Cross post from Indigenous Environmental Network
February 13, 2012
We have just 24 SHORT hours to stop the Keystone XL tar sands pipeline.
The Senate could vote as early as this Tuesday (tomorrow!)
on a deal that would greenlight construction of the pipeline. After
President Obama rejected Keystone XL last month, many Senators are
rushing to resurrect it in order to protect their friends, Big Oil. As
you read this, the oil industry is tightening the screws on the
remaining Senators they need to get this thing passed.
"Native Americans have spoken, the Mother Earth Accord
clearly outlines U.S. Native Nation's opposition to the proposed
Keystone XL pipeline. Elected Tribal leadership met with President Obama
in private at the White House Tribal Leadership Summit in December
2011. Tribal Chairmen from many nations told President Obama face to
face that this project is not in the national interest. The action of
the Senate to circumvent the White House on this decision is a mockery
of American democracy and slap in the face to the sovereignty and treaty
rights of U.S. Tribal governments who stand opposed." Tom B.K.
Goldtooth, Executive Director, Indigenous Environmental Network
To stop them, we need a remarkable response.
That’s why for the next 24 hours the movement is uniting in a serious way to blitz the Senate
with messages from across the country demanding that they reject
Keystone XL. Our goal is to collect and send 500,000 messages between
now and the vote on Keystone. Dozens of organizations are working
together, and we will be joined by bloggers, media figures, and our
celebrity allies to make our message unavoidable.
We don’t have a second to lose. Can you sign the petition to the Senate right away and then share it with your friends?
The petition says: “Senators: Block any efforts to revive the dangerous Keystone XL tar sands pipeline.”
There
is no way to the build Keystone XL that does not accelerate production
of the tar sands and contribute disastrous amounts of carbon to climate
change. The only people benefiting from this pipeline would be Big Oil -
every single claim about the positive economic impacts has been proven
false by independent review.
For
the next 24 hours, it’s all hands on deck. We’ve rigged together some
online tools to help you email your friends, share the petition on
Twitter and Facebook. But we also need you texting everyone you know,
calling up your mother and asking her to sign on, shouting out the news
from the rooftops.
24
hours from now, a team in Washington, DC will march into the Senate
with 50 giant boxes, each holding 10,000 signatures (or more!). It will
be a unified show of our power: our voices against the dollars of the
fossil fuel industry.
PLEASE SIGN NOW - THERE ISN'T A MOMENT TO WASTE!
Thanks for everything you’ve done already. Let’s make the next 24 hours a big, big deal.
Mother Earth Accord
|
Tribal
Government Chairs and Presidents, Traditional Treaty Councils, and US
property owners, with First Nation Chiefs of Canada, impacted by
TransCanada’s proposed Keystone XL tar sands pipeline and tar sands
development present at the Rosebud Sioux Tribe Emergency Summit,
September 15-16, 2011, on the protection of Mother Earth and Treaty
Territories:
Recognizing
that TransCanada’s proposed Keystone XL pipeline would stretch 1,980
miles, from Hardisty, Alberta, Canada to Nederland, Texas, carrying up
to 900,000 barrels per day of tar sands crude oil, which would drive
additional tar sands production;
Recognizing the existing resolutions and letters in opposition to the Keystone XL pipeline;
Guided by the principles of traditional indigenous knowledge, spiritual values, and respectful use of the land;
Affirming our
responsibility to protect and preserve for our descendants, the
inherent sovereign rights of our Indigenous Nations, the rights of
property owners, and all inherent human rights;
Affirming our Indigenous view that the Earth is our true mother, our grandmother who gives birth to us and maintains all life;
Recognizing that
the tar sands in northern Alberta, Canada is one of the largest
remaining deposits of unconventional oil in the world, containing
approximately 2 trillion barrels, and there are plans for a massive
expansion of development that would ultimately destroy an area larger
than the state of Florida;
Recognizing that
tar sand development has devastating impacts to Mother Earth and her
inhabitants and perpetuates the crippling addiction to oil of the United
States and Canada;
Recalling in
September 2010, the Assembly of First Nations of Canada called on the
United States government to take into account the environmental impacts
of tar sands production on First Nations in its energy policy, citing
the high rates of cancer in the downstream Fort Chipewyan community,
which prominent scientists say are potentially linked to petroleum
products;
Recognizing the
findings published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences that tar sands production releases 13 elements considered
priority pollutants under the U.S. Clean Water Act, including lead,
mercury, and arsenic into the Athabasca River in northern Alberta, which
flows 3,000 miles downstream to the Arctic Ocean;Recognizing that tar
sands production produces three times the greenhouse gas emissions of
conventional oil and NASA climate scientist James Hansen has said that
if the tar sands are fully developed, it will be “essentially game over”
for the climate;
Recognizing that
Canada’s greenhouse gas emissions from tar sands development have more
than doubled since 1990, which is the main reason Canada is failing to
meet its greenhouse gas emissions reduction targets under the Kyoto
Protocol;
Concerned that Indigenous people are most vulnerable to the social, cultural, spiritual, and environmental impacts of climate change;
Recognizing that
Exxon-Imperial and ConocoPhillips Heavy Haul shipments are attempting
to haul more than 200 oversized loads of heavy oil machinery from the
Port of Lewiston, Idaho along Highway 12 into Montana, then north to the
tar sands project in Alberta, Canada;
Concerned that
tar sands crude oil is more toxic, corrosive, and abrasive than
conventional crude oil and poses additional pipeline safety risks that
have not been fully assessed by the U.S. Department of State in its
final Environmental Impact Statement for the Keystone XL pipeline,
issued August 26, 2011;
Recalling that
TransCanada’s year-old Keystone pipeline, from Manitoba, Canada to
Patoka, Illinois and Cushing Oklahoma, has had 14 spills in the U.S.
portion since it started operation in June 2010, and was temporarily
shut down by regulators in late May, 2011;
Recognizing TransCanada’s
extremely poor safety record for the Keystone pipeline, it is probable
that the Keystone XL pipeline will have frequent spills because it will
have similar design specifications;
Concerned that
oil spills from the Keystone XL pipeline would destroy live-sustaining
water resources, including the Ogallala Aquifer, which provides drinking
water for millions of people and farmland irrigation throughout the
Midwestern United States;
Concerned that
construction of the Keystone XL pipeline will impact sacred sites and
ancestral burial grounds, and treaty rights throughout traditional
territories, without adequate consultation on these impacts;
Concerned that
the Keystone XL pipeline would increase air pollution in the
communities surrounding the refineries that the pipeline would service
where people of color, Indigenous peoples, and poor people are already
experiencing high rates of cancer and respiratory illness;
Recalling that
TransCanada’s permit application to the Canadian government for the
Keystone XL pipeline said it will increase oil prices in the United
States by $4 billion per year;
Acknowledging that
the Keystone XL pipeline is not designed to provide the United States
with energy security and that industry documents indicate Gulf Coast
refineries operate in a free trade zone and plan to refine tar sands oil
into petroleum products that are intended for export overseas;
Therefore, we are united on this Mother Earth Accord, which is effective immediately, that it be resolved as follows:
We support and encourage a moratorium on tar sands development;
We
insist on full consultation under the principles of “free, prior and
informed consent,” from the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of
Indigenous Peoples both in the United States and Canada;
We
urge regional authorities to halt the Exxon-Imperial and ConocoPhillips
Heavy Haul shipments of tar sands equipment through the United States
and Canada;
We
urge the United States and Canada to reduce their reliance on oil,
including tar sands, and invest in the research and development of
cleaner, safer forms of sustainable energy and transportation solutions,
including smart growth, fuel efficiency, next-generation biofuels and
electric vehicles powered by solar and wind energy.
We
strongly believe that the proposed Keystone XL tar sands pipeline is
not in the national interest of the United States or Canada; and
We urge President Obama and Secretary of State Clinton to reject the Presidential Permit for the Keystone XL pipeline.
PLEASE sign the petition to the Senate right away and then share it with your friends!
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