Archives for: February 2011
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Kumi Naidoo's Los Angeles Visit, and Why Our City Must Lead Globally On Quitting Coal

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Last week in Los Angeles, we had the distinct pleasure of hosting Kumi Naidoo, Executive Director of Greenpeace International. During his busy week here, Kumi was able to carve out an entire day of his trip to devote to visiting with members of our own City Council here in Los Angeles to discuss how LAcan become coal-free by 2020.

As the Southern California Greenpeace organizer, I was deeply honored to have Kumi in town. It's not everyday that man who oversees Greenpeace in over 40 countries and meets with world leaders is able to support local campaign work. However, what happens in Los Angeles in the coming years will have national and international significance. Global cities like LA must prioritize transitions to clean energy, and show the world that coal power is a thing of the past.

With Los Angeles City Council President Eric Garcetti

And few people can deliver that message like Kumi.  As an African, an anti-apartheid activist from the age of 15, a community organizer, and a lifelong advocate for the strengthening of civil society around the world, Kumi can speak to much more than the levels of CO2 in our atmosphere.  Kumi talked with Council President Eric Garcetti, Councilmembers Paul Koretz and Paul Krekorian, and staff from Councilmember Jan Perry's office about drought in Africa and the shrinking of Lake Chad, the rapid growth of coal-fired power plants in China, and the overall havoc that climate impacts will cause for our children and grand-children.

Los Angeles currently sources about 39% of our electricity from coal-fired power plants in Arizona and Utah. That is bad news for the climate, and bad news for public heath. There is overwhelming consensus by climate scientists that global climate change emissions MUST peak in 2015 and rapidly decline thereafter, otherwise our chances for avoiding an irreversible catastrophe are slim to none.  

With Los Angeles City Councilmember Paul Koretz                                                                                                                              

If we want to meet these ambitious goals here in the US, we must start by shutting down the coal plants that are responsible for a third of all US global warming pollution. And Los Angeles has an opportunity to lead that effort.

In the city's current 20 year energy blueprint (a.k.a. the Integrated Resource Plan), the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power makes some headway by ending our reliance on the power we purchase from the Navajo Generating Station in Arizona by the end of 2014, but unfortunately the plan also dictates that our city will remain dependent on coal-fired power until 2027.  This is not the leadership that the United States needs right now, or that Los Angeles is capable of.

So what can we do about this?  We need to urge our leaders, as Kumi and I did last Wednesday, to push for a plan that ends our dependence on this dirty and harmful source of energy by 2020.  The good news is that the City Council leaders we met with last week understand the importance of making LA coal-free by this important deadline, and we look forward to them embracing this issue as a top priority. The longer Los Angeles stays bound to coal, the longer we’re subjecting communities in Utah and Arizona to unprecedented levels of toxic pollution and communities in Los Angeles to the unreliable and increasing costs of coal-fired power.

We will continue working with City Council to ensure the Integrated Resource Plan provides visionary leadership, while reflecting the level of urgency dictated by climate change and toxic pollution.

 

 

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Michigan State: Raising Turbines and Registering for Power Shift!

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The World War II battle of Iwo Jima ended with an epic photograph of US forces raising the American flag atop Mount Suribachi, known as “Raising the Flag.” This photograph represented the end of a battle and signified the struggle and triumph of that battle with Japan. Over the years, this image has been recreated again and again. Years later, the Energy Action Coalition replaced the American flag with a wind turbine to symbolize the peaceful struggle and the much-needed triumph we can achieve with a clean, renewable energy future. This is ONLY energy future we can accept if we want to stop destroying our people, planet, and climate for dirty energy.

This week in the snow-covered, frigid land of East Lansing, Michigan State University students brought a call to action, recreating this iconic image all across campus. Why? Because in a far off corner of south campus at Michigan State lurks the LARGEST campus coal-fired steam plant in the nation, burning 250,000 tons of dirty, dangerous coal every year. A dirty coal plant that was fined last year for violating emissions standards set by the Michigan Department of Natural Resources and Environment - awesome, right?

Not exactly. That's why students sprung to action!

MSU Greenpeace joined forces with MSU Beyond Coal and MSU Eco, calling for an end to all dirty energy on campus and to usher in a clean, renewable energy future with sources like wind and solar power. “Raising the Turbine” has taken campus by storm! This week of action has brought students and campus community members out to participate in raising the turbine, calling on Michigan State’s President Lou Anna K. Simon and Board of Trustees to heed the call of students and switch to 100 percent renewable energy.

Raising the Turbine

"MSU has the opportunity to commit to such a transition and truly lead the green movement - the clean energy revolution," said MSU Greenpeace President Tabitha Skervin, speaking while the turbine was erected at Brody Square on Tuesday. "There is no question that this movement will happen, and MSU has the unique opportunity to be at the forefront of this movement!"

Raising the Turbine in Brody Square

While raising the turbine, students have also raised a question to the Michigan State administration. Will MSU transition from dirty energy to renewable energy? Will President Simon and the Board of Trustees agree that 31 deaths per year in the Lansing area due to coal are unacceptable? That over 500,000 asthma attacks, up to 36,000 deaths each year, 12,000 heart attacks each year, and nearly half a trillion dollars per year in hidden costs due to coal is downright immoral. Will Michigan State answer the students' calls for change and demonstrate the leadership needed to spark an energy revolution?

While Tabitha, MSU Greenpeace, and other environmental groups call for Michigan State to lead the nation in transitioning to 100 percent renewable energy, Power Shift fever has also swept campus by storm.

MSU Greenpeace at Brody Square

Wednesday night, MSU Eco, MSU Beyond Coal, and MSU Greenpeace hosted Michigan State’s first of many Power Shift 2011 registration kickoff parties! Dozens of students registered, and are committing to join the movement for a clean, renewable energy future.

Michigan State is Raising the Turbine (RSVP here) for the only future we can afford. The only future with no more deaths or destruction from dirty coal, or any dirty energy source. 

How will you Raise the Turbine at your school?

Join Tabitha, MSU Greenpeace, and 10,000 others this April at Power Shift 2011. Register RIGHT NOW before the Sunday, February 27th deadline.

WE are the clean energy future. WE have no planet B.

Join us this April at Power Shift 2011 and let's build this energy revolution together!

Michigan State Power Shift registration party!

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President Simon: Michigan State needs 100 percent renewable energy!

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MSU Greenpeace started a year and a half ago with just one student, Max Johnson. Max had a vision for bringing Greenpeace to campus to fight the University’s dirty, dangerous on-campus coal plant – which consumes 250,000 tons of coal PER YEAR! Today, MSU Greenpeace is a movement on campus. Organizing protests at Board of Trustees meetings, leading marches, mobilizing the students and community, and now that their call for 100 percent renewable energy on campus is being heard!

MSU Greenpeace No Coal!

Just weeks ago, MSU Greenpeace and MSU Beyond Coal teamed up to support a student government resolution calling on the University to switch to renewable energy! The resolution passed unanimously, mainly due to the overwhelming support from students, who, like you and me know that dirty fossil fuels are poisoning our air, water, cooking our planet, and incredibly expensive – now confirmed by a Harvard study. As students continue to raise their voices, the administration is starting to listen.

Yesterday, MSU Greenpeace members met with Michigan State President Lou Anna K. Simon to discuss their concerns about the campus coal plant. Four student leaders in the group met with President Simon: Tabitha Skervin, Adam Liter, Justine Becker, and Stephen Riccardi.

During their meeting MSU Greenpeace thanked President Simon for her recent steps toward a renewable energy future. Justine asked President Simon what her views were on renewable energy. President Simon agreed that coal and natural gas are NOT the solution Michigan State needs, but she explained that wind and solar are not an option because the campus is so large. She is open to renewable energy as more opportunities arise.

MSU President Simon

While that’s fantastic news, students are wondering why President Simon doesn’t simply create energy solutions by investing heavily in wind and solar energy research at Michigan State. The University is looking into an anaerobic digestion for powering its farms; however, it needs to think bigger. Create a space race mentality to secure millions in funding from statewide grants, renewable energy firms, and alumni donations. Not only will this create the solutions needed for campus, it will put Michigan State on the map internationally for its pioneering efforts and provide students with the experience and knowledge needed to compete in the burgeoning renewable energy job market.

The students were surprised to learn that President Simon is considering nuclear as an energy solution for Michigan State. Nuclear is a dangerous form of energy that has no place on a college campus.
 
While students were pleased to have the meeting, they want President Simon to lead the charge developing solutions to shut down the campus coal plant and replace it with 100 percent renewable energy. Not in 20 years, but today. Here’s Justine she said:

I love attending Michigan State, but with the university relying on the burning of coal as it's energy source, I can't help but feel like I am negatively contributing to the environment just by taking classes here. If MSU transitioned to 100% renewable energy, the students wouldn't have to be guilty because of the University's dirty habits and would instead get to be a part of the clean energy revolution.  

The administration is walking in the right direction, but now it needs to sprint toward a renewable energy future.

Next week, MSU Greenpeace is teaming up with MSU Beyond Coal and MSU Eco to host a week of action: Raising the Turbine! They will reenact the famous scene of Raising the Flag on Iwo Jima, but instead of an American flag they're raising a large wind turbine. RSVP here to help Raise the Turbine. This week of action is gearing up for two important events next week:

- A massive Power Shift 2011 registration party Wednesday, Febraury 23rd at 8pm in 305 Bessey Hall on MSU's campus. RSVP here.

- Michigan State’s first ever Energy Steering Committee meeting on Friday, February 25th.

Next week, students will continue to rally support for 100 percent renewable energy, mobilizing students to attend Power Shift 2011 and set the stage for the Energy Steering Committee to move the University away from dirty energy and toward the clean, renewable energy future students and our planet deserve. Thanks for starting this movement Max. Onward and upward we go!

EAC Raising the Turbine!

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Coal? Boo! What is it good for, absolutely nothing!

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thisisfarrah

In January, we started off our Coal Free Future ship tour on the east coast, kicking off our new campaign against dirty coal plants and helping to promote renewable energies. As a Greenpeace intern, and an environmental activist, it's natural for me to read up on the latest advances of sustainable living, green design, and innovative forms of renewable energy. There was one in particular that caught my eye. Solar panels. Not just any solar panels, but solar panels that collect energy in the DARK. This was something that I had never heard of before and was curious to find more information. I first read about this amazing technology on Green Wala's website here. 

solar panels in the dark 

Image taken from GreenWala.com

See, when considering alternative, renewable energies, you have to look at where you are on a map. Some areas don't get as much sun, so using solar power wouldn't yield enough energy to power much, whereas they might have more space for wind power and wind turbines. With this new technology though, it doesn't matter if the sun is shining or not!   

To read the full story put out by the Lawrence Berkley National Laboratory, click here!

First, we were destructors of the earth. Then, we were students of our mistakes. Then, we were creators of innovation and alternative energy and technology. Now, it's time to be healers and clean up!

Peace in Love, 

Farrah Tabatabaie, Online Organizing Intern, Greenpeace USA 

 

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Score One for Forests and Youth Activists!

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Ren Ostry is a Greenpeace Semester alum from the fall 2010 class and a  current campus coordinator at Ithaca College with the Greenpeace Student Network.  Read her story below! 

The second largest palm oil company in the world has finally heeded to a global Greenpeace campaign that included Greenpeace youth, and I’m happy to announce that the palm oil branch of Sinar Mas, Golden Agri-Resources (GAR), has agreed to stop deforestation in the Indonesian rainforest!

This win is not only huge for Indonesia, for our planet, and for our future, but for the youth activists at Greenpeace as well.
The forest campaigns that targeted Burger King, Nestle, and Unilever were won with the help of dedicated Greenpeace youth activists who organized and demanded that these companies stop supporting rainforest destruction.

Last fall, I had the incredible opportunity to join this campaign with my Greenpeace Semester class. We went to Philadelphia to carry out a week of actions outside various Pizza Huts and insist that they join the ranks of Burger King and the others by cutting their contract with GAR. We collected hundreds of postcards, drove calls in to Pizza Hut Headquarters, made “Pizza Cut” props and uniforms, and dressed as orangutans that were protesting to save their brothers and sisters back in Indonesia.

We didn’t see Pizza Hut fold that week, but so many managers passed our message along that the company made plans to fly a regional manager in to find out what was going on! I was so pumped by our week of actions that I couldn’t stop there. When I got home after the Greenpeace Semester, I hosted a pizza party.  A local pizza parlor donated a few pies, and I took the opportunity to share with my friends and family what was going on in Indonesia. We pledged to begin eating more local and sustainable foods that are healthier for us and for our planet, and we made phone calls to companies that hold contracts with GAR.

The look on the managers’ faces in Philadelphia when they learned what their companies were doing, and the passion that erupted in my own community as people made the choice to be mindful and think globally about their purchases, inspired me so deeply. I have seen first hand through this campaign what we are capable of if we continue to inspire and educate each other!

I am now campus coordinator at Ithaca College for the Greenpeace Student Network. I’m grateful that I have this opportunity to continue to motivate and aggregate youth activists. I’ve seen directly through this campaign that if you take the time to educate and embrace a cause, others will follow suit. Our generation is one of reclamation, and we will not let the corruption, greed, and naiveté in this world continue. From saving the rainforests of Indonesia to demanding a coal-free Facebook, I can promise you that there are young people fighting for a greener and more peaceful future every day.

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Valentine’s Day: Kentuckians show their Love for Mountains by saying "No" to Coal

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wojo

The people have spoken and won’t be ignored: We’ve got to stop coal and mountain-top removal mining now.

We know that coal kills and leaves a deadly legacy throughout its entire life cycle.
Destroyed mountains, poisoned water, filled valleys, sludge and ash impoundments, global warming pollution, asthma, and cancer are all gifts of mining and burning coal. 


But the people are standing up. As Greenpeace continues its Coal Free Future Tour this month, our allies in Kentucky are also showing their love for mountains, clean air and water this Valentine’s Day.

Today marks day four of an inspiring sit-in in Governor Beshear’s office in Frankfort, KY. Fourteen Kentucky Rising activists including author Wendell Berry are spending the nights on floors and chairs, occupying the governor’s office to demand that he end the destructive, poisoning practice of mountain-top removal mining.

This sit-in comes after numerous meetings with the governor asking him to stop the destruction that is coal mining. The governor has responded by downright ignoring the will of the people. Last fall, Governor Beshear sued the EPA to keep them from trying to protect the water around mining sites! Clearly, it was time for the people to rise up.

Mickey McCoy, one of the protesters, was just in Wilmington, NC inspiring activists to rise up there.  It’s plain to see why he does this.

People in Appalachia and around coal-fired power plants all across the country are being killed. Asthma, cancer and heart disease are not just a “cost of doing business.” People are sick and tired of being poisoned while coal companies make billions in profits. We must make a choice: people’s lives or polluter’s profits. There is clearly a right and wrong here. And it’s electrifying to see the people of Kentucky standing up for what is right.

You can hear acclaimed author, Jeff Biggers interview some of the other inspiring activists here.

I am not the only one who agrees with the activists sitting-in.  Adding support to the movement were hundreds rallying outside the governor’s office today, “I Love Mountains Day.” Continuing on last year’s tradition, Kentuckians for the Commonwealth sponsored the day that brought hundreds to the capital to say “No More!” to coal and mountain top removal mining.

Love is standing up for what is right.

I, for one, am feeling the love this Valentine’s Day.

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Lead Activist on board the Arctic Sunrise!

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annawagner

Stephen J from Woodstock, NY got an incredible opportunity this weekend. Stephen's the first ever Lead Activist to sail on the Arctic Sunrise.  Here's what he's got to say about his experience: Lead Activist Stephen Johnson 

I'm really privileged to be in transit aboard the ship 'Arctic Sunrise' with her full term crew. I was extended the invitation to sail for four nights on this legendary activist ship. Who wouldn't jump at the opportunity?

Feeling the rolling sway of this wizened ship en route to Boston, I smell the engine fuel and the spices from the galley kitchen. I admit that I feel out of my depth regarding my participating in this wayfaring campaign, and then I remember....I'm together with others. I'm with four other working guests that also have their apprehensions like me: is this safe, what about sleep or even internet connection? All that stuff dissolves when I think about the big picture...its for the planet.

This ship has a family that shines as a model community. For months on end they are sailing, living, eating, recreating, and coursing the ship in the optimal direction together. I see that all Greenpeace members, volunteers, activists and organizers envision a transformed civilization that cares for the environment, and this work is steering us toward the possible and sustainable future.

So, what is a citizen's participation worth for the future of the environment? I think about the quiet Catskill Mountain from the noisy ships' hold bunk-bed, and I get the connection: global pollution is everyone's problem. Amazingly, this ship has been to both poles many times, interrupted many corporate injustices, sailed up the Amazon and continues to penetrate the 'dead zones of environmental awareness' and now its time for the Coal Free Future campaign.

A Citizen chooses to participate... sweeps the the galley floor, coils the ships lines and communicates the possibility of a Coal free Future. I choose to participate. I know that we can learn to love our planet's soul and contribute to restoring climate stability through humanity's re-sensitization.

For the planet, Stephen

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Fish aren’t the only slippery things when it comes to seafood…

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Camry Haskins is a student in the Spring Greenpeace Semester class here in San Francisco. She is originally from the bay area and is currently a student at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. Her post was sparked after Casson Trenor, Greenpeace USA Seafood Market Campaigner, came to give a briefing to her class last week. Check out her story below!

On Monday, January 31st 2011, I found myself standing in front of the seafood counter at Whole Foods.  My attention was captivated by the transparent rating system that lets customers know which fish are the best and most sustainable fish to purchase.  What really struck me about one of the tags was that it read “not yet rated."  As I looked down the counter I quickly realized that around half the fish were labeled in this manner.  I don’t know about you, but in my life the use of “not yet rated” is rarely a positive thing.  It lead me to envision movies that lean in the direction of pornographic, children’s video games with graphic violence, language and abuse, and the power to keep selling something because you have yet to include a negative attachment.

So when Casson Trenor, the Seafood Market Campaigner at Greenpeace came to speak to my Greenpeace Semester class, I knew that I had to ask him about it.  I learned that my concerns were not unwarranted.  If the marking is unclear then you should just stay away.   Whole Foods is a store that ranks high on Greenpeace’s rating system.  In fact, they rate as third from the top.  This means that there are seventeen other stores that fall below Whole Foods in sustainable seafood purchases.  Now I don’t know about you, but in my opinion, if the third highest supermarket is confusing in their sustainable seafood options, then there must be room for even more improvement.

So who’s the highest in the ranking?  No it’s not Trader Joe’s, though it has recently risen to number five in the ranking.  Target is surprisingly perched at the top of the sustainability totem pole. Generally shopped at for its cheap household gadgets, electronics and clothing, Target now also boasts one of the most sustainable seafood selections around.  So next time you are casually shopping through Target and get a seafood craving you have no need to worry about driving to another store; just walk over to the grocery section and grab yourself some wild Salmon and feel good about the fact that you are taking a step in promoting sustainability.

Check out this Supermarket Seafood Sustainability Scorecard, but note that none of the supermarkets on the list rank higher than a pass rating.  This means that there is still a ways to go before we reach complete sustainability!  Before your next grocery shopping trip, check out which fish you should keep off your dining room table!

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President Obama and Penn State need to get serious about renewable energy

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djpins2

Yesterday, President Obama visited Penn State to tour campus research facilities and talk about his plan for renewable energy that he plugged in last week’s State of the Union Address. The President told students in his speech that the “future of the country depends on you.” While it is great that President Obama plans to stop subsidizing big oil companies and he talked about training a new “green energy” workforce, he continues to support false energy solutions. Fracked natural gas, carbon capture and sequestration, and nuclear are not clean energy sources and will endanger our communities, people’s health, and our climate.

Braden Crooks and several Eco-Action members who helped organize the Rolling Sunlight event on Wednesday were inside listening to the President’s speech. Outside, Tina Robinson a Penn State graduate who was very active in Eco-Action and now heads an environmental group called Cultural REcyclists, led the protests calling for President Obama and Penn State to “step it up” and switch to clean, renewable energy like wind and solar. Tina called on President Obama to not include “dirty, finite energy sources such a coal and natural gas in his ‘clean’ energy policy.” Chris Stevens who joined the event with his coalition organization United Students Against Sweatshops said President Obama’s speech was disappointing; that the President spoke more about football than energy.

While students and Pennsylvania community members are continuing to sound the alarm about Penn State’s missed opportunity to switch from coal to renewable energy, ranking officials at Penn State are becoming even more vocal about their support for natural gas from fracking. Michael Arthur and Terry Engelder, two professors of geosciences at Penn State are slamming the documentary “Gasland” after it was nominated for an Oscar. According to Michael Arthur the potential for groundwater contamination from fracking “does not exist in Pennsylvania [.]” Professor Arthur: please visit Dimock, PA where residents can light their drinking water on fire, please visit impacted Pennsylvania residents like Cindy Kalbach in Tioga County, and tell her fracking is safe. Professor Arthur, please look Pennsylvania residents straight in their eyes and tell them that disasters like last month’s well blowout in Tioga County are not a problem. I’m sure 21,000 gallons of fracturing fluids and sand that spilled onto the well site is good for the planet and all part of “clean” natural gas.

The industry connections and pro-natural gas sentiments run deep at Penn State. Michael Arthur, co-director of Penn State's Marcellus Center for Outreach and Research, is outspoken and opposed to Philadelphia's unanimous City Council vote to ban gas drilling in the Delaware River Basin. Professor Terry Engelder has previously worked for Texaco, received funding from Texaco for research, and worked previously on projects with Saudi Aramco and Royal Dutch Shell.

To me, it is not surprising that these Penn State professors are opposed to a documentary highlighting the dangers of natural gas drilling. Are you suprised? Didn't think so.

I know this truth is abundantly clear. If President Obama and Penn State are serious about clean, renewable energy, the only way forward is with renewable energy that does not poison people’s water, their air, communities, or contribute to climate change. What does that renewable energy future look like? An Energy Revolution including wind and solar. When do we want it: NOW!

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Let’s face it. Greenpeace activists rock.

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annawagner

Harvey the Polar Bear visits City HallOk, so maybe you can’t stop by the Arctic Sunrise ship in NYC or march in the Quit Coal protests in Philly.

Hopefully, someday you will – but here’s the real deal. Greenpeace activists are doing amazing things in their hometowns right now. And you can too.

For example – take Kathy in Redlands, CA. Not too long ago, Kathy signed up to be a Lead Activist.  When she started, she was one woman who cared very deeply about justice and our environment.  

Kathy decided she needed a team of activists to work with.  She invited some folks over to her house and started having regular potlucks.  At the meetings, they wrote letters to stop drilling in the Arctic and divvied up whale cards to take to local elementary schools to get Obama to save the whales.  At first it was one or two people, but the potluck meetings grew.  Each time, there was one more.

Kathy’s team of Redlands Greenpeace volunteers have taken a polar bear to City Hall to tell city council to get sustainable.  They’ve held a silent vigil in honor of the gulf oil spill to send a message that we need clean energy now.  Redlands, CA 10-10-10 pic - 1They’ve hosted educational forums about California clean energy issues, like Prop 23 – a push by big Texas Oil companies to overturn California’s global warming laws.

And a few activists working with Kathy attended the recent protests to tell the Koch Brothers to get their dirty money out of politics.  Her team is taking on local, state, national, and international issues.  And they’re making a difference.

Now, they’re hitting the streets to invite people to a “2011 Greenpeace Redlands Kick-Off” meeting, and their goal is to have 25 people attend.  They’re gearing up to scout local grocery stores for red-list fish and tell the managers to get sustainable.

Each day we're one more.  Join us

 

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How We Quarantined the Kochs in Rancho Mirage

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jennybinstock

 As you might have noticed in the news over the last week, a few thousand people descended Rancho Mirage, CA this past Sunday to let billionaires Charles and David Koch know that their secret strategy meeting of wealthy, right-wing elites would not go unnoticed or unopposed. As if flying the 

Greenpeace airship over the Ranchos Las Palmas resort the previous Friday wasn't enough, a coalition of over 30groups including labor, environmentalists, the faith community, and progressives organized a rally to “Uncloak the Kochs” to ensure that in 2011,the Kochs and their friends will be propelled to a new level of shame andinfamy in the public eye for their efforts to funnel billions into manipulating our elections and unraveling environmental, consumer and public health protections for the vast majority of Americans.

 

The day kicked off with a panel organized by our friends at Common Cause called "Uncloaking the Kochs: The Billionaires Caucus and its Threat to our Democracy".  The panel featured Robert Reich, former United States Labor Secretary; Van Jones, Senior Fellow, Center for American Progress; Erwin Chemerinsky, UC Irvine Law Dean; Lee Fang, Center for American Progress investigative journalist and Koch Brothers expert; and DeAnn McEwen, Co-President of the California Nurses Association.  The speakers addressed a standing room only crowd of 300 people, focusing on the impact that the Koch brothers and other special interest have on decision-makers and public policy.

 

 

vanessa lauren

Greenpeace volunteer leaders from Los Angeles Vanessa and Lauren came to Rancho Mirage for the rally

The panel was followed by a rally hosting close to 2,000 people who came from across California and the US to hear speakers representing all walks of life who have fallen victim to the Koch’s poisonous influence over theirlives.  The crowd was addressed by a cancer survivor describing her trials with the complexities of the American healthcare system, a student challenging the Kochs to an open debate, and an investigative journalist who’s beenuncovering the depths of the Koch’s corruption.

At the rally’s close, activist Jim Hightower deputized the entire crowd as membersof the “People’s Center for Disease Control”, and attendees moved down thestreet towards the Rancho Las Palmas Resort to quarantine the area to preventthe spread of the Kochs’s dirty money and influence.  The sight of a thousandpeople marching straight across Bob Hope Drive and boldly up to the frontentrance of the resort was an incredible display of solidarity amongst thediverse crowd.  Agents of the People’s Center for Disease Control cheeredon several dozen activists in hazmat suits that crossed into the resort’sdriveway and across police lines to send their message directly to the Kochs(we know the brothers were on the roof watching the whole thing!). They werepeacefully detained while the crowd blocked the intersection and chanted“arrest the Kochs, not the people!”

arrests  

We Americans have an incredible fight ahead of us to protect thefuture of our country from wealthy elites like the Kochs and their allies whowish to diminish the very democratic values on which our country wasfounded.  While the access enjoyed by these powerful forces will continueto push back on the fundamental rights of everyday citizens, actions taken bythose on Sunday send a powerful message: people are more powerful than dirtymoney, and when we come together as a movement, we build something far strongerthan the Kochs’s empire.  If we are vigilant and determined, we willcontinue to seek the truth and break through the lies and corruptionorchestrated by the Kochs.

 

 

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A ray of sunlight on the eve of President Obama's visit at Penn State

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djpins2

Today, students with the environmental group Eco-Action teamed up with Greenpeace to call on President Obama and University officials to get real and invest in truly clean, renewable energy like wind and solar. Hundreds of students and Penn State community members braved the cold winds, freezing rain, and slippery sidewalks to visit Greenpeace’s solar vehicle, the Rolling Sunlight. They came out to enjoy solar-powered hot chocolate and coffee, and to learn about clean energy solutions like wind and solar. Penn State's Vice President of Student Affairs, Damon Sims, and Sustainability Director, Erik Foley, were among a few notable attendees joining the crowds today.

No more dirty energy!

This ray of sunlight shines on the eve of President Obama’s visit to Penn State to tour campus research facilities and speak about innovation, clean energy, and “winning the future” by investing in renewable energy. His visit follows a State of the Union address that plugged real renewable energy solutions like wind and solar, and false solutions like carbon capture and sequestration, natural gas, and nuclear.

Penn State is also missing the mark when it comes to renewable energy. Just weeks ago, the University made a major decision to switch its on-campus steam plant from coal to natural gas, missing a huge opportunity to transition to 100 percent renewable energy. Students and community members are frustrated, and some outraged, by the University’s decision. Many are asking questions about Penn State’s connections to the natural gas industry, because several key decision makers and researchers on campus have either worked for or receive funding from natural gas companies. Penn State is intimately tied to the natural gas industry. In fact, the University just received its single largest donation from a Pennsylvania natural gas industry tycoon. 

The Rolling Sunlight was a source of inspiration and hope for those concerned about Penn State and America's clean energy future.

Eco-Action officer and Greenpeace campus coordinator Braden Crooks took the stage to lead a rally where several inspirational speakers addressed the crowd. Braden read a statement from Cindy Kalbach, a community member in the Northern Tier of Pennsylvania who could not attend because of inclement weather. Cindy said that natural gas well drilling has "destroyed environment, infrastructure, health and quality of life" in her community. She has a chronic cough from breathing in dust from as many as 50 trucks passing by her house each hour. Her drinking water has methane levels that register at a "highly explosive level" so that she can literally light her water on fire. Cindy has supported Penn State in the past, and is disappointed that the University is not speaking out against the destructive method of harvesting shale gas, a process known as fracking. She has also called on the Obama administration to help her, but her cries for help are not being answered.

The crowd heard similar messages from Ben Ketchum, Outreach Coordinator for the anti-fracking group Gas Truth; Steve Hvozdovich with Clean Water Action; and Robert Gardner, Greenpeace's Climate and Energy Campaigner.

They all raised some serious questions for Penn State and President Obama, which are touting natural gas as a clean energy source. Following the rally, Braden expressed his hopes and expectations to get some answers when he attends President Obama's speech on campus tomorrow. He told me that "today Eco-Action and Greenpeace showed Penn State and President Obama what real renewable energy looks like, and it has nothing to do with natural gas.”

Let's hope that we see real leadership from both Penn State and President Obama. We need 100 percent renewable energy like wind and solar, not dirty energy that endangers our communities, human life, and our climate.

Tomorrow the excitement at Penn State continues! Several Eco-Action members will attend President Obama’s speech, while many students and community members will demonstrate outside calling on Penn State and President Obama to do thing right thing: invest in truly clean, renewable sources of energy. Will they answer the call of a generation in desperate need of real clean energy solutions?

Stay tuned to find out. Many more updates to come from the front lines at Penn State.

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Greenpeace's ship the Arctic Sunrise coming to New York City this weekend!

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Hello New York City!

Greenpeace has been in a fight against dirty coal and big oil for decades to stop their disastrous impacts on human health and welfare, and to the climate. It is time that we phase out these fuels and kick-start a clean energy revolution! 
 
Please join Greenpeace on our Quit Coal campaign we are launching to stop dirty coal. The campaign began with our Coal Free Future Ship Tour in Wilmington, NC. Greenpeace's ship The Arctic Sunrise is on a month-long tour stopping in major East Coast cities. During the tour, we will support communities in their fight against the impact of coal and highlight these efforts in Wilmington, Philadelphia, New York, and Boston. 

Please join The Arctic Sunrise at Chelsea Piers Pier 59 (11th Avenue and W 17th St.) in New York City from February 4th to February 11th. In New York, we will focus on the solutions to dirty coal, like clean, renewable wind and solar energy. We will also offer open boat tours where you can visit the ship, meet the ship crew and learn a bit about our campaigns. 

These are the dates of the Open Boat tours:

Sat 2/5 - Open Boat 10-4pm
Sun 2/6 - Open Boat 10-4pm
Mon 2/7 - Open Boat 12-6 pm
Thur 2/10 - Open Boat 12-6 pm
Fri 2/11 - Open Boat 12-6 pm
 
Please join us in sharing strategies and solutions, and help us energize local campaigns against coal plants. In order to learn more about the open boat events, please click the link below to RSVP and we will get you more information.
 
 


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