Northeast
Residents Coordinate Multi-State Week of Action against Fracked-Gas Pipeline
Expansion
From Fossil-Free Rhode Island
Grassroots groups from
four states along the proposed route of Spectra Energy’s Algonquin
Incremental Market (AIM) pipeline expansion, which cuts through
New York, Connecticut, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island, have joined
together to host a coordinated “Week of Respect and Resistance”, with
actions from December 13 through December 19 in opposition to the
project. The project includes the expansion of a compressor station
in Burrillville which is already “a major source of hazardous air pollutants”,
according to the Federal Energy Regulatory Committee.
Video from earlier protests:
Video from earlier protests:
The
actions are planned in anticipation of the release of the final Environmental
Impact Statement by the Federal Energy Regulatory Committee (FERC) due on
or about December 19, 2014. The week of action will target local,
state and federal legislators and government agencies – all of whom have
direct roles or influence in the approval of the project. These
actions will build on the numerous rallies, vigils, meetings and call-in
campaigns that have been happening across the states for the past
several months.
“We are calling this a Week of Respect and Resistance: respect, because it's important to honor the other struggles for justice that have come before us, and those that are taking place right now around the world. It's also time for Spectra and our elected officials to respect our power and respect our desire to see a world powered by community owned renewable energy,” FANG organizer Nick Katkevich explains.
Fossil
Free Rhode Island, a grassroots group promoting divestment from fossil fuels,
will kick off the week with an event this Saturday, December 13th,
at the Alternative Food Co-op in Wakefield, RI, to highlight the need to build
a localized, worker-owned economy and rein in the power of multinational corporations
that perpetuates fossil fuel dependence.
Fossil
Free Rhode Island will follow up with a call-in campaign next week to ask
elected officials and state agencies to intervene to stop the AIM project.
Rhode
Island groups will also be present at the meeting of the Public Utilities
Commission next Tuesday, Dec. 16th, to protest the 23.6% electric
rate hike proposed by National Grid, a corporation headquartered in London,
Great Britain. The meeting will be held at 10 am at 89 Jefferson
Boulevard in Warwick.
Visit
this website for updates on the actions planned for Rhode Island: http://peoplesclimate.org/rhodeisland/
Late
last month, Fossil Free Rhode Island launched a campaign urging the Rhode
Island Department of Health to block the expansion of the compressor station in
Burrillville, citing elevated asthma rates in the surrounding area. “We
are outraged that Rhode Island’s political leaders—both Republicans and
Democrats—are ignoring threats to our children’s health, and instead are siding
with the fossil fuel industries,” said Tony Affigne, chair of the Green Party
of Rhode Island, a signatory to the campaign. “This week will show the state’s
leadership that people and the environment are more important than Spectra’s
profit margin.”
Rhode
Island Clean Water Action, the Sierra Club of Rhode Island,
Occupy Providence, and the Voluntown Peace Trust have also signed
on. As Peter Nightingale, Professor of Physics at the University of Rhode
Island, stated: “We need an immediate end to uncontrolled experiments that
threaten public health in Rhode Island and the habitability of the
planet.”
Many
elected officials in New York, including Congresswoman Nita Lowey, wrote to
FERC requesting an independent risk assessment of a massive 42” new segment of
pipeline that would run 105 feet from critical structures at the Indian Point
nuclear facility.
Renowned
pipeline expert Rick Kuprewicz stated: "[I] cannot overstress the
importance of performing a full and complete process hazard
safety analysis, independently demonstrating, especially to the
public, that there will be no interplay between a possible gas transmission
pipeline rupture and the IPEC facilities to failsafe shutdown or cause a
loss of radiation containment in such a sensitive and highly
populated area of the country."
“We
are at a critical juncture. Expanding the Spectra Algonquin pipeline will
lock us into a reliance on fossil fuel infrastructure for decades to
come. Communities across the region are coming together to oppose this
pipeline and call for clean energy alternatives, energy conservation
and efficiency,” says Michelle Weiser, Community Organizer
with Toxics Action Center.
If
approved, Spectra would begin construction as early as March 2015, and the
project would be completed in November 2016. Another Spectra expansion,
the Atlantic Bridge, is planned to follow right after the AIM Project with
additional expanded segments of massive 42'' diameter high-pressure
pipeline segments and compressor station expansions, and a third project
is also in the works.
These
expansions would be devastating to the entire northeast region and much of
the gas would be shipped overseas to foreign markets. "If the
governmental agencies fail us and approve this project, our nonviolent
resistance will only escalate. This week will be a demonstration of our
commitment to stop this pipeline at all cost," says Katkevich.
Groups
involved with the action include: Stop the Algonquin Pipeline Expansion
(NY); Sierra Club (CT); Greater Danbury MoveOn.org Council (CT);
Capitalism v. The Climate (CT); Occupy Danbury (CT); Fighting
Against Natural Gas (RI); Burrillville Against Spectra Expansion
(RI); Fossil Free Rhode Island (RI); Green Party of Rhode Island (RI);
Occupy Providence (RI); Toxics Action Center (MA & RI);
Mothers Out Front; No New Fracked Gas Infrastructure in West Roxbury,
Dedham, or New England (MA); Flood Boston (MA) and Better Future Project
(MA).