Above: Beyond Extreme Energy protest sign in the street in front of FERC during a week long blockade that began on November 1, 2014. The sign shows families impacted by fracking. Photo by Erik McGregor
We are Beyond Extreme Energy, a growing coalition of communities and individuals on the front lines—and taking casualties—in the extreme energy economy. We are the ones demanding to be heard, closing down First Street and getting in the way of FERC’s rubber-stamping of fracked-gas projects all over the country.
We have been noticed, but rattling and annoying the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission is not our objective. Rather, the permits must stop. The climate-disrupting, community-trampling, enrich-the-few-at-the-expense-of-the-rest system must change.
And so we have sounded a new Call to Action. From May 21-29, 2015, BXE is heading back to the FERC building on First Street in Washington. We must intensify our campaign, now, while the oil and gas industry is reeling from the massive drop in fuel prices worldwide. Business as usual is unacceptable. We must step up to block the tsunami of new fracked-gas infrastructure that is overwhelming communities across the nation.
BACKGROUND
“These groups are active in every FERC docket… as well as in my email inbox seven days a week, in my Twitter feed, at our open meetings demanding to be heard, and literally at our door closing down First Street so FERC won’t be able to work. We’ve got a situation here.”—Federal Energy Regulatory Commission Chairman Cheryl LaFleur speaking to the National Press Club on 1/27/15
When the chairman of the FERC admits she has “a situation,” then you know that we are making headway. Chairman Cheryl LaFleur says project opponents can be categorized in “buckets.” We are not just concerned about safeguarding the environment (LaFleur’s bucket #1). We aren’t merely trying to stop something in our backyard (LaFleur’s bucket #2). We are, for LaFleur, bucket #3. In her accurate description of us, we are looking at “the bigger picture”. We don’t want more pipelines, compressor stations, export facilities, or fracking. Anywhere. Everywhere is our backyard. Poisoned land, air, and water for one community is poisoned land, air and water for all. An economy fired on the dregs of gas trapped in shale rock means that the health of nearby people and places will be sacrificed immediately. It also means the end of a stable climate for human civilization and the extinction of thousands of other species.
Last November, Beyond Extreme Energy took action at FERC’s front door (and side doors and garage driveway). We wanted FERC to know that every permit, every well, every pipeline, every compressor station and every export terminal hurts families and communities. Every day for a week, we marched, sang, lay in the street, shouted, acted in silence, shared stories, made a mess of traffic, and got arrested. While FERC employees were on the sidewalk, blocked from their offices, our friends from fracked Pennsylvania told them their stories of harm and misery.
Since then, we have staged actions, been arrested, and canvassed in Lusby, MD, where Dominion is building a $4 billion liquefaction and export facility for fracked gas on the shore of the Chesapeake Bay. Dressed as Darth Vader and Stormtroopers, we went to the Waldorf Astoria in New York City to disrupt a meeting of financial analysts and potential Dominion investors. We supported fracktivists in Pennsylvania who were arrested chanting “Ban Fracking Now” at the inauguration of Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf. We demonstrated at the inauguration of the new Maryland governor, who wants to open his state to fracking. We have supported We Are Seneca Lake’s ongoing, inspiring and nonviolent direct-action campaign to stop a fracked-gas storage project in old salt caverns in the New York Finger Lakes region. We have attended every monthly FERC commissioners meeting. Chairman LaFleur, in an unprecedented move, adjourned the January meeting and cleared the room when we began speaking, one by one, about the human and environmental damage FERC’s decisions are having.
STILL MORE TO DO
Next up is an even bigger action in May. The first day of action, May 21, is the monthly FERC meeting, and we will continue every day FERC is open until May 29. We will include a weekend of training May 24 – 25 for four days of action May 26-29.
We need YOU. And your friends, too. FERC says its mission is to provide safe, efficient, sustainable energy for the country. It is failing on all counts. We want FERC to fulfill its mission and to make decisions based on what’s best for all of us instead of the fracked-gas industry. If you agree that now is time to step up, please sign up here.
This time, we are coming to DC with a nine-point plan to change FERC from a rubber stamp for the fossil fuel industry into a leader in the urgent, civilizational task of reducing greenhouse gas emissions and shifting to energy efficiency and renewable energy as rapidly as possible.
Most immediately, we demand:
- A moratorium on permits for new gas pipelines, compressor stations and export terminals.
- A halt to gas infrastructure and export terminals under construction but not yet operating until the new FERC has emerged, new priorities are in place, and a new reassessment has been made about whether the project should go forward.
- Transformation of the FERC approval process and mission. FERC must be guided by the health of communities and the ecosystem rather than the profits of energy companies.
- A time for public comments at the opening of each FERC meeting. In addition, FERC must make its website easier to navigate.
- A thorough review of the climate effects of proposed projects and the clean energy alternatives. FERC’s priority must be the advancement of wind, solar and energy efficiency.
Join us in Washington May 21 – 29. Help us not only to bring these demands to the FERC, but also the grassroots political pressure to make them happen. Sign up here.