Tuesday morning in Washington, D.C., dozens of activists rallied in two separate but related protests against what they see as climate science denial โ first, controversial comments from the World Bankโs leader, and second, Senate plans to force through a gas pipeline and ease other energy project permitting.*
Author and environmentalist Bill McKibben, who spoke at both rallies, told DeSmog, โThe thing we desperately need to do, according to every scientist, is use less fossil fuel. Why we would make it easier to build more fossil fuel projects, itโs just craziness. There’s no logical argument for it. Their only argument for it is โI’ve got enough money and political power to push it through.โ But that’s not an argument, that’s just power.โ
The protests were planned by two coalitions of environmental and progressive groups, including Third Act, American Blue Ridge Alliance, Our Revolution, Friends of the Earth US, Glasgow Actions Team, The Climate Reality Project, Chesapeake Climate Action Network, Our Future WV, For All, and WV Coalition to End the Filibuster.
At first activists rallied at the World Bank headquarters to speak out against recent comments from the Trump-appointed World Bank head David Malpass. When asked during a public event last week if he believed in the connection between fossil fuels and climate change, Malpass responded, โI don’t even know. I’m not a scientist.โ Climate activists are calling for Malpassโs resignation from the powerful global bank, which is tasked with reducing poverty by giving favorable loans to low-income nations and has not yet ended fossil fuel financing. The White House has since condemned the comments.
Next, protesters assembled at the east side of the U.S. Capitol, where they rallied to draw attention to Senator Joe Manchinโs (D-W.VA) efforts to push through the Mountain Valley pipeline. The fight against this fossil gas pipeline has been going on for years, with activists blocking work on it and protesting in Washington, D.C. The more than $6 billion pipeline, which has long been plagued by legal and regulatory hurdles, would run over 300 miles between West Virginia and Virginia, and in January, a court threw out the federal governmentโs approval of the pipelineโs route through a national forest.
Pipeline opponents are saying that theyโve been thrown under the gas-guzzling bus by a side deal made with Sen. Manchin during the negotiations for the Inflation Recovery Act, which this summer passed billions of dollars to fight climate change.
Peter Allen Johnson of the American Blue Ridge Alliance and Christians for the Mountains compared the fight against the pipeline to a biblical story. Johnson recalled the story of Naboth the Jezreelite, who owned an ancestral vineyard which a king demanded he turn over but Naboth refused. The kingโs wife Queen Jezebel โ whom Johnson compared to Senator Joe Manchin โ then successfully conspired to obtain the vineyard from Naboth through illegitimate means.
Manchinโs deal, which would be tacked onto a continuing resolution to fund the federal government, has been shepherded by Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) and would allow accelerated timelines for environmental review of projects like the Mountain Valley pipeline. A statement on the legislation released from Manchinโs office specifically calls for the โAuthorization of the Mountain Valley Pipeline.โ It also โrequires the President to designate and prioritize reviews for a list of [25] strategically important energy and mineral projectsโฆโ essentially forcing the hand of the President to allow continued large-scale fossil fuel projects. The bill would allow expedited environmental review for renewable projects as well.
The proposal also goes after the Clean Water Actโs power to object to federal authorization of major projects, such as oil and gas infrastructure, according to Brett Hartl of the Center for Biological Diversity. In a statement Hartl said, โWe donโt need to gut the Clean Water Act and other bedrock environmental laws to build out wind and solar energy.โ
Both West Virginia Senators have received at least $10,000 in donations from the PAC of the company that will eventually run the pipeline, Equitrans Midstream, according to OpenSecrets. In addition, Senator Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.) has thousands of dollars of investments in NextEra Energy Inc., one of the companies building the pipeline. Both Sens. Manchin and Schumer have received hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign contributions from fossil gas companies, including more than $280,000 going to Schumer and nearly $60,000 to Manchin from NextEra during this election cycle.
From the Frontlines of the Mountain Valley Pipeline Battle
Theresa โRedโ Terry used to have red hair but she says due to the stress of the last eight years she has spent fighting against this pipeline, her hair has lost its original color. She lives on a Roanoke County, Virginia farm thatโs been in her husbandโs family for seven generations; it was reportedly granted to them by the king of England before the United States even existed. But that land is slated to have the Mountain Valley pipeline pass through it, and Terry spent weeks in a tree on this land in protest in 2018. She explained that this project meant that a โ42 inch fracked gas pipeline [is] going to be 1400 pounds of pressure going through my backyard up hills.โ
At todayโs protest over the pipeline at the U.S. Capitol, Terry told DeSmog of terror campaigns that the pipeline companies allegedly have been committing against residents along the projectโs path: shooting guns in the sky at night and setting off dynamite charges when none were supposed to occur. Sheโs most worried about the water in this section of Appalachia. โIf they blow up the water here, that interrupts the flow of the water and sends it somewhere else. So you’re affecting people’s farms, their wells, the wildlife.โ
Senator Tim Kaine (D-VA) told Politico last week that he wasnโt part of the conversation on the pipeline that would pass through his state (known as MVP). โAll I have said is, I am deeply opposed to the MVP provision, and frankly I think it would open a door that we do not want to open.โ While voicing concern, Sen. Kaine did not seem prepared for a fight that could blow up the federal spending bill thatโs close to passing. โIโm not a threat-style person,โ he said. โLet me tell you where I am. Let me tell you what I think about this. Can we solve it?โ
However, Red Terry says she is hoping that her senator will stand up for her interests in the pipeline battle. If he doesnโt, she warns, heโll hear from her.
*Update 9/27/2022 4:19 p.m. Pacific: Sen. Manchin today withdrew his energy proposal from the government spending bill after bipartisan opposition, including from Sen. Kaine, scuttled its chances of passing. “I stand ready to work with my colleagues to move forward on this critical legislation to meet the challenges of delivering affordable reliable energy Americans desperately need,โ Manchin wrote. โInaction is not a strategy for energy independence and security.โ
According to The New York Times, Sen. Schumer “said he would continue to work toward passage of the energy plan before the end of the year.”
Climate advocates welcomed the news of the proposal’s demise. “Over the last few weeks, frontline leaders with a mass movement behind them have made clear the incredible dangers and deceptive political maneuvering around Manchinโs fossil fuel fast tracking bill,” May Boeve, Executive Director of 350.org, said in a statement. “We have more work to do but today we breathe a sigh of relief.โ
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