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NCIPL Invites Faith Communities to join in the National PreachIn on Global Warming!

January 26, 2015 By nancy

This may be the biggest PreachIn yet and you don’t want to miss it! Over 3,000 faith communities all over the US may preach or hold educational events on Valentine’s […]

NCIPL Invites Faith Communities to join in the National PreachIn on Global Warming!

January 26, 2015 by nancy

PreachInLogoWithDateThis may be the biggest PreachIn yet and you don’t want to miss it!

Over 3,000 faith communities all over the US may preach or hold educational events on Valentine’s Day weekend.  What a wonderful Valentine for the planet! The message will be climate justice and loving God’s Creation and will reach over one million people of faith.heartEarth

“The Preach-In is our most popular event of the year, hands down,” said organizer Andree Duggan of national IPL. “We’ve learned a lot from our congregations about what they need from us, and we provide everything from sample sermons and prayers, to bulletin inserts and post cards to senators. There’s something very powerful about knowing thousands of congregations are preaching about this issue at the same time. And this year, we’ll be adding a synchronized prayer for climate action on Valentine’s Day.”

Ninety percent (90%) of all major faith traditions are represented in this event and most have issued climate statements about the moral imperative to act as responsible stewards of the Earth.

Please participate in the PreachIn on Global Warming! Sign up for access to free online resources and an affordable printed kit that includes “love the Earth” valentines for US Senators!

And if you need more time, NCIPL includes from Valentine’s Day to Earth Day in the PreachIn activities! Help us make NC a better place for everybody to live.

Preach-In on Global Warming
Preach-In on Global Warming

Filed Under: Blog, Faith in Action Homepage Card

LTE in News & Observer. Stephen Jurovics: Future concern

January 19, 2015 By nancy

Letters to the Editor:  January 7, 2015 The Jan. 1 Point of View “ Why N.C. should fight EPA” revealed utter indifference for the future of North Carolina. While the […]

LTE in News & Observer. Stephen Jurovics: Future concern

January 19, 2015 by nancy

Letters to the Editor:  January 7, 2015

The Jan. 1 Point of View “ Why N.C. should fight EPA” revealed utter indifference for the future of North Carolina.

While the article purports to tell “the backstory” of these rules, the words “climate change” do not appear. Yet, the administration proposes the rules in order to reduce emissions from the largest contributor to climate change: coal-fired electricity plants. That’s the backstory.

North Carolina has a 300-mile coastline supporting commercial and recreational fishing, tourism and other industries. Within 30 years we anticipate sea level rises ranging from 4 inches to 12 inches, depending upon location. These increases plus seasonal storm surges can have devastating economic impacts on businesses and coastal residents.

Efforts to reduce the causes of climate change and its destructive effects should be welcomed, not opposed. But the writer expresses no concern for the future well-being of our state.

Future generations will face numerous challenges including food and water shortages due to changes in rainfall and temperatures; more frequent and intense storms; higher energy bills; and more insect-borne diseases.

We the people must convey to legislators our concern for the future of North Carolina and its people, for the voices of short-term self-interest could not care less.

Stephen Jurovics

Raleigh

Read more here: http://www.newsobserver.com/2015/01/07/4457616_stephen-jurovics-future-concern.html?rh=1#storylink=cpy

Filed Under: Blog

JDNews.com article: Program looks at potential coastal impacts of fracking

January 19, 2015 By nancy

By Jannette Pippin – Jannette.Pippin@JDNews.com Published:  Saturday, January 17, 2015 at 3:29 PM MOREHEAD CITY | Lee County is considered the epicenter of any future fracking operations in North Carolina, […]

JDNews.com article: Program looks at potential coastal impacts of fracking

January 19, 2015 by nancy

By Jannette Pippin – Jannette.Pippin@JDNews.com
Published:  Saturday, January 17, 2015 at 3:29 PM

MOREHEAD CITY | Lee County is considered the epicenter of any future fracking operations in North Carolina, but Eastern North Carolina isn’t immune to possibly damaging impacts, according to leaders fighting to keep such activity out of the state.

“That’s just where fracking itself may happen,” said George Mathis of Frack-Free NC, referring to a map of areas of North Carolina potentially containing shale gas. “Just about anywhere in the state can be impacted in one way or another.”

A program entitled Keep NC Frack-Free was held Friday in Carteret County and sponsored by the Unitarian Coastal Fellowship Green Sanctuary Committee and the Croatan Group of the Sierra Club.

Frack-Free NC is a network of organizations that believe that shale gas development using hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, cannot be done without harming the environment and public health.

A primary concern is the potential for contamination of drinking water and groundwater if fracking is done in North Carolina.

Fracking is a method of extracting natural gas that involves injecting high pressure fluids thousands of feet deep with a mixture of water, sand and chemicals to break up shale formations and release natural gas.

Mathis said the Triassic basins of North Carolina are shallow and discontinuous compared to shale formations in other states, with less distance between these formations and groundwater supplies used for drinking water wells.

“More than 3 million people in North Carolina rely on private wells for drinking water,” he said.  Fracking also requires a large amount of water for the process: an average of 3.5 million gallons is used per frack. Mathis said there are questions about where this water will come from and what it could mean to the state’s water supply and water resources. “Whose right is it to remove that water? Is it the fracking company or is it our right to speak out?” he asked.

Legislation signed into law last year opens the door for fracking in North Carolina and work in ongoing to develop regulations for such activities. For Eastern North Carolina, the uncertainties about fracking’s future in North Carolina raise questions about impacts away from the fracking sites. While the coast may not be prime for fracking locations, there are questions about the disposal of the wastewater from fracking and where and how that disposal would take place.

Mathis said the idea of storing frackwater in open pits until transported to whatever waste processing facility has been discussed in rule-making process. Spills do happen, Mathis said, referring to the hog lagoon spills of the past in Eastern North Carolina.  And even if there is not a spill, an open pit means evaporation of chemical-filled wastewater into the air, creating air pollution.

Deep injection into wells has been the preferred method for disposal by the industry, but North Carolina’s history with such activity has not been good, Mathis said. It was permitted from 1968 to 1972 and wells about four miles from Wilmington were used by Hercules, a company that manufactures the raw materials used in the production of polyester fabrics. Underwater leakage from that chemical injection process led to a ban on deep injection wells in North Carolina.

The question is whether the ban will remain if fracking proceeds in North Carolina.  “In North Carolina it’s not the first time we’ve dealt with injection wells. Here it is 2015 and the debate is still going on,” Mathis said.

If natural gas production occurs, Mathis said it’s also logical that processing facilities will be needed. And with a state port located in Morehead City, that could be a place to consider.  “If they need to export natural gas, where’s a logical place to put a facility?” he asked.

Information on fracking and the efforts of the coalition can be found online at frackfreenc.org.

Explanatory picture from News & Observer:

NC Fracking

Filed Under: Blog, NC Regions

National Preach-In on the Environment

January 19, 2015 By nancy

Get your Faith Community to Join in the “Preach In”! Environmental Stewardship Greensboro is helping to recruit as many Faith Communities as possible in the Triad to participate in the “National […]

National Preach-In on the Environment

January 19, 2015 by nancy

Get your Faith Community to Join in the “Preach In”!

Environmental Stewardship Greensboro is helping to recruit as many Faith Communities as possible in the Triad to participate in the “National Preach In on the Environment.  This national and statewide program is sponsored by the North Carolina Council of Churches and North Carolina Interfaith Power and Light.
Interfaith Power & Light Invites Congregations to join Valentine’s Weekend Preach-In on Climate Change
Interfaith Power & Light expects its 2015’s Preach-In on Climate Change to be the biggest yet. The organization and its 40 state affiliates are aiming to sign up 3,000 faith communities to preach or hold educational events on Valentine’s Day weekend. The Preach-In will reach over one million people of faith and focus on the message of climate justice and loving God’s Creation.
“The Preach-In is our most popular event of the year, hands-down,” said organizer Andree Duggan. “We’ve learned a lot from our congregations about what they need from us, and we provide everything from sample sermons and prayers, to bulletin inserts and post cards to senators. There’s something very powerful about knowing thousands of congregations are preaching about this issue at the same time. And this year we’ll be adding a synchronized prayer for climate action on Valentine’s Day.”
Ninety-percent of all major faith traditions are represented in this event and most have issued climate statements about the moral imperative to act as responsible stewards of the Earth. We hope your faith community will join with us in participating in the Preach-In on Global Warming. Click here to sign-up for access to free online resources and an affordable printed kit that includes “Love the Earth” valentines for U.S. senators.

Filed Under: Blog, NC Regions, Worship Pages

Climate change and the new NC DENR chief

December 17, 2014 By chris

More than 97 percent of the world’s climate scientists believe we humans are changing our climate for the worse. (That scientific consensus is as strong as the one that finds […]

Climate change and the new NC DENR chief

December 17, 2014 by chris

More than 97 percent of the world’s climate scientists believe we humans are changing our climate for the worse. (That scientific consensus is as strong as the one that finds smoking causes cancer.) By burning fossil fuel in power plants, trucks and cars, by releasing methane gas during gas and oil drilling, by cutting down precious forests, we’re not only inviting more extreme weather events—severe droughts, and dangerous hurricanes, wildfires and floods—we’re also despoiling and endangering the majesty of God’s creation.

NC flag

That’s why, as Governor McCrory reviews candidates for the position of Secretary of the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), it’s vitally important that he consider only candidates who accept this well-established fact. Whoever our new DENR Secretary is, she or he needs to accept and work with this unfortunate reality of our times and integrate climate-change prevention and preparedness into the state’s plans and services. North Carolina’s safety and security depend on it.

Though the problem of climate change is daunting, its solutions are not difficult or financially ruinous, no matter what some elected officials might tell you. In fact, as the Director of the multi-denominational North Carolina Interfaith Power & Light, which helps religious and spiritual congregations of all kinds address both the moral dimensions of climate change and its positive, practical solutions, I’ve seen these synergies in action. Protecting life and the beautiful world God has created doesn’t just bring us into greater communion with the Divine Source, it’s also good for the bottom line.

raleigh friends and community ucc pre-w work crew

Members of Raleigh’s Community United Church of Christ provide one such example. Moved by Jesus’s message to protect “the least of these my brothers and sisters,” and knowing that climate change will wreak its most significant havoc on those with the fewest resources, they’ve gathered a group to help low-income Wake County households become eligible for Weatherization services. Weatherization insulates low-income homes and makes them more energy efficient, meaning residents will save money on heating and electric bills, while cutting the amount of global warming pollution they add to our already overstressed atmosphere. Meanwhile, in Hayesville, the Good Shepard Episcopal Church increased the energy efficiency of its facilities, something that allowed the church to spend less money on energy and contribute more to its central mission. At Temple Emanuel in Greensboro, 58 families have contributed between $10 and $3,000 each to install solar panels. Those panels now provide the synagogue with pollution-free electricity, serve as an outreach tool to local residents intrigued and encouraged by their presence, and have helped the synagogue’s members fulfill their religious obligation to repair our all-too-broken world.

Temple Emmanuel - solar array

Whomever Governor McCrory choses as Secretary of DENR must know that such synergies are possible through the state’s work as well. Take, for an example, our Clean Smokestack Act of 2002, which has cut the amount of dangerous sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxide pollution from North Carolina’s power plants by an amazing 89 percent and 83 percent, respectively. (These pollutants are closely linked to diseases like asthma, emphysema, heart disease and lung cancer.) By reducing them so significantly, in 2012, Clean Smokestacks saved 1,700 North Carolinian lives. The estimated economic benefits range from $500 million to an astounding $16 billion a year.

Climate change’s solutions are equally promising. But to take full advantage of them—to reap the good jobs, clean air and energy savings that come along with them—our state government, our governor and his new DENR secretary must acknowledge what our weather and the overwhelming majority of scientists are already telling us: Human-caused climate change exists. The time to start addressing it here in North Carolina is now.

— Susannah Tuttle, M.Div – Director, NC Interfaith Power & Light

Text Originally Printed in the Raleigh News & Observer
December 12, 2014
http://bit.ly/NCIPL-OpEd-Dec2014

Filed Under: Blog

PreachIn Map Test

October 28, 2014 By chris

North Carolina leads the nation in the number of congregations involved in the PreachIn which happens every spring. Click here to participate! [wpgeo_mashup post_type=”faith-community” engagement=”preachin”]

PreachIn Map Test

October 28, 2014 by chris

North Carolina leads the nation in the number of congregations involved in the PreachIn which happens every spring. Click here to participate!

[wpgeo_mashup post_type=”faith-community” engagement=”preachin”]

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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