Last week Convergence activists in Chicago staged an action outside of BP’s offices to protest the release of 500 gallons of tar sands oil into Lake Michigan from a BP owned refinery. Check out the full video of the Press Conference and local news coverage from WFLD Fox News at 9 as well as the action’s press release written by local GCC activist Jackie Spreadbury:
CHICAGO – March 28 – Monday afternoon, an estimated 500 gallons of oil from the tar sands in Alberta, Canada, leaked into Lake Michigan, poisoning the source of drinking water for 7 million people in and around Chicago. The BP Refinery on the lake’s shore has admitted responsibility, but has yet to take sufficient action to ensure the safety of our drinking water and ecosystem.
This serves as further evidence that the reliance on fossil fuels in all its forms has serious and long term effects on the health of the planet and the people who inhabit. This is doubly true in the case of the processing or tar sands that goes on at BP’s Whiting facility. This most current spill comes after years of legal challenges to the Whiting plant that is one of the largest sources of industrial pollution in the nation.
Alternative energy sources are available and we call on our local and federal governments to immediately expedite this transition. Failure to do so will only lead to further spills and environmental devastation. We don’t want another Deepwater Horizon on the shores of Chicago and yet with this spill BP demonstrates again that they they put their profits above the the lives of the people who inhabit our city and our world.
An emergency action at BP’s Chicago offices has been called by the Global Climate Convergence (GCC) and local environmental groups to demand that BP be held accountable.
The GCC, in conjunction with multiple environmental organizations, issues the following demands:
1. The EPA immediately begins testing our water to ensure that it is safe to drink, and publishes their findings.
2. BP is returned to the federal no contract list – which they were removed from only THIS month following their contamination of the Gulf Coast – so that public money does not fund their damage to the ecosystem.
3. BP may no longer divert resources from the public – eg the use of contracted police officers to prevent citizens from entering the land that has been contaminated- to shield themselves from warranted investigation.
4. The city of Chicago becomes a green-energy leader by shifting our energy sources to 100% renewables-based.
We believe that this is only the first of many oil spills to come, following the recently initiated processing of tar sands oil, unless we take a stand against such careless corporations.
Join us to defend our planet, our communities, and our water.
Endorsers (in formation): Global Climate Convergence, CAPOW, Tarsands Free Midwest, NEIS, ISO, System Change Not Climate Change, Rising Tide Chicago, Michigan Coalition Against Tarsands, 8th Day Center for Justice, Young Communist League, CPUSA
Facebook Event: https://www.facebook.com/events/270141553149298
More Info: http://globalclimateconvergence.org/