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Recent Poll Shows North Carolinians Want More Clean Energy

July 26, 2013 By nancy

Most North Carolinians oppose fracking, favor clean energy and think current regulations are sufficient or should be stronger. Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) released the North Carolina poll results on […]

Recent Poll Shows North Carolinians Want More Clean Energy

July 26, 2013

polls1Most North Carolinians oppose fracking, favor clean energy and think current regulations are sufficient or should be stronger. Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) released the North Carolina poll results on July 15, 2013.

From the mountains to the beaches, it’s clear that North Carolinians take special pride in their state, and see state environmental safeguards as protecting our heritage and ensuring that our children can enjoy this place we know and love,” said NRDC senior attorney Luis Martinez, who is based in Asheville.

Among the poll’s key findings:

  • 61% say state environmental standards and regulatory standards do more good than harm for the state.
  • More than 75% say current standards and safeguards are “about right” or “too weak.”
  • 55% oppose fracking.  Opposition was strongest in the triangle at 59%, followed by the easternmost and westernmost parts at 55%; Charlotte, 53%; and in the Triad, 48%.
  • An overwhelming majority favor supporting and developing clean renewable energy from solar, wind and other sources.  About 56% oppose attempts by some lawmakers to eliminate the state’s clean energy standard which requires utilities to get at least some of their energy from clean, renewable sources.  Regarding various sources of renewable energy: 68% favor solar; 56% wind; and 50% offshore wind energy.

 

“These polling results justify what we’re experiencing in our communications with congregations,” says Susannah Tuttle, Director of NCIPL.  “North Carolinians are incredibly proud of our quality of life in this great state. NRDC’s report inspires and encourages us all to advocate for what we value. Investments in clean energy sources protect what we love, which is clearly a public priority for North Carolina.”

Filed Under: Blog, In the News, Uncategorized

Environmental Groups Push for Stronger EPA Regulation of Toxic Poisons from Coal-Fired Power Plants Routinely Dumped Into U.S. Waters

July 24, 2013 By nancy

After 3 decades of delay, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is proposing to set long-overdue standards to limit the dumping of billions of pounds of toxic pollutants from coal-fired […]

Environmental Groups Push for Stronger EPA Regulation of Toxic Poisons from Coal-Fired Power Plants Routinely Dumped Into U.S. Waters

July 24, 2013

After 3 decades of delay, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is proposing to set long-overdue standards to limit the dumping of billions of pounds of toxic pollutants from coal-fired power floodgates-375plants into U.S. waterways and drinking water sources.

On Tuesday, July 23, 2013, in a press conference held on the banks of Mountain Island Lake near Charlotte, NC, a coalition of environmental organizations and clean water groups released a national investigative report analyzing the multiple options comprising the proposal titled Closing the Floodgates:  How the Coal Industry is Poisoning Our Waters and How We Can Stop It.  Environmental experts from The Environmental Integrity Project, The Sierra Club, Clean Water Action, Earthjustice and the Waterkeeper Alliance reviewed data from 386 coal-fired power plants across the country and found that the Clean Water Act has been almost universally ignored by for almost three decades by power companies and permitting agencies.  The report found that:

At least 5.5 billion pounds of water pollution is released into the environment by coal-fired plants every year, including nearly 80,000 pounds of arsenic alone.  Coal-fired power plants dump more toxics into our waters than the other top nine polluting industries combined.

Tens of thousands of miles of rivers are degraded by this pollution.

The EPA has identified more than 250 individual instances where coal plants have harmed ground or surface waters.

Nearly half of the 386 power plants studied are operating with expired Clean Water Act permits.  53 have permits which expired 5 or more years ago.

Over 30% have no requirements to monitor or report the discharge to governmental agencies or the public.

70% have no limits on toxic substances such as arsenic, boron, cadmium, lead, mercury and selenium.

71 plants were dumping toxics into rivers, lakes, streams and bays that have already been declare impaired due to poor water quality.


CLOSE TO HOME

In Belews Lake, just one decade of coal waste dumping eliminated 18 or the 20 fish species and left dangerous levels of contamination more than 10 years later.

In Hyco Reservoir, coal plant dumping led to a $864 million fish kill and selenium levels in blue gill 1,000 times greater than normal.

A survey of waters affected by nine power plants in North Carolina found contamination all across the state exceeding human and aquatic life standards for arsenic, antinomy, cadmium, selenium and thallium.

The report calls the Catawba River, the French Broad River and the Cape Fear River “Coal Rivers:  Duke Energy’s Toxic Legacy in North Carolina.”  Groundwater monitoring revealed leaking at every single one of the 10 coal-burning power plants in North Carolina.  Three of the reservoirs on the Catawba are heavily polluted.  Duke Energy is allowed to dump approximately 8 million gallons per day of scrubber sludge and ash water into Lake Norman with no limits on arsenic and water.  Lake Norman provides drinking water for many nearby towns.

Coal ash was pumped for many years into two unlined ash ponds that are leaking toxic metals into Mountain Island Lake, the sole drinking water source for more than 8000,000 people in the Charlotte area.  Even though the Riverbend Station is no long operating, it continues to pollute and monitoring is inadequate.

The G.G. Allen, further down the Catawba, has no enforceable limits on discharges.

The Duke Energy L.V. Sutton power plant on the Cape Fear River has recorded in its own discharge monitoring reports that it discharged 603 pounds of arsenic to the river, along with 526 pounds of selenium in 2012 alone.  Leaks from the coal ash ponds into groundwater have been documented.  The river below the Sutton plant has high levels of nickel and copper and is considered unsafe for harvesting aquatic life, even though it is a popular sportfishing lake.  Fish in the Atlantic Ocean at the mouth of the river have been found to contain high levels of mercury.


ACTION IS REQUIRED

The report goes on to report that the technology to eliminate coal ash wastewater completely already exists and is cost effective.  The EPA estimates that ending toxic dumping from coal plants would cost less than one percent of annual revenue for most coal companies.

Unfortunately, EPA’s proposal includes many options.  The report mentioned that the EPA proposal came back from the White House’s Office of Management and Budget (OMB) with new, weaker options.  Some of these would do little to control dangerous dumping.  Only “Option 5” would set “zero discharge” standards that would require plants to clean up almost entirely.

Environmentalists across the country are speaking out, including Robert Wendelgass, Clean Water Action’s president and CEO:  “The EPA must end the power plant industries’ free pass to pollute into already damaged waterways and other vital waters that are sources of drinking water for millions of Americans.”

Many local events will be held across the country, from a “toxic lemonade stand” in Pennsylvania to a “Miss and Mr. Toxic Water Swimsuit Competition in Missouri and a fish-less fry in Illinois.


WHAT CAN YOU DO? 

  • Read the report.
  • Send the report to as many people as you can, including your local news media.
  • Tell the EPA to choose option 5 during the public comment period which ends September 20.
  • Tell as many people as you can to tell the EPA to choose option 5.
  • Post the report and EPA link to your website, facebook, and twitter.  Use the following hashtags:  #notoxicwater, #kickcoalash, #protectcleanwater, #swimdrinkfish
  • Cross post the many news stories that will appear across the U.S.
  • Create and participate in public events to raise awareness.

Filed Under: Blog, In the News, Uncategorized

2013 Walk for Our Grandchildren

July 24, 2013 By nancy

This summer dedicated activists walked 100 miles from Camp David to Washington, DC.  to ask President Obama and other policy makers to take strong action to keep the majority of […]

2013 Walk for Our Grandchildren

July 24, 2013

2013 Walk for Our Grandchildren 1This summer dedicated activists walked 100 miles from Camp David to Washington, DC.  to ask President Obama and other policy makers to take strong action to keep the majority of fossil fuels in the ground.  They are demanding climate action now!

As they walked, they talked to the people in the communities along their route. They are listened for their concerns and ideas about how together we can respond to the dangers posed by fossil fuels. And then they took this message to the White House.

The first stop on the second day of the walk was Myersville, MD, the site of a proposed gas compressor station on the edge of town.  The citizens are organizing to keep their town from being a key site in the fracking infrastructure.  As Greg Yost wrote in his blog, “Today’s experience proves the point: the struggle against the carbon extraction economy is all one fight. Fossil fuels cause damage when they’re taken from the ground, when they’re moved, and when they’re burned. Whether it’s tar sands, fracked gas, offshore drilling, or coal ripped from the ground, there’s somebody, somewhere paying a high cost for all this “cheap energy.”

They arrived in Harpers Ferry, VA on day 3, where the number of walkers tripled.  Steve Norris, one of the Walk’s originators, used its history to make a connection.  Greg Yost said in his blog on the third day, “Steve pointed out that just as our nation now finds itself addicted to carbon-sourced energy and in desperate need of deliverance, so it once was also addicted to slave-sourced fuel. The commitment, courage, moral seriousness, and sacrifice exhibited during Emancipation, a struggle for the very heart and soul of the nation, serves as a model for us now.”

The walkers arrived at Lafayette Park across the street from the White House on July 27, coinciding with Summer Heat, a week of action across the nation to address global warming and carbon pollution.

A Rally for Independence from Fossil Fuels took place that day at the Joan of Arc Statue.   The Rally featured leaders from the iMatter Kids vs. Global Warming Campaign, including Nelson Kanuk, an Alaskan Native and a member of the Yup’ik Eskimo Tribe, who has already lost his home to sea level rise. Bill McKibben, a founder of 350.org, was the Rally’s keynote.

A Ceremony based on the Declaration of Independence from Fossil Fuels invited participants to make a commitment to act on our children’s behalf.  After the Rally, the iMatter youth moved with all attendees to the White House to present the President with the Declaration of Independence from Fossil Fuels and messages from people on the Walk and across the country about their concern about rapidly progressing global warming.

 

Filed Under: Blog, In the News, Uncategorized

In the Shadows of Riverbend

July 24, 2013 By nancy

Across the street, a small, unassuming, idyllic Catholic church faces the Duke Power Riverbend Coal Plant at the center of litigation and outrage in response to consistent pollution and lack […]

In the Shadows of Riverbend

July 24, 2013

Closing the FloodgatesAcross the street, a small, unassuming, idyllic Catholic church faces the Duke Power Riverbend Coal Plant at the center of litigation and outrage in response to consistent pollution and lack of effective coal ash pond treatment. For a new intern at NCIPL, the physicalized contrast contained powerful irony that drove home the nature of our relationship as faithful North Carolinians with utility companies; we will always be living side by side. While utilities provide us the basic comforts of modern life, we see the destructive nature of their work and feel called to act and react against it.

Such was the impetus behind the press conference on Tuesday July 23 that unveiled a major report revealing the damaging toxic pollutants being leached into groundwater and waterways from the discharge from coal plants and the seepage from unlined coal ash impoundment ponds. The Sierra Club and Waterkeeper Alliance, among others, wrote the report and officially released it outside the Riverbend coal plant outside of Charlotte, NC to a crowd of about 40 people.  They called on us all to act with them to get the EPA to pass its most stringent (many would say appropriate) set of proposed laws to limit or eradicate pollution from the single largest point source of water pollution in the country–coal-fired power plants.

Read more here.

More on the gathering, speeches, and atmosphere of the day coming this Friday from NCIPL’s intern Joey Shea.

Filed Under: Blog, In the News, Uncategorized

The Moral Journey from Independence to Interdependence

July 17, 2013 By nancy

Reflections from Earth Sabbath Celebration facilitator, Nancy Hardy. I believe that ever since we humans started getting together and creating what we call “culture”, there have been several major paradigm […]

The Moral Journey from Independence to Interdependence

July 17, 2013 by nancy

Reflections from Earth Sabbath Celebration facilitator, Nancy Hardy.

InterdependenceI believe that ever since we humans started getting together and creating what we call “culture”, there have been several major paradigm shifts.  We celebrated one recently.

The Declaration of Independence, which we celebrated on the 4th, didn’t just happen.  Philosophical ideas were circulating and being debated for a long time before it was possible to adopt it as the founding principle for a new way of governance.

Many would say we’ve come a long way since then.  We have been working diligently to make sure that our actions consider the rights of all people, not just white males.  I hope we are beginning to learn that our continued existence requires the well-being of all parts of the Earth community, not just our own species – that all beings have rights. Ecuador sets a good example:  it was the first country to declare in its written constitution in 2008 that nature has rights.

Sr. Miriam MacGillis of Genesis Farm wrote a blog titled Reflections on Independence Day.  In it she says, “Independence is a worldview held by a culture that has not yet made the distinction between independence and individuation.  Individuation is the unique capacity of a living being to evolve within the interdependent web of life in which it exists….(Independence) is an ideal that celebrates individual human endeavor but remains silent about how those endeavors are derived from or affect other life systems.  Independence is a fiction, a mental fiction born of human consciousness.  Interdependence, on the other hand, recognizes that human fate is inextricably linked to all the other life systems on the planet.”

In his recently published article, Rabbi Daniel Swartz, spiritual leader of Temple Hesed in Scranton and incoming president of Pennsylvania Interfaith Power and Light, compares President Obama’s Climate Change speech to the Gettysburg Address and hopes that it, too, marks a turning point.  He says, “It’s time – past time, actually – to stop using “cheap” energy that ruins the future of generations to come. We need to say carbon pollution is wrong, that harming our children and grandchildren through our profligate burning of fossil fuels is immoral and unjust.”

Pastor William C. Thwing of St. Paul’s United Church of Christ in Pennsylvania read Rabbi Swartz’ article and responded: “The issue of the survival of our civilization and the countless innocent species that we are in the process of taking down with us as we fall, is just as much of a “Faith Issue” as was slavery. Slavery was just plain wrong and the continued use of fossil fuels is just plain wrong.”

It took almost 100 years from the first writings on the evils of slavery until the thirteenth amendment abolishing slavery was signed in 1865.  I don’t think we have that long.  What will it take for us to declare our interdependence and then do what is morally right?

 

Filed Under: Blog

The National “I Will Act on Climate” Bus Tour is Coming Through North Carolina in the Next Few Days!

July 11, 2013 By nancy

Climate change affects us all.  As the President said in his climate change speech,  “The question now is whether we will have the courage to act before it’s too late.  […]

The National “I Will Act on Climate” Bus Tour is Coming Through North Carolina in the Next Few Days!

July 11, 2013 by nancy

I Will Act on Climate BusClimate change affects us all.  As the President said in his climate change speech,  “The question now is whether we will have the courage to act before it’s too late.  And how we answer will have a profound impact on the world that we leave behind not just to you, but to your children and to your grandchildren.”

A non-profit group, Organizing for Action (OFA), is rallying a groundswell of support for President Obama’s Climate Action Plan.  They are kicking off a National “I Will Act on Climate” Bus Tour as part of a concerted effort to generate widespread discussion and action.

The tour begins today, July 11, in Tennessee. 

All along the tour, you are invited to join with local leaders to learn more about the President’s Climate Action plan and lend your support by making a video postcard or writing a letter.  See the tips for writing a letter to your editor on our website!

Come join them in Asheville on Friday, July 12!  Hosted by Southern Alliance for Clean Energy and the Sierra Club, everyone is invited to come to Pack Square Park in Asheville 9:30 to 11:00 am.  Families and children are welcome.  There will be a children’s art project on display as well free coffee, juice and pastries for attendees.

Then it’s on to Greensboro that afternoon.    This stop will be hosted by the League of Conservation Voters, Friday, July 12 from 3:00 to 5:00 pm at the Morehead Building.

We will be broadcasting news of other stops in between Greensboro and the coast on the events page of our website.  Check back frequently!

The next known stop is Wrightsville Beach, Monday, July 15!   It is hosted by Environment North Carolina at Johnnie Mercer’s Pier from Noon-1:00 pm.

Come out to show your support for the Climate Action Plan
when the “I Will Act on Climate” Bus comes to your local area!

Filed Under: Blog

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