + contact Biden

Welcome back to Movement Mondays in which I typically highlight a frontline community enduring the worst of the climate crisis and then offer an action you can take on their behalf. Today, I’ll be asking you to contact President Biden on behalf of ALL of us. But first, I want to update you on the Mountain Valley Pipeline (MVP). I most recently wrote about the MVP here (and that post includes links to the five previous posts about MVP), when Biden included it in the debt ceiling “negotiations.” Unfortunately, as noted in my June 5 update: [. . .], despite the overwhelming pushback on making Appalachia a sacrifice zone, Biden and the Democrats refused to vote for Senator Kaine’s amendment to remove all text related to Mountain Valley Pipeline from the Fiscal Responsibility Act. According to that legislation, ALL permits must be passed without judicial review within 21 days. 

Senator Joe Manchin insisted MVP be included in the Fiscal Responsibility Act because “The Mountain Valley Pipeline is a crucial piece of energy infrastructure that will help balance global supply and demand while strengthening our energy and national security.” Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm repeated that same national security fear-mongering in her letter to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), also writing, “. . . I request that if there is any further Commission-related action on this project, it proceeds expeditiously.” 

Guess what? An independent analysis of the Mountain Valley Pipeline reported last week that MVP will only be able to operate at 35% capacity.

The contentious Mountain Valley pipeline will likely operate at an average of only 35 percent capacity once built, resulting in a “limited impact” on Appalachian gas production, according to an energy analytics firm.

East Daley Analytics, a company that monitors operational risk across the oil and gas industry, predicted the pipeline would carry far below its capacity of 2 billion cubic feet per day, citing the limits of the Transco gas pipeline system. 

Including MVP in the Fiscal Responsibility Act had zero to do with debt ceiling issues and zero to do with national and energy security. The Mountain Valley Pipeline is and always was about further enriching fossil fuel companies at the expense of people and planet. 

San Diego 350. Image by Ryan Ezpinoza

Okay, now for taking action on behalf of ALL of us who are enduring extreme weather events around the country whether that be wildfire smoke from Canada, life-threatening heat waves,  flooding, hail, tornados, etc. It is clear this is a Climate Emergency and we need to push Biden to declare a climate emergency under the National Emergencies Act and use his executive powers**.

**That would give us the ability to reinstate the crude oil export ban, end new fossil fuel projects and drilling, redirect disaster relief funds toward distributed renewable energy construction in frontline communities, and marshal companies to fast-track renewable transportation and clean power generation. All while creating millions of high-quality union jobs.

Biden also has the power to deny approvals for any new fossil fuel projects, and mandate a phase out of fossil fuel production on federal lands and waters — two actions which scientists have stated are essential to staying under the global warming limit necessary to avoid the very worst of the climate catastrophes.

Thank you for reading this far! I wish you healthy air, water, and temperatures, wherever you are. Solidarity! ✊🏽

Climate Movement Monday: multi-pronged approach

Welcome back to Movement Mondays! I hope wherever you are, the air is clean and healthy, because that’s what everyone and everything on this planet needs and deserves. Today I’m going to highlight two organizations with different approaches to ending the fossil fuel era that has clearly accelerated the climate crisis. As I write this, the fires in Canada have burned 11.6 million acres and wildfires are expected to continue throughout the summer. Clearly, it is way past time to transition off fossil fuels.

There is no one “right” way to force this transition and I’m of the belief that we need to keep throwing everything we have at the issue, hitting the powerbrokers and decision-makers from multiple angles. This post is a result of back-to-back emails received today from two groups with very different approaches to ensuring a livable planet.

Twitter image celebrating the allyship between Third Act and Climate Defiance during D.C. actions last week.

Third Act is an organization of people 60 years-old and older because “as a generation we have unprecedented skills and resources that we can bring to bear. Washington and Wall Street have to listen when we speak, because we vote and because we have a large—maybe an overlarge—share of the country’s assets. And many of us have kids and grandkids and great grandkids: we have, in other words, very real reasons to worry and to work.”

Third Act’s email was a reminder about the launch of their latest campaign focused on Public Utility Commission (PUC) Advocacy. Alongside more than a dozen other partners, we’re building the largest-ever coordinated nationwide initiative to influence Public Utility Commissions (PUCs) in order to strengthen clean energy policies and build a better future — with clear, smokeless skies — to pass on to our grandchildren. Here’s an early peek/explanation of PUCs. On Wednesday (June 14th), they’re hosting a one hour teach-in (6-7 pm ET // 3-4 pm PT). RSVP here. I hope to see you there!

The second email came from Climate Defiance.  (“We are young. We are livid. We are no longer willing to be disposable.”) This organization takes a direct approach to dealing with the powerbrokers and decision-makers. One of their main points is that “Online petitions won’t solve climate change.” (And yes, as someone who frequently asks people to sign petitions in these Movement Monday posts, I feel called-out. But I recognize that petitions are only one tool AND signing one is just a first step that I hope leads to other engagement and involvement on the issue.) Climate Defiance is about (peacefully and calmly) getting in the faces of the powerful and this is their theory of change:

  • We need consistent, mass-turnout, nonviolent disruption to stop business as usual and compel politicians to act.
  • When we engage in direct action—whether through a strike, a blockade, or a mass occupation—we break through.
  • People see us. People tune in. People engage. Our movement grows.
  • Direct action puts the state in a double-bind: allow the action (and the disruption) to continue OR crack down, further driving up public support for the cause.

 

Climate Defiance has taken a number of successful actions in the past months, the most recent  including presenting a Harvard law professor with a Big Oil’s Bestie award. Jody Freeman is a a self-proclaimed “environmentalist” who receives $350,000 per year for sitting on the board of ConocoPhillips, the company behind the massive carbon-bomb Willow Project in Alaska. Activists demanded Freeman stop Willow or step aside! Video shows those who came to hear Freeman’s keynote address seeming quite uncomfortable by Climate Defiance’s action. Success!

Not everyone is ready or willing to act at this level of involvement**, and that’s okay. There are other ways to support Climate Defiance’s efforts. If you like what you’ve read here, I hope you check them out and then consider a donation and/or amplifying their efforts on social media.

If you’ve read this far, I’d love to hear your thoughts on these two groups AND/OR suggestions for other groups I can highlight here in future posts. Thank you for being here and I wish you a wonderful week. Solidarity! ✊🏽

**although I predict as the crisis worsens and more are directly affected, that will rapidly change.