Sheldon Whitehouse introduces a carbon tax


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

And in his 80th Senate floor speech on climate change, Sheldon Whitehouse introduced a carbon tax.

“For years now, Rhode Island has been on the losing end of the fossil-fuel economy,” said Whitehouse, according to a press release announcing the legislation. “We suffer the effects of climate change caused by carbon pollution – from rising seas that damage property to warming waters that affect our fishing industry.  Meanwhile, the big polluters get to offload the cost of that harm without having to pay a dime.  Today I’m introducing legislation to put the costs of carbon pollution back on the shoulders of the polluters where it belongs, while also creating an even playing field for Rhode Island clean energy businesses to compete and generating much-needed revenue to benefit families in Rhode Island and across the nation.”

Coal, oil, and natural gas, no matter where it comes from, will pay $42 per ton of carbon pollution it creates. The fee is expected to raise $2 trillion in 10 years, according to the press release.

The American Opportunity Carbon Fee Act is co-sponsored by Sen. Brian Schatz of Hawaii.

Here’s more from the New york Times.

Wingmen: Climate change, renewable energy, wind power


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

bob_wingmen“We’re trying to save this world on this one,” I tell Bill Rappleye on NBC 10 Wingmen this weekend in a discussion about climate change, renewable energy and offshore wind power.

Rob Paquin of the RI GOP didn’t seen to disagree. “People that will flat out deny that it is taking place, they’ve missed the boat at some point,” he said. “It’s happening, I think a little more slowly than people want us to think.”

We also spoke about why climate change is a particularly vexing problem for the Ocean State and our tourist economy – and why we need to do more to protect both coastal wetlands, and the Ocean Mist!

News, Weather and Classifieds for Southern New England

Sheldon to GOP: ‘Ask a scientist’


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

sheldon“Many said they weren’t scientists,” Rhode Island Senator Sheldon Whitehouse says in his 79th Senate floor speech on climate change. It was a direct shot across the bow to one of the craziest climate deniers in Congress, who will also soon chair the Senate committee on the environment.

If you’re looking to make lemonade out of Democrats devastating defeats in Congress, you can do a lot worse than watch our own Senator Whitehouse really start to go on the offensive when it comes to calling out climate deniers.

“If you’re not a scientist, check it out,” Whitehouse implores. “Ask the responsible scientists ask the leading scientific societies. If you don’t believe them measurements, measurements confirm what the scientists know. Sea level is rising, and the rise is accelerating. You measure that. With a glorified yard stick. It’s already up nearly 10 inches at the Newport Naval Station… The ocean is warming. You measure that. With a thermometer. Narragansett Bay is nearly 4 degrees Fahrenheit warmer, mean winter water temperature, than 50 years ago. That is an ecosystem shift.”

15:41 if you want to fast forward to Sheldon quoting Micheal Corleone. He also quotes Pope Francis. But the best line is his: “Friends don’t let friends deny climate change.”

“And just so you know, I’m not going anywhere,” he closes. “My state is small and coastal, and worse, bigger storms put us in serious danger. I am not going to ignore that.”

Capitalism = Climate Chaos


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387
I survived superstomer Sandy and all I got was this stupid pipeline.

One week after the People’s Climate March, eight U.S. Senators, including our own Sens. Sheldon Whitehouse and Jack Reed, wrote a letter to the President urging him “to establish national standards to reduce methane pollution from the oil and gas sector.”

The Left is shaking its chains to Earth like dew
The Left is shaking its chains to Earth like dew

This might seem progress to some, but I’m afraid that our Senators lost me even before the get-go:

We strongly support your Administration’s efforts to address climate change through implementation of your Climate Action Plan as we continue to push for climate action in Congress.

The Climate Action Plan was fraudulent in its presentation as it completely ignored the problem of fugitive methane, escaping gas that contributes with a vengeance to global warming.

In its implementation, the “Plan” will be calamitous for the global climate. I wrote about this more than a year ago: Of spying and genocide.  All that changed is that the key point, namely that natural gas (mostly methane) is a bridge to nowhere, has been put on an even firmer basis.

The rhetoric of The President’s Climate Action Plan and the hot air generated ever since might sound impressive, but anyone who looks at how the plan is put into action is in for a rude awakening. The following recent news items clearly demonstrate this:

These articles refer to 20-year export contracts at a time when we have to reduce global emissions by 6% per year as of 2014.  That amounts to a reduction by 70% over those 20 years. Does the Administration have a Secret Action Plan for migration to Planet B, and, if so, do our Senators have reserved seats on an escape vehicle?

Keep the LNG export facilities in mind, and then read the justification our Senators present for the expansion of the gas pipeline infrastructure:

Despite the abundance of domestic natural gas resources and low natural gas prices elsewhere in the United States, New England has not received the same benefit as other regions. [… S]ignificantly constrained pipeline capacity into the region has driven up natural gas and wholesale electricity prices …

Let’s see how that works.  So, we’re going to keep domestic gas prices down by building export facilities for the global market with its much higher gas prices?  Does that not sound as if it contradicts what they teach in Economics 101?

As mentioned, new, damning research about the national energy policy keeps popping up.  Indeed, just this week, I came across this open access paper, in which, once again, methane as a bridge fuel is exposed as a sop — beware: skip if you suffer from number phobia.

Abstract

Increased use of natural gas has been promoted as a means of decarbonizing the US power sector, because of superior generator efficiency and lower CO2 emissions per unit of electricity than coal. We model the effect of different gas supplies on the US power sector and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Across a range of climate policies, we find that abundant natural gas decreases use of both coal and renewable energy technologies in the future. Without a climate policy, overall electricity use also increases as the gas supply increases. With reduced deployment of lower-carbon renewable energies and increased electricity consumption, the effect of higher gas supplies on GHG emissions is small: cumulative emissions 2013–55 in our high gas supply scenario are 2% less than in our low gas supply scenario, when there are no new climate policies and a methane leakage rate of 1.5% is assumed. Assuming leakage rates of 0 or 3% does not substantially alter this finding. In our results, only climate policies bring about a significant reduction in future CO2 emissions within the US electricity sector. Our results suggest that without strong limits on GHG emissions or policies that explicitly encourage renewable electricity, abundant natural gas may actually slow the process of decarbonization, primarily by delaying deployment of renewable energy technologies.

That “abundant natural gas may actually slow the process of decarbonization” is, of course, just common sense. Nonetheless, the letter signed by our U.S. Senators ends with “[y]our methane strategy is a key component of your Administration’s effort to combat climate change.”  Dream, baby, dream!

None of this should come as a surprise. The US Senate is a staunch supporter of the Washington Consensus, which Noami Klein, recalling the late 1980s, summarizes as follows:

One year after Hansen testified, the Berlin Wall collapsed. History was declared over. This was the moment when we were all being told that there was no alternative to privatization, deregulation, cuts in government spending, tax cuts, free trade.

We’ve been living it; we’ve been breathing it.  This is why it is so tragic that the Left has ceded the climate discussion to the environmentalists, because we should have understood this fundamental clash.

I survived superstomer Sandy and all I got was this stupid pipeline.
To see the connections you’ve got to be out on the streets.

Did I mention the shale scam that forms the subprime carbon bubble at the basis of the Climate Action Plan?  Let the late Randy Udall explain this, as he talks about a fatal characteristic of extreme extraction wells:

Drill-Baby-Drill is no longer optional; drill-baby-drill is destiny! […] This is progeria [a syndrome in children indicative of premature old age].  This is a well dying as it is born. […] We’ve chained ourselves to a drilling rig and thrown away the key.”

As our US Senators hop along from one fund raiser to the next and from one shale well to the next, they are captives on board of a neo-liberal drilling rig destined for nowhere.  At the same time it has become clear how we can fight the Wall-Street-funded industry hype in a supposedly democratic system that operates according to the principle that “whose bread one eats, their tongue one speaks.”

As the nearly half a million people who participated in the People Climate March saw, we do have new leaders.  They are in the streets, they are organizing everywhere and they understand that, as Chris Hedges summarized it: “Unfettered capitalism is a revolutionary force that consumes greater and greater numbers of human lives until it finally consumes itself.”

Green Power to the People!

Global #Frackdown at URI


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387
Randy Udall explain this:
Global Frackdown at URI: October 12, noon-2pm in front of URI Foundation on Upper College Road, Kingston
Global Frackdown at URI: October 12, noon-2pm in front of URI Foundation on Upper College Road, Kingston

As the nearly half a million people participating in the People Climate March in New York City on September 21 demonstrated, we now depend on our leaders who are in the streets.  They will secure our daily bread, and they will forgive our debts, as they organize everywhere.

The message echoing in the streets of New York and across the globe may come as a surprise to some.  The following is from a report that Jared Paul posted after his arrest at #FloodWallSt in New York.  In Jared’s My report back from #FloodWallSt / #PeoplesClimateMarch he makes the key point loud and clear:

Looking around it became clear that the majority of the messaging was blatantly anti-capitalist. Signs read: “Capitalism Is Destroying Our Planet,” “Corporate Globalism doesn’t work: System change now!” “Climate Change is Class War.” I thought it was just our area but as thousands of people streamed by on either side heading for different parts of the march, I saw that the signs were almost all of similar messaging. From watching #DemocracyNow I knew that there was a large contingent of First Nation activists leading the march with a clearly anti-capitalist message as well.

Not all of URI might be quite ready for this radical position, but some of us certainly are.  However that may be and wherever you may find yourself on this political spectrum, please join us for the:

Global Frackdown at URI: October 10, noon-2pm in front of URI Foundation on Upper College Road, Kingston.

Green Power to the People!

Obama, world leaders talk climate at UN Summit


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

New York, NY — More than 100 heads of state came together at the United Nations with representatives of the private sector and NGOs for a climate summit Tuesday, offering perspectives on the unique threats of global warming for their countries and putting forward proposals for action — some underway, some more aspirational — to address the challenge.

President Obama addresses the UN Climate Summit
President Obama addresses the UN Climate Summit

The full-day event, convened by UN Secretary General Ban Ki Moon, aimed to build a shared international resolve going into the next round of climate talks in Lima, where nations will meet in December to hammer out the draft of a climate agreement.

There were some concrete successes: Six countries pledged $2.3 billion for a fund to assist developing nations with impact mitigation and the transition to cleaner energy. A declaration on forests was signed by 28 governments and dozens of companies and NGOs to cut global deforestation in half by 2030. Perhaps most importantly, there was a convergence across the individual proposals by heads of state on some key points: that ambitious and decisive action is required, that a 2-degree Celsius increase in temperature is a critical target, and that getting to a meaningful, universal agreement should happen by next year in Paris where the Lima draft will be finalized.

Among the heads of state who presented to the group convened in the enormous General Assembly Hall was President Barack Obama, who appeared to slip a reference to the People’s Climate March into his call to action.

“The climate is changing faster than our efforts to address it,” said President Obama. “The alarm bells keep ringing.  Our citizens keep marching.  We cannot pretend we do not hear them. We cannot condemn our children, and their children, to a future that is beyond their capacity to repair.”

Acknowledging the role that the US and China play as the world’s largest carbon emitters, Obama offered a backstage look at the retail politics possible only at the UN.

“Just a few minutes ago, I met with Chinese Vice Premier Zhang Gaoli, and reiterated my belief that as the two largest economies and emitters in the world, we have a special responsibility to lead,” he said. “That’s what big nations have to do. ”

Obama also announced several new initiatives: directing federal agencies to factor climate resilience into international development programs and investments, a new partnership to draw on private sector companies and philanthropies to help plan for an mitigate climate threats, and plans to provide developing nations access to technical resources like mapping data and extreme weather forecasting.

In what was perhaps a nod to his own predicament — forced to rely on executive actions by a congressional gridlock — Obama counseled fellow heads of state to move beyond business as usual.

“None of this is without controversy,” said the president. “In each of our countries, there are interests that will be resistant to action.  And in each country, there is a suspicion that if we act and other countries don’t that we will be at an economic disadvantage. But we have to lead. That is what the United Nations and this General Assembly is about.”

Obama’s talk at 1pm followed a full morning of sessions. There was an opening plenary featuring, among others, Al Gore, who argued that it was no longer a matter of technology but of political will, “And fortunately, political will is a renewable resource.” Leonardo DiCaprio, appointed by Ban Ki Moon as a special UN messenger, gently chided the assembled heads of state. “Honored delegates, leaders of the world, I pretend for a living. But you do not.”

The rest of the morning was taken up with three breakouts, each with about 40 presidents, prime ministers, and other national leaders delivering 4-minute summaries and vision statements. The afternoon comprised sessions where governments and NGOs reported on plans and thematic discussions around key climate topics.

Thomas Stocker, Co-Chair IPCC Working Group I
Thomas Stocker, Co-Chair IPCC Working Group I

Thomas Stocker, co-chair of the IPCC working group on the science of climate change, was featured in a session where he explained to UN delegates and heads of state the significance of the panel’s latest findings.

“We’re already in a 2-degree world,” said Stocker, meaning that the 535 gigatons of carbon dioxide we’ve already pumped into the atmosphere has put us on a trendline toward temperatures around two degrees hotter by the end of the century.  “And with business as usual, we’ll be in a 4.5-degree world.” Already, he said, we have adapted to 19cm of sea level rise, “but that’s a different task than 63cm or more by the end of the century.”

He offered the gathered world leaders three tools to bring back to their constituencies: “Robust science, simple language, and multiplication of message.”

“Look back 20 years,” Stocker said. “What makes leaders more comfortable now stepping up to the rostrum [to talk about climate change]? High quality observations.” Next, he said, “We need to communicate, even as experts, in simple language.” Finally, he urged the leaders to call on their scientific communities. “As leaders, you have scientists in your countries,” he said, and they should be ready to answer questions. “Scientists are your best ambassadors of knowledge about climate change.”

Fighting climate change will require radical economic solutions


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

WhichWayOutArriving in New York for the People’s Climate March a day early allowed me the opportunity to attend The Climate Crisis: Which Way Out, a forum featuring Senator Bernie Sanders, climate activist Bill McKibben, author Naomi Klein, journalist Chris Hedges and Seattle City Councillor Kshama Sawant.

The event was hosted at the Unitarian Church of All Souls, not too far from Central Park. Seating was first come, first serve, and it filled up quickly. While waiting outside, I noticed Chris Hedges making his way to the event, occasionally stopping to exchange words with those in line. His public persona so dour, it was refreshing to see Hedges smile and enjoy his interactions with the public.

Those waiting in line were targeted by a steady stream of leafleteers offering the opportunity to attend other climate change related events. Young people wearing Socialist Alternative t-shirts, the group made famous by Kshama Sawant, worked the line, selling copies of their newspaper. I’ve often thought that the modern socialist movement needs to be more… modern. Selling newsprint to advance a political agenda feels so 1920s in the age of the Internet.

Once inside I notice Unitarian Universalist President Reverend Peter Morales sitting near the front, with the U.U. United Nations liaison Bruce Knotts. I shake Reverend Morales’ hand. We’ve met twice before, but he doesn’t seem to recognize me. Later I notice that Morales has left the event early. I’m not sure when, but I can’t help but feel that the radical politics on display expressed by the speakers may have had something to do with it.

The event starts late, because Bernie Sanders is stuck in traffic. When it starts, and the guests step out on stage, Naomi Klein takes one look at the Aquafina water bottles and turns around. A minute later one of the organizers comes out and removes the bottled waters and replaces them with pitchers of ice water and paper cups. Score one for a good environmentalist.

DSC_3168
Bernie Sanders

Bernie Sanders is the keynote speaker. He starts out strong, saying, “Climate change is real. The debate is over about about the cause and the impacts of global warming.” The crowd loves this. There are shouts of “Run, Bernie, run!”

But then there is a commotion. Some of the people sitting near me get up and unfurl a banner in front of Sanders that reads, “Bernie voted for the war on the indigenous people of Palestine.” Sanders is caught off guard by this, and his speech stumbles. Some in the crowd cheer for this reminder about the plight of Palestine, others are uncertain as to how to react. A woman comes forward and asks the protesters to “sit down, you’ve made your point.”

To my surprise, the protesters do sit down, their point well made.

Sanders rallies and gets back into his speech, but he’s off his game now, and he never quite resonates as strongly as when he started. Still, more than a third of the audience stands in applause as he wraps up. “Nothing passes the United States Congress without the approval of the Oil Companies, Corporate America and Wall St.,” says the Senator Sanders.

“Take to the streets,” he said. “We can hurt them.”

Bill McKibben, founder of 350.org, the man and the group most responsible for the People’s Climate March, begins by announcing that official estimates place the expected crowd at tomorrow’s rally at about 200,000 attendees. (In fact the number was twice that.) It will be by far the largest climate change rally in history.

McKibben talks about how opposition to the Keystone Pipeline led one oil executive to lament that, “We’ll never be allowed to build a pipeline in peace again.” There are laughs at this, but McKibben isn’t making jokes or declaring victories.

This march is bigger than one pipeline or tar sands oil or fracking, says Mckibben. This march is the “burglar alarm” on the people who are trying to steal our future.

“We need to take on the Koch Brothers directly,” says McKibben, adding that in the face of such a terrific threat to humanity and the planet, “It’s an obligation and a privilege to be around right now.”

Author Naomi Klein, whose new book, This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs. the Climate nails the climate change zeitgeist, made no apologies for framing the battle in stark economic and social justice terms. Klein maintains that the reason we can’t get off oil and adopt clean energy solutions is because of the neoliberal agenda advanced by free market extremists. Unrestricted free trade, the privatization of government services and the imposition of extreme austerity have crippled our ability to respond in any meaningful way to this imminent disaster.

We need to “break every rule in their idiotic playbook because [neoliberalism] is at war with life on Earth,” she said.

DSC_3143
Chris Hedges

More dour and more radical was journalist Chris Hedges. The People’s Climate March, said Hedges, is but a “prelude to resistance.” Framing the issue as “the beginning of a titanic clash between our corporate masters and ourselves,” Hedges said that it is fast becoming time to “speak in the language of overthrow and revolution.”

Working with the Democratic Party, says Hedges, is pointless. “We’re pouring energy into a black hole.”

As the guests were introduced at the beginning of the program, the biggest cheers were for Kshama Sawant. No surprise; the line was packed with New York members of Socialist Alternative. In Seattle Sawant ran as an unrepentant and open socialist and won a seat on the Seattle City Council, pushing through a bill for a $15 an hour minimum wage, the highest minimum wage in the country. She donates most of her City Council pay to social change groups, keeping only “an average worker’s salary” for herself. She’s impressive, but when she speaks in her careful, accented way, she is electric.

Sawant stands and reads her simple declarative statements with both precision and compassion. “Tomorrow’s protests,” says Sawant, “must represent a turning point.” We must “bring the giant corporations into public ownership,” because, “you cannot control what you do not own.”

DSC_3169
Kshama Sawant

“We cannot be bound by what is acceptable to big corporations” who believe that, “the Market is God, and everything is sacrificed on the altar of profit.”

The crowd responds with enthusiasm or surprise. Klein, Hedges and Sawant, each more radical than the last, are literally calling for economic revolution as our only hope to avoid the burning of the planet.

When Sawant finishes, there are calls from the crowd. “You should run!” says one woman, echoing the calls of the Bernie Sanders supporters from the beginning of the forum. Sawant smiles. She surely recognizes that the call for her to run is an emotional, not logical reaction, but suddenly Sawant doesn’t seem to be channeling the past, as I mentioned when I saw her supporters selling newspaper outside. Instead, Sawant seems to be summoning the future.

As power and money continues to consolidate in the hands of fewer and ever more powerful corporate hands, and as the extinction clock for all life on Earth continues to count down, the revolutionary begins to seem less impossible and more imminent. As Naomi Klein says in the title of her book, climate change “changes everything.”

Thousands flood Wall Street in climate protest


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387
Flood Wall Street protesters stage sit-in on Broadway near the famous Wall Street Bull
Flood Wall Street protesters stage sit-in on Broadway near the famous Wall Street Bull

More than a thousand protesters occupied several blocks of Broadway in Manhattan’s financial district for over eight hours today in an action called “Flood Wall Street,” protesting what organizers called “the role of corporate power in climate politics.” While the NYPD had been very restrained during the day — even when protesters surged against barricades at the entrance to Wall Street — after night fell, there were reports of pepper spray being used, and according to organizers, as many as 100 were arrested.

Protesters surge up Broadway
Protesters surge up Broadway

The day had begun with a 9am rally in Battery Park, at the lower tip of Manhattan, where speakers warmed up the crowd and organizers coached participants in the plan. Hundreds of people drank coffee, made last minute adjustments on banners, and did interviews with the milling press corps, who numbered nearly a hundred.

Participants practiced the gestures for “surge,” meaning that the crowd should “flow forward like water,” and “sit,” to occupy the space. Three groups were established, with the last one comprising those who did not wish to risk arrest. Then, shortly before noon, they headed north out of the park and out onto traffic on Broadway.

"Carbon Bubble" hangs up on Citibank light fixture
“Carbon Bubble” hangs up on Citibank light fixture

They ran into trouble almost immediately. There were two 15-foot silver-and-black mylar balloons, dubbed “Carbon Bubbles,” that the group was carrying, threading them among the busses and trucks at the intersection of Battery Place and Broadway. In an unintentional but ironic twist, one bubble was punctured by the anti-pigeon spikes on an ornamental lamp on the wall of the Citibank at One Broadway.

Traffic was brought to a stop as the group made its way nearly as far north as Morris street, just past the famous statue of the Wall Street Bull. It was unclear whether they were unable to progress further due to the traffic or the NYPD, but the group made a 150-degree turn down Whiehall Street which meets Broadway at that point forming the narrow triangular island where the Bull stands.

And that’s as far as things went for five hours. The NYPD had already deployed steel railings on both sides of the street, and now closed off both ends of Broadway, flushed out the remaining vehicles, and settled in to let the protesters have the space. Occasionally, police would take responsive action — chasing a group of indigenous protesters down from a window, or deflating the second “Carbon Bubble” when the group tried to bounce it onto the Bull. But for the most part, they hung back behind their perimeter fencing, watched, and waited. The strategy paid off: as the clock ticked through the afternoon, protesters visibly drifted away.

Before the closing bell, this reporter headed up to Wall Street. Security had been established at each of the entrances, with steel fencing augmenting the existing bollards and anti-vehicle devices. It was striking to see business as usual, with brokers exiting the white security tent set up as a checkpoint in front of the stock exchange as if nothing were happening a few blocks away.

Police meet protesters at the intersection of Broadway and Wall Street
Police meet protesters at the intersection of Broadway and Wall Street

Then, just before 4pm, the protesters, numbering in the hundreds now, surged up Broadway toward the entrance to Wall Street, where they were stopped and pushed back as police expanded the perimeter fencing to create a twenty-foot semicircle  around the intersection. The protesters sat down, the police expanded the frozen zone several blocks north, and things seemed headed for another stalemate, which is when this reporter left. Subsequent reports on Twitter and in New York media  indicated that an hour or so later, police arrested those still in the street.

More pictures from the event are up on Flickr stream and multiple, minute-by-minute accounts on Twitter under the hashtag #FloodWallStreet.

Texts, video from People’s Climate March


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387
The People rising and will no let up!
The People rising and will no let up!
The People are rising, as are the seas!

Text messages as the People’s Climate March was unfolding on this historical day, 9/21:
10:36 AM

[…] People flooding in from all streets. Buses are backed up waiting to get into […]

10:33 AM

manhattan – it’s huge! -Matt

11:41 AM

MattLeonard: And we are moving! At the front – but huge crowds packing the whole march, and more on spilling over on sidewalks.

12:31 PM

At 12:58 we’re holding a moment of silence while linking hands overhead in honor of those already suffering in the face of climate change. Spread the word.

12:36 PM

At 1:00 we’ll break the silence and sound the climate alarm that’s been ignored for too long. Be REALLY loud.

02:52 PM

BREAKING: initial count for the People’s Climate March: 310,000. Thank you all for being part of a beautiful, historical day.

03:36 PM

This march is so big that we’re asking people to disperse just before they reach 11th Ave. and 42nd St.


Because of delays at the beginning of the march, South County’s delegation to the March missed its 10:30 AM opportunity, ‘Educating Sheldon.’  An email had gone out to the RI-PCM hub listserv, last week — yes, you can still sign up
here:

Here is a communication from Emily Enderly in Senator Whitehouse’s office:

Thanks again for all the info and proposing a meeting time and location.  10:30am on Sunday at 71st and 8th Ave works for Senator Whitehouse.  […]

This is a unique chance to let Senator Whitehouse know that his position on natural gas as a bridge fuel is misguided.

Specifically, our congressional delegation should withdraw its support for the AIM project for natural gas pipeline expansion, which will disrupt Green Power for The People.  Senator Whitehouse has the credibility to get us off this path to perdition.

See these links for public statements about this:

  1. New England Senators support AIM project
  2. RI congressional delegation supports bridge fuel myth

For more detailed information about what’s wrong with this “Green” Bridge to Hell see:

  1. Tomgram: Naomi Oreskes
  2. See “The Myth that Gas is ‘Clean Energy'” (June link)

–Peter

PS
For dedicated readers only:

Surely, our congressional delegation consists of honorable people, but they are part of a system that has lost its way, a system without ethics, empathy and compassion, a system that tramples on vulnerable communities and treats life on Earth as a disposable commodity.

We need system change.  It’s really not that hard to understand the words of Jeb Saño, climate negotiator of the Philippines:

Super Typhoon Haiyan made landfall in my family’s hometown and the devastation is staggering. I struggle to find words even for the images that we see from the news coverage. I struggle to find words to describe how I feel about the losses and damages we have suffered from this cataclysm.

Our system can no longer take in the meaning of these words.  It ignores what happened in the Philippines.  Listen to our Senator Jack Reed.  Undoubtedly he is a decent, well-meaning person, but all I can say is when I hear him talk about sea level rise in Bangladesh while he focuses only on how it will threaten US national security is this:

Shame!  Shame!  Shame!  Shame on a system that robs people of their ability to show their sensitivity for human misery!

Occupy Providence was there:
Occupy Providence was there: “We’re not dead yet; no, never!”

This lack of morality is what we heard from the organizers at “PCM Central — read everywhere— on the days before the march.  It resulted in a last-minute email to Rhode Island riders to the People’s Climate March:

Please participate in the 1pm moment of silence; text ALARM to 97779 for a signal.  This is to honor those on the front lines, those in humanity’s sacrifice zones.

South county residents at the People's Climate March
South County residents, quite alive too: “The 1% will survive climate change just fine.  Thank you!”

Fossil Free Rhode Island and our legion allies have been trying to get this message across for a long time.

Naomi Klein sums up the problem as follows and she adds yet another ingredient to the mix:

And I think part of the responsibility for this, you know, is shared by the environmental movement in the United States, because there is this sense that:

  • That is a political no-go zone. You can’t talk about any kind of redistribution of technology or wealth between North and South;
  • This is toxic.

In her interview with Robert Malin, Vandana Shiva has the looters of Earth and their governmental flunkies stand naked.

VANDANA SHIVA: The issue is so urgent in my part of the world.  We just had one monsoon season last year, where the extreme climate events washed away 20,000 people.  We’re having extreme climate events in Kashmir right now, which affects both India and Pakistan, and more than 500 people have been washed away and died.  We are talking of hundreds and thousands of people dying in every part of the world, every year.  This is no more a theoretical debate.  It is a human emergency and a planetary emergency.

ROBERT MALIN: So, what we are talking about is the genocide that is a socially committed one.  What kind of responsibility does the United Nations have to put an end to that?

VANDANA SHIVA: The United Nations gave us the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, and Copenhagen was going to give us the post-2015 commitments.  Sadly, President Obama flew in, got China and India and other polluters together and said: “Let’s continue to pollute and let’s not have a legally binding commitment.”  So, I would say that the UN is being blocked right now, which is why Ban Ki-moon is coming here to the streets.

ROBERT MALIN:  I’ve heard you talking about the corporations structure.  How are people that fighting against corporate power, union people fighting for labor, and people fighting for environmental justice are all fighting the same fight?

VANDANA SHIVA: Well, we are all fighting the same fight, because the same corporations are giving us climate havoc.  The same corporations are giving us poisons in our food.  The same sets of corporations and the same logic of a globalized free trade, which gives them freedom, is dismanteling the hard-won rights of workers to live a life of dignity and justice.  Everywhere in the world, workers’ rights are being dismanteled, and the corporations like a system where workers live in misery and can be super-exploited.  The Planet can be exploited and nothing should come in the way, but that is both ecocide and genocide.

 

Our politics is about national security and more bombs and submarines. Have we no decency?  Of course, we do;  let’s continue to change everything.

Green Power to the People!

Photos from the People’s Climate March


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Yesterday I marched with 400,000 people in New York to demand that government take strong action to save the earth from the catastrophic results of climate change.

DSC_4272

We were a united humanity taking a stand for everything that is truly important: our lives, our world and our future.

DSC_3198

DSC_3242

DSC_4286

DSC_4279

DSC_4259

DSC_4236

DSC_4225

DSC_4222

DSC_4212

DSC_4198

DSC_4147

DSC_4134

DSC_4129

DSC_4124

DSC_4098

DSC_4083

DSC_4069

DSC_4056

DSC_4053

DSC_4048

DSC_4034

DSC_4006

DSC_4000

DSC_3998

DSC_3965

DSC_3952

DSC_3934

DSC_3927

DSC_3915

DSC_3892

DSC_3839

DSC_3819

DSC_3807

DSC_3794

DSC_3777

DSC_3775

DSC_3768

DSC_3763

DSC_3758

DSC_3746

DSC_3721

DSC_3701

DSC_3693

DSC_3682

DSC_3665

DSC_3653

DSC_3635

DSC_3602

DSC_3588

DSC_3560

DSC_3521

DSC_3500

DSC_3496

DSC_3487

DSC_3464

DSC_3446

DSC_3386

DSC_3380

DSC_3379

DSC_3347

DSC_3335

DSC_3320

DSC_3316

DSC_3314

DSC_3311

DSC_3310

DSC_3300

DSC_3289

DSC_3288

DSC_3280

DSC_3270

DSC_3266

DSC_3265

DSC_3263

DSC_3250

DSC_3248

Notes from the People’s Climate March


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

13sep21_pcm_42ndst

Four solid miles of people — 400,000, according to organizers — marched through the heart of New York City to show that climate change is no longer an abstract threat, and to demand action from national and international leaders.

They carried signs and banners, made music, rode bicycles, pushed kids in strollers, and made noise in a line so long that when lead contingent arrived at 34th Street and 11th Avenue, the tail of the march had just begun to move from 86th Street and Central Park West. It made the usual crush of people in Midtown Manhattan seem sparse by comparison. Imagine roughly half of the people in the state of Rhode Island marching together.

There were plenty of Rhode Islanders there, including a half-dozen busses with folks from groups including the RI Sierra Club, Fossil Free RI, the RI Progressive Democrats of America, the Humanists of RI. Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse was in the march, we spotted him as he stopped to talk with students from Brown and URI.

The march was timed to coincide with Tuesday’s UN Climate Summit, which aims to build international support for action before the next round of climate talks, and in an unusual move, Secretary General Ban Ki Moon himself joined the marchers. RI Future caught up with former Vice-President Al Gore, and he expressed his hopes for action at the Summit.

The People’s Climate March was grouped into six sections, who each had a several-block stretch of Central Park West where they began marshaling early this morning. The weather had been predicted hot, but an overnight rain left the streets cool and damp when people began assembling around 8am. Leading the march at Columbus Circle (an irony acknowledged by the organizers) were the people on the “Frontlines of Crisis” — indigenous people, climate justice groups, and impacted communities. Next was “We can build the future,” comprising labor, families, students, and elders. Following them was the “We have solutions group,” with renewable energy people, food and water justice groups, and environmental organizations. Then came “we know who is responsible,” with anti-corporate campaigns, peace & justice groups, and others. After them — and we were up to 81st street now — was “The debate is over,” featuring scientists and interfaith organizations. Finally, the last group, “To change everything, we need everyone,” included NY boroughs, community groups, neighborhoods, other cities, states, and countries.

Each section had its own floats, banners, and themed signs, and each began the morning with a mini-rally at the head of their staging area. Not only was the street packed, solid, for those twenty blocks, but the sidewalks on both sides and slowed to a crawl as people moved up and down the line to find their contingent.

Sallie LatchThe tone, energized and upbeat throughout was notable. There was definitely plenty of anger — at corporations, at international leaders, at the system — but from the youth contingent near the front enthusiastically chanting “This is what democracy looks like” to the many folks who had clearly been at this for a while, there was a positive energy.

Sallie Latch, with the group globaljusticecenter.org, held a sign on 81st Street saying “I can’t believe I’m protesting this crap after 60 years.” Smiling, she told RI Future, “More than 60 years. We need to do something. We can’t wait for our politicians and corporations. This is about system change, not climate change.”

Although the march stepped off on time, it still took hours for those in the final groups to begin to move, as the line snaked across 59th Street, down 6th Ave, then across 42nd to 11th Avenue, where they headed south to a post-march celebration/block party between 34th and 37th. This reporter had walked north along the entire staging area to get a sense of the groups (see the photos on Flickr) and was able to catch the subway and get to Times Square in time to meet the frontline group headed West on 42nd Street.

The final marchers made their way along the west side about six hours after the event began. This reporter grew up in NY, and cannot recall seeing anything with this scale since the anti-nuclear protest back in 1982.

Be the ‘Disruption’


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Whitehouse PCM ThumbnailIt was a beautiful day yesterday (unless you’re a die-hard Pats fan), not the kind of day you want to spend inside. Nevertheless, I found myself in a darkened classroom at Brown University in order to watch “Disruption,” a documentary that dropped online yesterday and which is designed to drive people into the streets to demand action on the climate. The film gave me goosebumps several times, both anticipating the impending People’s Climate March in NYC on September 21st and reminiscing about the giant Forward on Climate Rally in DC last February. It runs a little over 50 minutes, and it makes a compelling case for people to show up in New York. [stream it here]

Did I mention you can get a Climate March bus ticket roundtrip for as little as $15 and the deadline is Wednesday? CLICK HERE FOR THE TICKET PAGE  (If it says the tickets are sold out, please join the waiting list. More buses are being arranged)

The People’s Climate March is expected to draw more than 200,000 people, all to make the statement that global action must be undertaken to drastically reduce carbon emissions. The film builds excitement for the march by interlacing behind the scenes clips of the amazing organizing work being done to make it all run smoothly with interviews of renowned climate activists. The organizers’ perspective on the march is reinforced by periodically counting down the days until September 21st, beginning 100 days out and ending with 14 to go.

One of the renowned activists who makes an appearance in “Disruption” is our own Senator Whitehouse. The Senator held his annual Energy and Environmental Leaders day, and we were able to pull him aside for a moment to get an exclusive video interview. Among other things we asked him why it’s important to go down to New York City. This is what he had to say:

Even if you know you can’t make it to the People’s Climate March and disregard the Senator’s invitation, I recommend watching the movie to get a sense of the scale of the movement we need to create in the coming decades in order to save civilization as we have known it. It requires unprecedented action, and it’s made more difficult by human psychology, which isn’t biologically designed to grapple with problems that emerge and must be resolved over generations. This challenge is acknowledged in “Disruption.” The theory in the film and behind the march itself is to get enough people onto the streets to reach a cultural tipping point, to find a place in our collective consciousness where we can plan for the long term and act accordingly.

We are closer to this tipping point than we realize, and each new pair of boots on the ground brings us a step closer. In New York and beyond, if we want to disrupt business as usual, we must be the disruption.

Buy Your Ticket Now!

 

‘Disruption’ at URI


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

disruption_poster_exportJoin us for a screening of ‘Disruption’, a fast-paced, cinematic journey through the wild world of climate change: the science, the politics, the solutions, and the stories that define the crisis at this critical point in the history of Earth.

The movie is close to an hour long, and afterward, we’ll have a discussion about what all of us can do together about this crucial issue.

The screening will prepare the way for the People’s Climate March in New York City on September 21st, when a vast quantity of people will converge in New York City for what may become the largest climate march in history to date. As we march, reported world leaders will be attending the UN for a special summit on the climate crisis.

URI students will join with people from other schools, community organizations, unions and hundreds of other groups from across the country and around the world for this historic occasion. We’ll take to the streets to demand the the climate justice that is within our reach.

There will be buses departing from Kingston and Providence to New York City on September 20th (Providence only) and 21st, and returning on Sunday, the 21st.

Tickets will be $30 round trip, with low-income tickets available for $15. You can purchase your bus tickets here.

There also is an RI site for donations.

Please fill out this interest form if you are planning on attending the People’s Climate March.

The screening of Disruption is sponsored by:

Finally, here Sophie Robinson explains what motivates her to organize for the People’s Climate March:

… the worst fear

That can ever be hurled

Fear to bring children

Into the world

(Bob Dylan’s Masters of War)

Where did Congressional climate change deniers go?


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

sheldon

How do you know Democrats are slowly starting to win the hearts and minds of Americans when it comes to addressing climate change?

When every witness at a Congressional committee hearing – even those invited by Republicans – can agree that climate change is real and caused carbon emissions.

To kick off the hearing on the costs of climate change, Rhode Island Senator Sheldon Whitehouse asked everyone: “It appears to me that everybody on this panel agrees that climate change is real, it’s really happening, and it relates to carbon emissions. Is that true across the board of all five of you?”

They all said yes. Here’s the video:

It was a Budget Committee hearing titled: “The Costs of Inaction: The Economic and Budgetary Consequences of Climate Change” and you can see a list of the witnesses here.

Tackling beach erosion with two sticks and a string


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387
Jon Boothroyd and Bryan Oakley, Geologists with the Rhode Island Geological Survey provide a historical account of coastal erosion in South Kingstown. (Photo Tracey C. O'Neill)
Jon Boothroyd and Bryan Oakley, Geologists with the Rhode Island Geological Survey provide a historical account of coastal erosion in South Kingstown. (Photo Tracey C. O’Neill)

Matunuck –  Armed with just two sticks and a string,  a group of 15 environmentalists took to South Kingstown Town Beach to tackle one of the biggest issues facing Rhode Island: eroding barrier beaches.

“The reason we can hold this kind of workshop is that the technique we use to actually monitor, to create these (profiles) is with a very simple technique,” said Bryan Oakley, University of Rhode Island graduate and Asst. Professor of Environmental Earth Sciences at Eastern Connecticut State University. “We don’t have anything that costs more than $30 to build these sticks. It literally is as we call it two sticks and a string.’ ”

The training is sponsored by the Coastal Resources Management Council in collaboration with the Rhode Island Geological Survey at URI, the beach gathering was intended to encourage volunteers to actively participate in monitoring changes and collecting data on the state’s barrier beaches.

The Emory Board Method

“We like it because it doesn’t require a lot of fancy equipment, “ said Oakley. “So in this day and age of funding, we can go out and set up a new profile for very little money. It’s just time to go run the data.”

20140723_095925
Bryan Oakley (l) and Rob Hollis (c) instruct a group on the science of beach profiling. (Photo Tracey C. O’Neill)

Dubbed the Emery Board method, the profile technique was formulated by the late Kenneth O. Emery, (K.O.), Scientist Emeritus at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute.

“Anybody can learn how to do it. It’s just a matter of consistency and really practice,” said Oakley. “You get better, you get faster, you get more efficient the more you do it.”

“It’s a field driven technique, we like that because its easy to sit and look at GIS and look at long-term changes, to the shoreline, but a lot of the detail is, you’re out here the day after a storm, you collect the data and you can say something about how much the shoreline went away,” he said.

Janet Freedman, CRMC Coastal Geologist helps Dori Boardman with her beach sketch. (Photo Tracey C. O'Neill)
Janet Freedman, CRMC Coastal Geologist helps Dori Boardman with her beach sketch. (Photo Tracey C. O’Neill)

Assisting the two professors in instruction were Janet Freedman, CRMC Coastal Geologist and Rob Hollis, URI Graduate Student.

The two sticks method was also the more practical choice for volunteer profiling as the more technical, kinematic GPS systems cost anywhere from $30,000 to $60,000.

Volunteers were also given tracking, plotting and sketching instruction for future use on their chosen beaches across the state.

Spearheading the training was Dr. Jon Boothroyd, State Geologist and Research Professor Emeritus at URI’s Rhode Island Geological Survey.

“Things are about to happen here,” said Boothroyd. “They are already happening.”

Pointing to South Kingstown Town Beach, where Boothroyd established a profile in 1996, he said, “This is a highly erodible place. It’s eroding at the same rate that some of the beaches are eroding and even more. And we think, we don’t know yet, and we hope the SAMP will shed some light on it, that there’s wave refraction around the shallower water out here. That’s a focus here.”

“The CRMC asked us to start a profile here in 1996,” Boothroyd said.

“They built this part in 1992,” he said of the town beach’s pavilion. “And they built the shore-parallel boardwalk in 1994. Almost as soon as it was built, people started noticing that the scarp and the bluff were approaching the boardwalk pilings.”

Taking care to school participants on the need for beach profiling, Boothroyd and Oakley walked the group through the history and science of the eroding shoreline. Before heading out onto the beach for hands-on training, the educators presented a basic foundation of changes and profiles generally seen on Rhode Island beaches.

Recovery takes time

Residents from multiple coastal communities took part in the training. (Photo Tracey C. O'Neill)
Residents from multiple coastal communities took part in the training. (Photo Tracey C. O’Neill)

The South Kingstown Town Beach is serving as the subject because it provides both historical and current change lessons in geology and meteorology.

“You know that the storms pass off to the east – that the wind comes in from the northeast – and we have what is known as Nor’easters,” said Boothroyd. “Everybody calls an extra- tropical cyclone a Nor’easter, but here if the storm track passes to the west, we have winds coming in from the southeast, so we really have So’easters on this coast. “[It] depends on which way your coast faces.”

Using Superstorm Sandy as a severe weather gauge, Boothroyd explained Sandy’s path and turn away from the RI coast.

“If Sandy hadn’t turned, we’d look like New Jersey. Not everyone believes it, but we dodged a bullet.”

The historical data for the beach, chronicled the changes since Sandy brought the sea ashore in Matunuck.

“Without this data, we wouldn’t know that the bluff here went back 7 meters during Sandy – the crest of the bluff,” said Oakley.

Engaging the participants, Oakley pointed to the scarp (slope formed by wave action) west of the pavilion. “So that scarp you see down there went back, 23 feet give or take during one storm.”

Natural replenishment and erosion is a long process, with intermittent storms and activity forestalling and contributing, in either positive or negative processes, the construct of the barrier beach.

“We’ve found over the years that there’s a cycle, although I’d hate to call it a cycle, but there’s a pattern,” said Boothroyd. “If you start with a very large beach with a big berm, then you have a moderate storm, severe storm, and post-storm recovery, over time it comes back. But it takes actually years to come back, so we’re still recovering here after Sandy.”

Joining the training were volunteers from Middletown, Little Compton, South Kingstown, Charlestown and Narragansett.The Narrow River Preservation Society in Narragansett, Salt Ponds Coalition,  2nd Beach, Middletown and the South Kingstown Conservation Commission were represented.

CRMC may offer additional beach profiling training sessions in the future, according to Laura Dwyer, spokesperson for CRMC.

How to protect your riparian dream from climate change


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Remember what Hurricane Sandy did to the Jersey Shore? One day that will happen here in Rhode Island, too.

Hurricane Senady damage in Westerly. Next storm could be much worse. Image courtesy: FEMA
Hurricane Sandy damage in Westerly. Next storm could be much worse. Image courtesy: FEMA

“We’re planning for a sea level rise of 3-5 feet by 2100 – this could mean that within the lifetime of people born today, Rhode Island’s oceans might rise enough to swallow the beaches as we know them now,” said Laura Dwyer, spokeswoman for the state Coastal Resources Management Council. “Natural hazards like Sandy have also inflicted significant damage to homes and infrastructure along the coast.”

But CRMC is doing more than just offering up doomsday scenarios for beach bums and coastal property owners. The state agency tasked with protecting and managing the shoreline has also partnered with the URI Coastal Resources Center to create the:

Rhode Island Coastal Property Guide

Screen Shot 2014-07-22 at 2.13.42 PM
Screen shot of Rhode Island Coastal Property Guide. (click on the image to check out the site)

It’s a 30-page booklet in the form of a webpage that explains the potential dangers and ecological realities to living the dream of owning ocean-front property. It’s also a handy checklist of everything you need to know to make sure your riparian slice of the American Dream is as safe – and as legal – as possible.

“People who live at the coast or own businesses there are telling me more and more that they are worried about what’s going to happen to their properties, and they want to know what to do about the impacts we are seeing from storms and sea level rise,” said Grover Fugate, CRMC executive director. “The guide gives people practical ways they can start adapting to these significant impacts associated with living near the shore.”

For example, the guide can help you glean if your property requires flood insurance (hint: if you think you need to check this out, there’s a good chance it does) and how one can – and cannot – protect their investment from a catastrophic weather event. (If it doesn’t seem like this would be good news for Rhode Island realtors, think again.)

“Rising sea level and extreme weather events resulting from global warming will have a significant impact on Rhode Island in the years to come,” said URI Graduate School of Oceanography Dean Bruce Corliss. “The Rhode Island Property Guide will provide timely and valuable information for residents and businesses to address these threats and is the result of the ongoing collaboration between URI CRC, CRMC, and Rhode Island Sea Grant to address the needs of Rhode Island’s coastal communities.”

Sunshine and methane pipeline expansion


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387
Exploding gas pipeline

A recent post congratulated our RI Governor Linc Chafee, who won an award for “exceptional destruction” and “his support of the Spectra fracked gas pipeline expansion and the natural gas industry as a whole.”  NOPE, the grass roots-Green party coalition to stop natural gas pipeline expansion, seems to have been onto something in its act of gubernatorial recognition.

Let’s see what happened since.  Let sunlight disinfect!

Exploding gas pipeline
Toast: from New England Governors & the meth industry with love!

CLF, the Conservation Law Foundation, published documents obtained by means of a Freedom of Information Act request.  The documents show that the New England States Committee on Electricity (NESCOE) and the representatives of the NE governors have tried hard to avoid a transparent process and have put in place a massive infrastructure initiative that gambles not only with tax payer funds but with the global climate in its totality.  The following sums it all up:

In January, the New England Governors announced a regional infrastructure plan to finance new gas pipelines and electric transmission lines with billions of dollars in funding from residents and businesses. Documents obtained by CLF through public records requests show:

  • Details worked out “behind closed doors.” The states and the agency in charge of implementing the Governors’ plan – the New England States Committee on Electricity (NESCOE) – are deciding on the elements, scale, and costs of the plan in secret and have repeatedly shielded technical and legal analysis regarding the plan from public scrutiny.
  • Self-interested industry insiders shaping the plan outside public view. NESCOE and state representatives have been and are currently working out many of the most important details of the plan in private discussions with gas pipeline companies and the gas and electric utilities that would earn billions from the plan. The states are using talking points directly from industry and allowing electric and gas utilities to help define their roles as middlemen who stand to profit from the plan .
  • Ignoring smaller , more affordable solutions. Despite public statements to the contrary, NESCOE and the states agree in private that they “ are not looking for market adjustments as alternatives to our current infrastructure investment path” that could be far less costly. According to the executive in charge of the region’s electric grid, the point of the plan is to use public money to “ overbuild ” gas pipeline.
  • NESCOE claims that it is not subject to public records laws and is refusing to provide any documents to CLF. Several states also are withholding their documents about the plan. CLF is considering legal action to force compliance and bring these document to light.

The dedicated reader may follow this link to learn more about the details.  A document that reveals NOSCOE’s own, detailed summary of its stunning ignorance is here.

Finally, it should be reiterated that supporting decisions without understanding the details now seems to be the strategy of choice of the representatives of the Corporate States of America.

Climate change and human extinction at URI


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Guy McPherson gave a talk Climate Change — The End? at URI on April 12 of this year. The first part of his provocative presentation is now available as an annotated video, put together by Robert Malin.

This sums up the main points of this installment:

  • Earth is headed for a temperature increase exceeding 3.5C (6.3F) above baseline, the average global temperature at the beginning of the industrial revolution.
  • There have never been humans on Earth in that temperature range.
  • Human extinction will result and come about as a result of absence of habitat.
  • The main-stream media and governments are complicit in covering up decades worth of scientific research and predictions.

My view on climate change is: “The 1% will survive climate change just fine. Thank you.”  How much does the thought cheer you up that Guy might be wrong and that I might be right?

Stay tuned!

We’re still not doing nearly enough on climate change


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387
Chafee award from

Last Tuesday State Senate climate bill S2952 was unanimously passed by the Environment & Agriculture committee. Huzzah!  The previous Monday, the EPA announced a “historic” proposal to cut carbon emissions from power plants by “30%.”  Ah-choo!  The answer to the question “percentage of what?” is given in this panel discussion on The Real News Network, where Daphne Wysham also explains my quotation marks:

It’s historic in the sense that the bar has been set so low.  Yeah, it’s good to see the Obama administration finally wresting power out of the hands of Congress and taking some action, but essentially it’s like trying to put out a house fire with a squirt gun. And at the same time, when we should be using multiple fire hoses, instead we’re worrying about the criminal, in this case the polluter, burning our house down.

Here is my cynical take on this consummately capitalist Climate Action Plan put out by the White House – EPA axis of evil:

The Lord of Death, an ally of State Governors, in a surprise visit to Greenwich, CT
The Lord of Death, an ally of State Governors, in a surprise visit to Greenwich, CT
  1. We’ll build new and retool old coal power plants to run on methane
  2. Item (1), pipelines and exports will drive up the price of methane
  3. This will bail out Wall Street with its toxic weapons of gas destruction, i.e., its investments in the shale gas industry
  4. Meanwhile, we’ll invest billions in chasing fugitive methane
  5. Finally, just after the next presidential elections, when the fracking boom goes bust, we’ll have the “best” of all possible worlds:
    1. Virtually nothing invested in renewable energy
    2. Methane and its price up there in the stratosphere
    3. The economy, environment, and future wrecked with one modest plan, but we’ll be fine until the end of the quarter

The story

Let me explain all of the above.  This is what the fracking industry claims:

With a history of 60 years, after nearly a million wells drilled, there are no documented cases that hydrolic fracturing has led to contamination of water.

Yeah, right, and smoking is good for your health!

Of course, nobody cares about the health of people in capitalism’s sacrifice zones, but there is more: the economic weapons of gas destruction.  As Deborah Rogers wrote in Shale and Wall Street:

Aubrey McClendon, CEO of Chesapeake Energy, stated unequivocally in a financial analyst call in 2008:

I can assure you that buying leases for x and selling them for 5x or 10x is a lot more profitable than trying to produce gas at $5 or $6 mcf [per thousand cubic feet].

<a href="http://shalebubble.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/SWS-report-FINAL.pdf" target="_blank">More Wall Street Bull</a>
More Wall Street Bull

I smell a Wall Street bubble, but, dear reader, if you’re not convinced, maybe this —from the same source:— will sound familiar:

Banks no longer held on to mortgages. Instead it became lucrative to make loans, package the mortgages, have a ratings agency pronounce it a safe investment and then flip them to investors, thereby collecting large fees. This is not unlike the land grab which shale operators engaged in by leasing millions of acres of land, drilling a handful of wells and pronouncing the field “proved up” and thereby a “safe” investment, and then flipping such parcels to the highest bidder. This exercise quickly drove prices up.

Let the 99% tremble at the financial revolution. The 1% have nothing to loose but their spoils. Managers of All Capital Markets unite!

The New York Times, already in 2011 knew what’s going down and published industry insider emails that exposed the shale scam; see Drilling Down.  None of this had an impact on the bullish forecasts of the US Energy Information Administration (EIA), which has a long history of over-optimistic projections —see page 28 of Drill, Baby, Drill— and breathtaking exaggerations.

This takes care of items 1 through 3 of my Executive Summary for Cynics.  Let’s move on to item 4, fugitive methane.  Almost a year ago, I explained why, in my opinion, the White House Climate Plan was fraudulent.  To sum it up, the fact that methane only produces half the amount of carbon-dioxide per unit energy in the process of burning it is extremely misleading.  It ignores the immediate and present danger of the fugitive methane that escapes during drilling and piping.  Methane is a much more potent greenhouse gas than carbon-dioxide.  To skip over this vital information is, as last year’s “Climate Action” Plan did, is nothing less than a cover-up of conspiracy to commit a crime against humanity, nay, the biosphere.

As George Zornick writes in The Nation:

Still, one critical concern is that methane affects the atmosphere more quickly—and given the ticking climate clock, it presents a unique danger. “We should and must control carbon dioxide because of its long-term consequences, but the climate system is far more responsive on the short time period to methane,” said Howarth. “And so if we are to slow the warming and avoid these potential tipping points just fifteen or twenty years out, we have to control methane emissions.”

Let’s see what the EPA plan has to say about methane:

We have also analyzed potential upstream net methane emissions impact from natural gas and coal for the impacts analysis. This analysis indicated that any net impacts from methane emissions are likely to be small compared to the CO2 emissions reduction impacts of shifting power generation from coal-fired steam EGUs [steam generating units] to NGCC [Natural gas combined cycle] units. Further information on our analysis of upstream impacts can be found in the Appendix 3A of the RIA [Regulatory Impact Analysis].

(I can’t help it, but bureaucrats’ salaries are based on the average number of acronyms they pack into one sentence.)

Whom should I believe, Wall Street’s own White House and EPA or a bunch of  “corrupt, grant-chasing” scientists?

Just to get a sense of perspective, it’s helpful to keep in mind that there is an alternative (TIA) to this approach all-of-the-above coming the the rescue of just-more-of-the-same.  Here is one example:

Plans to Convert the 50 United States to Wind, Water, and Sunlight

Local power generation?  That might give Power to the People, who —polluted Heaven forbid!— might decide to run the power grid by means of worker-owned co-ops. That would spoil the business climate for the Vampire Class. What would this do to poor corporations such as National Grid, head-quartered in the United Kingdom?  That’s a no-go, baby!  It does not fit in with our neoliberal, hyper-financialized system operated by our precious, Wall-Street-funded Washington Duopoly.

The only ones who do not seem to understand any of the above are the politicians. And, yes, that includes, our own celebrated Rhode Island congressional delegation — you can hear them hear speak in support of the Meth Bridge to Nowhere.

Of course, none of this is a surprise given the toxic bloom of public servants from Goldman Sachs infesting the White House.  Or to paraphrase Upton Sinclair:

It is difficult to get politicians to understand something, when their campaign contributions depend upon their not understanding it!

As mentioned, the US Energy Information Administration has a long history of over-optimistic projections.  This is what informed our ElecToon in Chief in the 2012 State of the Onion address:

This country needs an all-out, all-of-the-above strategy that develops every available source of American energy. (Applause.) A strategy that’s cleaner, cheaper, and full of new jobs.

We have a supply of natural gas that can last America nearly 100 years. (Applause.)

Just a couple of weeks ago, the Energy Information Administration downgraded by 96% its estimate of the amount of recoverable oil in the Monterey Shale in California.  The White House continues to blow bubbles for the 1%, and —praise the Lord of Death!— the farcical, all-of-the-above national energy policy rolls on, while 60% of US shale oil goes poof!

Fighting back!

Lord of Death
NOPE in Greenwich
Earlier this month, the Democratic Governors association met in Greenwich, CT.  Tim McKnee of the Connecticut Green Party welcomed protesters of  NOPE, the No Pipeline Expansion grassroots coalition:

Welcome to Greenwich Connecticut!  Welcome to gated communities and billionaires.  I’m not talking lowly millionaires, I’m talking billionaires.  This is so symbolic!  Where are governors meeting?  Not in Bridgeport, CT.  No! Not in Pawtucket, RI.  No!  They are meeting here, where the money is!

Then there was Nick Katkevich of FANG (Fighting Against Natural Gas) with A Message from the Lord of Death

Death is rather silent. That’s why Death has asked me to speak, but it’s quite an honor that the Lord of Death has traveled from the Underworld to be here today.

There is a lot more information about the protest over at with our own Lisa Petrie of Fossil Free RI and Tony Affigne from the Rhode Island Green Party, but I’m going to wrap this up.

Conclusions and Questions

The analysis I presented above may be too cynical and  even totally wrong.  Who knows?  We have to keep in mind that indeed there is a lot we —that includes the deciders the 1% bought for us— do not know.  What we do know is that Sheldon Whitehouse, who, as he admits is not familiar with the details of the Spectra pipeline, nevertheless supports the pipeline expansion project. Indeed,  he and Jack Reed nonetheless blessed the project with their signatures of support.  Neither one of this duo seems to understand that most of the methane escapes at the well.  United with the shale industry informed we decide.  What a marvelous confidence booster!

In spite of the spectacular uncertainties, the execution of grand Climate Inaction Plan announced last summer by the administration is fully underway already.  I forgot to mention that, in addition to our intrepid congressional delegation, also New England’s governors lend their support to the scam; see New England Governors’s commitment to regional cooperation on energy infrastructure issues — appendix B, page 2. Burrilville, RI, be damned!

For war and violence we have the Manhattan Project, and in no time we build enrichment facilities the size of the US car industry.  For war and violence we follow the demands of the One-Percent Doctrine,  but for peaceful purposes and the future of the biosphere we throw caution to the wind, and all we can come up with are squirt guns!

Randy Udall, a couple of months before his death, gave an intriguing presentation about the oil and shale gas boom with which he was intimately familiar. Here are some of his poetic musings:

Does that carbon have any desire? These ancient plankton and little microscopic sea creatures, do they want to be back on the stage again? And what do people want? And then I asked myself can you have cretaceous carbon without have a cretaceous climate? Again, this period in Earth’s history was very warm and sea levels were very high compared to where they are today, hundreds feet higher. The North Pole was as warm as Denver. Can you mine and burn cretaceous carbon without having a cretaceous climate? I think that … maybe it’s not an open question. Maybe we have the answer to that already.

I’ll end with quoting Larry Wilkerson, former chief of staff to United States Secretary of State Colin Powell.

[L]et’s just keep being predators and watch the planet cast us off, because the planet is going to cast us off, or at least a sizable majority of us. There’s no question in my mind about that. The planet will go on as it went on after the dinosaurs, but human life might not. And that’s the nature of the challenge that we confront in this century.

Oh, oops I forgot this: NOPE is happy to congratulate our own fearless governor.  Keep up the good work for the 1%, Linc!
Chafee award from

Important health information — the the price is right, the cost of reading this is your mind:

According to the Surgeon General cynicism has been linked to dementia.

New EPA rule will be boon for RI renewable energy sector


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387

Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387
A coal-fired power plant in West Virginia. (Creative Commons)
A coal-fired power plant in West Virginia. (Creative Commons)

Rhode Island’s renewable energy industry is sure to benefit from the EPA’s new Clean Power Plan, said Abel Collins, program director of the Rhode Island chapter of the Sierra Club.

“The new EPA Carbon Rules are great news for Rhode Islanders, because the coal burning fire plants in the Midwest that have been poisoning our air for decades will either be closed down or cleaned up, preferably shuttered for good,” Collins said. “That will mean significant public health benefits, healthcare savings, and that’s even before we look at the climate impacts. Rhode Island’s economy is poised to capitalize on renewable energy development, and the planet will be better for it.”

Seeking a 30 percent cut in power plant emissions by 2030, the New York Times called President Obama’s executive order that the EPA tighten regulations on coal-based power plants “one of the strongest actions ever taken by the United States government to fight climate change.” It’s called the Clean Power Plan.

State Rep. Art Handy, primary sponsor of the Resilient RI bill that would develop a plan to address climate change said:

“While there has been much hand wringing about the new rule from the coal industry and their allies about these reasonable new rules, the truth is they will spur innovation in clean energy and efficiency, prevent thousands of deaths and millions of asthma attacks and will move our country in the right direction to reduce the impact of climate change on our economy and our society. Rhode Island with other northeastern states already started on this path with the successful RGGI program – the new rules will bring the rest of the country along with what we have been working towards for years.”

Channing Jones, campaign director of Environment Rhode Island said: “This announcement is exactly what we’ve been waiting for. EPA’s announcement is a huge win for the health of our families and our environment.”

He added, “The dirty energy companies that oppose this move may question the science and predict economic apocalypse if we act. They can make up whatever claims they want. But a cleaner, more energy-efficient economy and environment is not going to undermine our prosperity. In fact, our kids’ future depends on it.”

Jones’ comments echoed a post Rhode Island Senator Sheldon Whitehouse wrote for Vice News, published Sunday night:

Sight unseen, the polluters have been characterizing the rules as part of a “war on coal” that will kill jobs and impose unfair costs on industry. Don’t believe them.

Their claims are exaggerated at best, and flat-out lies at worst — and they look at only one side of the ledger, ignoring the effects of carbon pollution on the rest of us.

The EPA proposal, according to Vox “will set different emissions targets for each state — which, when taken together, will aim to cut carbon-dioxide emissions from the nation’s power sector as much as 30 percent below 2005 levels by 2030.” After a one-year period to finalize and tweak the new rule, Rhode Island and other states will have until June 2016 to develop a plan to reduce emissions. “States will be given a variety of options for cutting their emissions — using more efficient technology at coal plants, boosting their use of solar or wind or nuclear power, or even joining regional cap-and-trade systems that require companies to pay to emit carbon-dioxide.”


Deprecated: Function get_magic_quotes_gpc() is deprecated in /hermes/bosnacweb08/bosnacweb08bf/b1577/ipg.rifuturecom/RIFutureNew/wp-includes/formatting.php on line 4387