National advocacy groups call on Raimondo to drop power plant support


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2015-11-30 World AIDS Day 007 Gina Raimondo
Gina Raimondo

Today, over a dozen national advocacy groups joined local community groups in delivering a letter to Rhode Island Governor Gina Raimondo asking her to show climate leadership and revoke her support for the proposed Invenergy Clean River Energy Center in Burrillville, RI. The groups noted there are serious concerns about local air and water pollution, and also that methane released from fracked gas is a potent greenhouse gas contributing to the climate crisis. Methane leaks from every stage of the natural gas system, from well sites to processing plants and compressor stations to beneath city streets.

“Support for this project is inconsistent with climate leadership and will move us away, rather than towards, the quick and just transition to 100 percent renewable energy that we desperately need…Promoting natural gas not only will lock in decades more of fracking and contribute to the climate crisis, but it will result in billions of dollars being spent on the infrastructure to support burning gas, preventing us from moving into a sustainable energy future,” said the letter.

Governor Raimondo has spoken out about the need to address climate change, and her desire for the state to become a green energy leader. Regarding Rhode Island’s participation in the Governors’ Accord for a New Energy Future, Raimondo said, “Already, we’ve taken valuable steps forward to reduce our environmental impact and grow green jobs by supporting the construction of the nation’s first offshore wind facility, investing in renewables, and encouraging clean modes of transportation. More work remains, and this accord acknowledges the challenges we face and our commitment to addressing them.”

“Governor Raimondo can’t have it both ways,” said Wenonah Hauter, executive director of Food & Water Watch, which organized the letter. “Fracked gas is as dirty as it gets. Burrillville residents deserve better than the Invenergy plant. The climate deserves better, too.”

“There are 300 gas plants proposed across the country,” said Nick Katkevich of The FANG Collective. “Building these plants will lock us in to climate catastrophe and hurt communities facing the onslaught of fracked-gas infrastructure. We need Governor Raimondo to listen to her constituents and drop her support of Invenergy’s proposed power plant.”

“Fracked-gas is not a bridge fuel to a clean energy future – it’s a road block. We need a just transition to 100 percent community owned renewable energy. For this to happen in Rhode Island, Invenergy’s proposed power plant must be cancelled,” said Kathy Martley of Burrillville Against Spectra Expansion, who lives a quarter mile from the proposed power plant site and the existing Spectra Energy compressor station in Burrillville, RI.

Many of these organizations will be converging on Philadelphia on July 24, on the eve of the Democratic National Convention to demand that elected leaders including Governor Raimondo take swift action to keep the vast majority of fossil fuels in the ground and commit to transitioning swiftly to renewable energy.

“Governor Raimondo’s decision will not only determine the fate of the project,” said Hauter. “It will also determine whether she is a leader in this revolution, or a follower on the same old dirty path.”

Organizations signing the letter include: 350 CT; 350.org; AnastasiaThinks INC; Breast Cancer Action; Burrillville Against Spectra Expansion; Center for Biological Diversity; Climate Disobedience Center; Elders Climate Action; Environmental Action; The FANG Collective; Food & Water Watch; Franciscan Response to Fracking; Friends of the Earth; Grassroots Environmental Education; Immanuel Congregational Church UCC Environmental Ministry Team; Jewish Climate Action Network; Justice Action Mobilization Network; Justice and Peace Office of the Congregation of Notre Dame USA; National Nurses United; People Demanding Action; Popular Resistance; Progressive Democrats of America; South Coast Neighbors United, Inc.; Stand; Stop the Algonquin Pipeline Expansion; Toxics Action Center; U.S. Climate Plan; and We Are Seneca Lake.

The letter can be found online at: http://www.foodandwaterwatch.org/sites/default/files/rhode_island_powerplant_sign_on_letter_final_5_23_16.pdf

[From a press release]

Activists hope to shut down Brayton Point Sunday


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brayton pointMore than 1,000 environmental activists from all over New England are planning a direct action at Brayton Point power station near Fall River on Sunday. Civil disobedience will be utilized in hopes of shutting down the largest coal plant in New England that is a major source of air and water pollution.

There is a “mandatory” training in Providence on Saturday for those “risking arrest.”

According to the website JoinSummerHeat.org, “We will call for Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick and others to immediately close the Brayton Point coal plant and ensure a just transition for workers and host communities towards a healthy and sustainable future.”

Brayton Point is in Somerset, Mass on Narragansett Bay, right on Rhode Island’s border. While Massachusetts’ largest source of carbon dioxide pollutes the entire northeast, the Ocean State is particularly at risk because Brayton Point is so close; it pollutes directly into Narragansett Bay and it’s air pollution is literally visible from as far away as South County.

The protest is part of the nationwide grassroot effort to call attention to the fossil fuel industry’s role in climate change and environmental and economic degradation organized by 350.org. Occupy Providence, Occupy Fall River, Fossil Free Rhode Island and the Brown (University) Divest Coal Campaign, among many others, have all promoted the event.

There is a sign-making party tonight in Providence and there will be a training in Rhode Island on Saturday for those who hope to be arrested. See this link for details.

“The training schedule on the 27th includes choreographed practice for the action, preparation for jail support, affirmation of action agreements, training in nonviolent direct action, a conversation with representatives of the National Lawyers Guild, time for forming action support groups, snacks, dinner, and more!” according to Occupy Providence’s website.

“Brayton Point is the largest coal-fired power plant in New England, and at full capacity it’s the largest source of carbon dioxide emissions in Massachusetts. In 2010, it poured 6.3 million tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere,” according to SummerHeatBraytonPoint.org. “We can transition away from coal through increased efficiency standards and a strengthened renewable energy portfolio (including visionary projects like Cape Wind). We also need worker retraining and tax support for communities like Somerset and Fall River that have long borne the costs of coal.”