The Climate Crisis Far Too Great to Permit Large Fossil Projects

by Diana Gooding on August 20, 2022

Speak up to prevent a “political decision” for large corporations

Coal Ash to Pipelines: How an Activist Continues to Fight Climate Change

From an Article by Katie Keller, Wild Virginia, August 17, 2022

From coal ash to pipelines: here is how one activist continues to fight climate change. She is passionate about protecting Virginia’s waterways, and what started in the fight against coal ash dumping, a known carcinogenic waste made by coal-burning power plants, led to a journey in fighting fossil fuel infrastructure like the Atlantic Coast and Mountain Valley Pipelines.

MVP is not a done deal, but if it pushes through after millions in fines, it would be the equivalent of 23 coal fired power plants adding to our national greenhouse emissions and perpetuating climate change further.

Jessica Sims, of Appalachian Voices, joins Wild Virginia to talk about her story in the coal ash fight, and how that led her to fighting both the Atlantic Coast and Mountain Valley Pipelines. She talks about organizing, how policy affects our environment, how public commenting is critical to stopping pipeline infrastructure, and actionable insights listeners can implement to get involved in combatting climate change.

Born and raised in Virginia, Sims is an activist and Virginia Field Coordinator with Wild Virginia partner, Appalachian Voices. Greensboro, NC led her to the nonprofit arena, where she started as a volunteer for Chesapeake Climate Action Network (CCAN) and the James River Association, before working at the Sierra Club focusing on organizing against pipelines.

As the lead for Virginia at Appalachian Voices working against fracked-gas pipelines, she is a natural partner who cross-collaborates with groups like Artivism Virginia, the POWHR coalition, CCAN, Mountain Valley Watch, West Virginias River Coalition, and 7 Directions of Service.

“Mountain Valley Pipeline is not inevitable – it is not a done deal,” Sims notes. “It will be a thing of the past.” She discusses the motivations behind her work, the remarkable people and community she works with, the legislative and policy space, and how it all works together to stop dirty projects. We need to keep pipelines in the climate conversation and broaden the scope of those that that story reaches.

So, you’re passionate about protecting Virginia’s waterways, but you’re not sure where to plug yourself in. You can continue to submit pubic comment to the docket, call your elected officials, connect with these groups, join their mailing lists, and stay tuned. We will potentially see another public comment period with the Forest Service, so get your pens ready Wild Virginians.

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SEE ALSO: Mountain Valley Pipeline opponents vow to keep up fight despite Manchin deal, Elizabeth McGowan, Energy News Network, August 18, 2022

Activists who have fought the Mountain Valley Pipeline project for years say Democrats’ reported deal with the West Virginia senator won’t deter their opposition. They plan to keep pressure on financial backers.

{ 1 comment… read it below or add one }

Charles Pierce August 20, 2022 at 5:40 pm

Spare a Thought for the Folks Who Got the Short End of the Stick on the Climate Deal

August 15, 2022 |Charles P. Pierce |Esquire

Most of official Washington and its attendant media, is still congratulating itself on the Very Big Bill that got passed all the way through Congress a week or so back and that will be signed into law tomorrow [August 16] by the president. Crucial to the passage of what is described as the largest investment the American government has made in fighting the climate crisis was a sudden change of heart by Sen. Joe Manchin (D-Bituminous).

So with all this good feeling swirling about, surely nobody will mind if Maury Johnson, a 62-year-old farmer from Monroe County, West Virginia, explains why he hasn’t gone Politico all over this landmark legislation.

From the invaluable Mountain State Spotlight:
Up until recently, the cinder-block well provided all the water for his house. But now, the groundwater is filled with sediment and Johnson is planning to fill the well with water from a nearby stream that’s less likely to fill up with dirt. “So what I gotta do, I gotta flush. I gotta pump. I’ll probably pump water for two hours,” he said of his plans for the upcoming weekend.

Johnson, 62, has lived on this farm almost his entire life, and still has big hopes for his land: He wants to attract the rusty patched bumble bee this season, and is growing a bounty of pumpkins, corn, and squash. But not being able to use his main source of water, something feels off.

Johnson’s bete noire is the Mountain Valley Pipeline, which is a particular darling of his senior U.S. senator, Joe Manchin. Manchin loves this pipeline, and he doesn’t love the fact that Johnson and other property owners, whose land was hijacked through eminent domain, managed to stall its construction for several years.

Now, Johnson dedicates the vast majority of his time documenting the pipeline’s land and water violations across Greenbrier, Summers and Monroe counties. For years, he and other pipeline opponents have stalled the project, which is planned to stretch 303 miles across West Virginia and into Virginia. Though construction is nearly complete, not counting the land restoration the company has to do, the pipeline is four years overdue and the cost has ballooned from $3.5 billion to $6.6 billion. This is largely because repeatedly, rulings from the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals have found that key aspects of the pipeline—its impact on water, endangered species, and national forests—don’t comply with the law.

Here is where things get very, very Washington. Did I mention that Joe Manchin was a crucial vote on the celebrated mega-bill that everyone loves? And did I mention as well that Joe Manchin loves himself some Mountain Valley Pipeline?

Watch how the sausage gets made.

In exchange for supporting the Democrats’ most recent climate and economy bill, Manchin got Democratic leaders’ support for a host of permitting changes. Among them was a directive for Congress to “require the relevant agencies to take all necessary actions to permit the construction and operation of the Mountain Valley Pipeline”, and to move all new legislation regarding the pipeline to the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, the pipeline’s preferred venue.

In short, Manchin exercised his own form of eminent domain over the Congress on behalf of his pet pipeline. I probably don’t need to mention that Manchin’s political donor lists are thick with executives of the pipeline industry, as well as the people who profit from the gas, goo, and gunk the pipelines carry.

Meanwhile, back in West Virginia…
In Summers County, Mark Jarrell is sitting in his living room on his 90-acre property. His house is the only structure on the expanse of land. “The fact is, I own this freakin’ place. Don’t I have any say so?” he asks, his voice echoing off of the metal-lined cathedral ceilings above him […] Jarrell remembers the day he woke up in the spring of 2018 and heard construction trucks on his property. Notably, he had not yet reached a settlement with the company. He soon settled with the company out of fear that if he didn’t, the pipeline would happen anyway and he’d be left without compensation. Now, there are 17 piles of rotting logs on Jarrell’s property — former trees that Mountain Valley Pipeline cut down during construction. He can’t remove the logs, because he can’t drive a vehicle over the rectangular land masses the company built in numerous places on his field to prevent erosion. In addition to the pipeline itself, it’s another way that his land doesn’t really feel like his.

From Mississippi Today:
Confirming Denbury’s account of the event, PHMSA found that the pipeline broke from heavy pressure caused by movement in the soil after persisting heavy rain. But PHMSA also found that Denbury had, among other errors, failed to prepare for such natural hazards, failed to alert local emergency officials about the incident, and failed to educate nearby residents about the pipeline before the breach. In its report, the agency proposed a civil penalty of $3.9 million against Denbury, which the company can either accept or contest. As a result of the pipeline failure, PHMSA also announced it would begin a new rulemaking to update safety standards.

West Virginia’s had two very bad experiences with natural gas pipeline explosions in the past 10 years.

If the pipeline ever starts carrying gas, a scenario that’s played in the back of Jarrell’s mind will take on a new life. “I’m not gonna snap at this age,” he says as he motors his John Deere tractor up his property’s steep slope. “Unless …” He pauses. “Unless, for instance, say I ran down to the store when my granddaughter’s here and the explosion happens, she’s burned alive, and I’m not.”

Sometimes, it’s real people who get ground up in the sausage-making

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