Planned Pipeline near D.C. Putting Potomac River at Risk

by Duane Nichols on November 20, 2017

Protesters gather Saturday to pressure Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan to block TransCanada’s proposed Potomac pipeline

Protesters Target Proposed Potomac River Pipeline

From an Article by Emily Wells, Truthdig, November 8, 2017

More than 100 people gathered Saturday on the banks of the Potomac River to protest a proposed 3.5-mile underground natural gas pipeline that would cross far below the river in the DMV area—a local abbreviation that stands for Washington, D.C., Maryland and Virginia. The pipeline project, which has gone largely uncovered by mainstream media, would be built by TransCanada, a company behind the controversial Keystone XL pipeline.

“This fracked gas pipeline would go through very porous bedrock under the Potomac River. When—not if—the pipeline leaks, it would be dangerously easy for any pollutants to get into our drinking water, putting 6 million people’s health at risk. DMV residents came together today to stand up for our water and against reckless, unnecessary fossil fuel projects,” said Ntebo Mokuena, a member of 350 DC, one of the groups that sponsored Saturday’s protest, in a press release.

Sebastian Medina-Tayac, an event organizer and a​ member of the Piscataway Indian Nation and a group called Rising Hearts, added, “As the original people of this region, we depend on the river for our spiritual and material sustenance. Any threat to the river is a threat to our way of life and the future of our nation. Our elders tell us we come from the river and that it flows through our veins, the same way it flows through this great land now known as Maryland and Washington DC.”

The press release continues:

​​DMV-area groups and concerned residents have been building pressure on [Maryland Gov. Larry] Hogan to follow the lead of New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, who has rejected Clean Water Act water quality certificates for several proposed pipelines, blocking their construction. A similar water quality certificate rejection from Hogan would stop the Eastern Panhandle Extension from being built.

“This pipeline and fracked gas pipelines in general are becoming the new threat to this country. … It’s not going to benefit Marylanders whatsoever,” Denise Robbins, spokeswoman for the Chesapeake Climate Action Network, told the Sun.

H. Wood Thrasher, West Virginia’s secretary of commerce, says the pipeline is vital to the economy of eastern West Virginia, which has no underground natural gas reserves.

But Brent Walls, an advocate for the protection of the river, says that any potential leak could prove a serious health hazard for residents of the area. “There have been plenty of [incidents] across the nation where there have been gas lines that have leaked into their well water, into their drinking water,” he said. “That’s what we are mostly concerned with.”

{ 1 comment… read it below or add one }

Jon Queally November 22, 2017 at 11:32 pm

To Stop Keystone XL, 8,000 People in Just 24 Hours Make ‘Promise to Protect’

>>> By Jon Queally, Common Dreams, November 22, 2017

“TransCanada has many hurdles still ahead on Keystone XL, and if they ever run out, thousands of people have promised to be the biggest one.”

It’s been less than 48 hours since a panel in Nebraska gave final approval for the Keystone XL pipeline to built in the state, but already more than 8,000 people have vowed to put their bodies on the lines—and in front of the construction path, if needed—to make sure the construction never happens.

“It gives me a great sense of hope and community to see nearly 8,000 people who have signed on to the ‘Promise to Protect’ our water, our homelands, our people, and to stand in solidarity with us on the ground. Especially our Indigenous communities, our tribes, and our farmer and rancher friends. This is hope, this is power—people power.” —Joye Braun, leader of the Wakpa Waste Camp at the Cheyenne River Sioux Reservation

The vow to stand against the pipeline—dubbed the “Promise to Protect”—was launched Monday during a gathering of Indigenous leaders and their allies in South Dakota who renewed their vows to defend sacred lands, waters, and sites against new pipelines and any expansion of the Canadian tar sands. The petition was then endorsed by other Native tribes, green groups, and high-profile climate activists.

Joye Braun, leader of the Wakpa Waste Camp at the Cheyenne River Sioux Reservation in South Dakota, said, “It gives me a great sense of hope and community to see nearly 8,000 people who have signed on to the ‘Promise to Protect’ our water, our homelands, our people, and to stand in solidarity with us on the ground. Especially our Indigenous communities, our tribes, and our farmer and rancher friends. This is hope, this is power—people power.”

Faith Spotted Eagle, member of the Yankton Sioux Nation, said the surge of people commiting to stand against Keystone XL shows the Monday’s decision was not a win for pipeline owner TransCanada. “Continued attempted assaults on Mother Earth are never winning actions,” she said. “The No KXL Dakota/Lakota gathering at Kul Wicasa on the same day of November 20 is an exciting renewed strong circle of allies who walk forward stronger than ever. We will prevail in our spiritual movement.”

People can sign the petition as individuals, but entire organizations can also make the commitment.

“TransCanada has many hurdles still ahead on Keystone XL, and if they ever run out, thousands of people have promised to be the biggest one,” added May Boeve, exectuive director of 350.org, also backing the petition. “This pipeline’s route through the upper Midwest has been hampered at every turn for nearly a decade, and we’re doing all we can to keep it that way.”

As the petition states:

We — Indigenous leaders, farmers and ranchers, students, scientists, faith leaders, and more — will make a series of peaceful stands along the proposed pipeline route; resolute displays of our continuing opposition to a plan that endangers the waters of the Midwest and the climate of our one earth. Water is life; climate is life–those will be our rallying cries against a project that will endanger both.

We know asking you to travel is asking a lot. The pipeline route is far away from where most people live. But the Indigenous people, farmers and ranchers of the region have fought this good fight for years now and we owe it to them to be there at the critical moment, when they ask us to be.

“We honestly don’t know if we can hold the line against Keystone XL forever—but we know that we have a chance,” the statement adds. “If we make a stand now it will improve our odds in a thousand other similar fights happening now and in the years ahead.”

Source: https://www.commondreams.org/news/2017/11/22/stop-keystone-xl-8000-people-just-24-hours-make-promise-protect/

Reply

Leave a Comment

Previous post:

Next post: