Methane gas is no bridge fuel


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After a persistent campaign by a broad coalition of environmental groups and a string of escalating acts of civil disobedience, Rhode Island mainstream media have slowly begun to question the claim that “burning natural gas is about one-half as carbon-intensive as coal, which can make it a critical bridge fuel for many countries as the world transitions to even cleaner sources of energy.”

That misleading statement was pivotal in The President’s Climate Action Plan of June of 2013. Business climate would have been more appropriate. But the media are discovering that the claim fails to account for the climate impacts of methane, the main constituent of “natural” gas, over its full life-cycle.

The latter starts at the well. From there, gas is transported via pipelines and compressor stations, to its final destination downstream. Gas escapes unburned at every stage.  When the global warming potential of this so-called “fugitive methane” is taken into account, it turns out that “natural” gas (both conventional and fracked) is a greater threat to the climate than coal or oil burned for any purpose. This came to light in 2011, when Cornell University researchers Anthony Ingraffea and Robert Howarth, along with actor and anti-fracking activist Mark Ruffalo, were named among Time Magazine’s 50 “People Who Matter” for performing and publicizing a study that undercut the bridge-fuel claim. In April of 2014, a recent update of the research has confirmed this finding.

Meanwhile, Rhode Island continues on its misguided path of expanding the fracked-gas infrastructure with two proposed build-outs of Spectra Energy’s compressor station in Burrillville—part of a 3-stage pipeline expansion that will ultimately send fracked gas from Pennsylvania to Canada for export overseas—and the planned construction of a new gas-fired power plant, also in Burrillville. In addition, there is a plan is for a liquefaction facility at Fields Point in Providence, RI.

In a striking instance of environmental racism, the LNG facility will be sited next to a residential, low-income community of color with numerous schools and day care centers, and several hospitals. The area also is the site of the Univar chemical facility which has a hazard radius of 14 miles, within which there are 311 schools with almost 110,000 children.

PeterLockedDownIncreasingly, climate activists across the nation have mounted campaigns against fracked gas, not only because it is disastrous for the climate, but also because fracking causes wholesale destruction of communities and the environment. Indeed, the expansion of fracking and fracked-gas infrastructure across the country continues to draw people from all walks of like into defiant acts of civil disobedience.

On August 13, Curt Nordgaard and I were arrested after locking ourselves to the front gate of Spectra Energy’s fracked-gas compressor station in Burrillville, Rhode Island in a direct action organized by the group Fighting Against Natural Gas (FANG) to block construction at the site.

CurtLockedDownNordgaard, a pediatrics resident at Boston Medical Center with no prior history of arrests, gave this explanation for his actions: “if we had legal means to stop this project, we would use them. Instead, we are forced to protect families and communities through nonviolent civil disobedience, in proportion to the severity of this threat.”

As a professor of physics at the University of Rhode Island with four grown children and six grandchildren, I am alarmed by the destruction we visit upon the Earth they shall inherit. In the spring of 2013, we founded Fossil Free Rhode Island to push for a swift transition away from fossil fuels.

Last December, I was arrested for the first time during a sit-in in U.S. Senator Sheldon Whitehouse’s office in Providence to protest his tacit support for the pipeline expansion; with this recent arrest, I have lived up to my words at that time: “Science has shown that natural gas is more dangerous for the climate than other dirty fuels such as oil and coal. This pipeline is immoral and unjust, and we will keep taking action until this project is stopped.”

Let me correct a detail of the Providence Journal article Methane release from gas extraction seen as climate threat. The article states that compared to carbon-dioxide, methane is “20 times or more as potent in trapping heat while it lasts.” In reality, that factor is 86 times over the first 20 years after release. Considered over a 100 year time frame, methane was considered 21 times as potent as carbon dioxide, but the IPCC revised this figure to 34; the EPA still uses 21 as the global warming potential, an estimate decades out of date.  (The ProJo has thus far chosen not to publish my Letter to the Editor with this correction.)

Numerous current developments, such as polar sea-ice loss, land-based ice sheet melt, and permafrost thawing, show unambiguously that the 20-year time frame is critical if we want to have a chance to avoid run-away climate change.

Meanwhile, our congressional delegation continues to recycle National Grid’s talking points in favor of more fracked-gas infrastructure. Supposedly, it is all about avoiding price spikes and choke points.  Never mind that there were none of these last winter, as explained by Reuters in this article As New England freezes, natural gas stays cheap.

In all those years since Howarth was honored by Time as a “person who matters,” and in spite of his 100+ climate change speeches in the US Senate, despite countless attempts to get him up to speed, Senator Sheldon Whitehouse has been unable to absorb the fact that, as far as global warming is concerned, natural gas is worse than coal and oil.  No surprise; this comes with our corrupt political system in which access exchanged for campaign contributions takes precedence over the common good.  Our state government, of course, is just as much a victim of the corrupt political system we still tolerate: Rhode Island Gov. Gina Raimondo’s Campaign Contributions From Financial Services Industry Come Under Scrutiny.

In this picture below we see access in action: Lindsey Graham, Sheldon Whitehouse tour coal-fired plant with new technology.   I still try to teach my students to consult independent experts when they want to educate themselves. How quaint!

(CBC)
Industry educating Tom Rice, Lindsey Graham and Sheldon Whitehouse (CBC)

PVD firefighters stand strong against Elorza at City Hall


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2019-09-08 PVD Fireghters City Hall 017“This is an issue that starts here and ends here,” said Paul Doughty, the president of the Providence fire fighter union IAFF Local 799, from the fourth floor of the Providence City Hall to the more than 300 people, firefighters and their families, who had come out in a peaceful show of force against Mayor Jorge Elorza‘s recent shift changes that have resulted in firefighters working more hours for no additional pay.

The City Council met in executive session, which is not open to the public. They were briefed on the legal issues by the City Solicitor’s office. Doughty was inside the meeting for a while, and reported to the crowd that, “The councillors in there tonight, taking up our cause, at this point they’ve lead me to believe that they think we are on the side of right, that we speak the truth, and that we mean what we said, and when we signed a collective bargaining agreement, we expect it to be followed.”

Many of the signs carried by the firefighters were critical of Elorza’s recent trip to Guatemala, where he met with President Otto Perez Molina, who was ousted from power and brought up on fraud charges within days of Elorza’s ill-timed visit. Molina has also been implicated in possible war crimes. Other signs were pointed reminders that working longer hours keeps parents away from children, and denies firefighters much needed rest.

Right now talks seem to have broken down and a judge will decide if the issue will go to arbitration.

“There is… a path to resolution,” said Doughty, “That is to restore us to our shifts and hours, follow the collective bargaining agreement, and then come talk to us.”

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Providence College prof Cedric de Leon takes on ‘right to work’ laws


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Cedric de Leon is a local activist, a former union organizer and a sociology professor at Providence College. He’s also the author of an important new book for anyone who cares about worker rights, living wages and even gender and racial equality. His book “The Origins of Right to Work” details their sordid racist history as well as how they prey on the dreams of the working class. He will be discussing his book and “right to work” laws at As220 (115 Empire St. in Providence) this Saturday from 5 to 7pm.

But wait. What is a “right to work” law?

Since the 1890’s through the 1940′ and 1950’s, “right to work” laws of various sorts have played on the racial fears of southerns and midwesterners. Today, says de Leon, they are sold much more covertly but still have a somewhat similar effect.

de Leon wrote the book after his home state of Michigan, a stallwart of the labor movement and where de Leon was the president of his grad student union, became a right to work state. “This is partly my way of dealing with it, which is to fight back.”

And fighting back, he said, is important because the Supreme Court is slated to consider a case that could effectively make every public sector union in the nation a “right to work” shop, if you will.

But he seems imminently confident the labor/progressive coalition can beat back the neoliberal attempts to destroy unions.

Originally a conservative from Canada, de Leon came to the progressive left after seeing rampant poverty in Mexico.

He worked with the United Farm Workers to “get grapes out of the Yale dining hall,” he said. “That was my gateway drug to the labor movement.” He also worked for SEIU 1199 organizing health care workers right here in Rhode Island. “It was my first job out of college

Years later, he returned to the Ocean State as a sociology professor at Providence College. He’s been critical of PC on labor positions and in this interview was critical of the Catholic college on racial issues in this interview.

de Leon doesn’t speak of any kind of animus lightly. He’s been the victim of a seemingly politically-motivated hat crime in Providence, he told me.

You can watch my full interview with de Leon here:

cedric