By Gary Berg-Cross
The Do the Math Tour and Rally organized by 350.org blew
into DC for a post-election protest on
Sunday Nov. 18, 2012. The Washington Post didn’t seem to cover it on a normal
weather day. The rally chanting "Forward to Clean Energy" included 3
thousand or so people and a symbolically inflated, plastic pipeline (for the Keystone pipeline that if approved would carry tar sans oil to a port). The pipeline, lofted by protestors, was
carried from Freedom plaza, across the ellipse and in front of the White House where the chants included "Hey Obama, we don't want no climate drama," and "Michelle Obama, tell your man, stop that dirty pipeline plan!." There people called on President Obama to reject the Keystone XL pipeline once and for all because it would open a vast new reservoir of carbon-based energy at a
time when we need to be moving in the opposite direction - closing strip mines, offshore oil wells, and
coal-fired power plants. This and other points were made by post-march speakers including Bill McKibben, Sierra Club President Allison Chin,
Indigenous Environmental Network organizer Marty Cobenais, Gulf Coast
activist Cherri Foytlin, and others.
The 21-city tour is yet another
creative move from the mind and heart of environmental writer and activist Bill
McKibben and worthy of note, so here are a few of the points it makes.
McKibben and his 350.org
organization hopes the rallies and marches will ignite groundswell of nationwide protest movement
which in turn can be focused to pressure more traditional institutions to
divest funds in the fossil-fuel industry and in the immediate stop the XL
pipeline.
The challenge is great as past
efforts since environmentalists and regular folk are:
“ up against the most profitable,
powerful, and dangerous industry in history. But we have our own currency:
creativity, courage and, if needed, our bodies." (McKibben quoted from his
rally speeches)
Bill Clinton was able to make quite a point about arithmetic
and things not adding up at the Democratice convention and environment Bill McKibben used arithmetic to equal effect in Rolling
Stone to discuss the Global
Warming's Terrifying New Math:
June broke or tied 3,215
high-temperature records across the United States. That followed the warmest
May on record for the Northern Hemisphere – the 327th consecutive month in
which the temperature of the entire globe exceeded the 20th-century average,
the odds of which occurring by simple chance were 3.7 x 10-99, a number
considerably larger than the number of stars in the universe.
Now he adds year end stat that to this point 2012 has been
the warmest year on record and points to a series of disasters (fires, floods,
Sandy etc.) including “we melted the arctic this summer!” Former UN Secretary General Kofi Annan has his own list:
“Global warming is
causing more than 300,000 deaths and about $125 billion in economic losses each
year.” http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/29/science/earth/29climate.html
What to do and where to start? The big new statistics concerns CO2, fossil fuel use and what it will
do to the climate:
Rally at Freedom Plaza |
Rally Stage |
There's more fossil fuels (nearly 2,230 gigatons more) that
corporations want consumers to buy and burn than climate scientists says is
safe to do if people want to live on a planet the climate-wise resembles the
one we live on now. Even the most
conservative governments in the world, he argues, have agreed that global
warming should be limited to no more than 2°C. And climate scientists say to
meet that target we can only emit an additional 565 gigatonnes of carbon
dioxide (CO2) into the atmosphere. But how
much fossil fuel is in the ground? The fossil fuel industry itself says there
is about enough reserves of fuel to produce 2795 gigatonnes of CO2. It’s simple math. There is about nearly five times what will produce a dire
atmosphere. Do we have the wisdom and
confidence to leave some 4/5ths of the reserves where it is? The fuel industry & funded friends have a business model that
externalizes damages. They want to burn
it all as spend their profits looking for more. As Bill says, our grandchildren
looking back 50 or more from now won’t
be asking what we thought of the fiscal slope or sex scandals. They will be asking about our moral wisdom. They will want to know what were thinking,
doing and planning when the climate was changing around us.
Oh, and with this in mind there will be another rally in February on President's day weekend. This will be organized by front-line groups like the Sierra Club, the oldest, largest and most influential grassroots environmental organization with 755,000 members, who will be driving the nation-wide efforts as a way of keeping pressure on Big Oil.
350.org is building a global movement to solve the climate crisis. You can connect with them on Facebook and Twitter, and sign up for email alerts.
Oh, and with this in mind there will be another rally in February on President's day weekend. This will be organized by front-line groups like the Sierra Club, the oldest, largest and most influential grassroots environmental organization with 755,000 members, who will be driving the nation-wide efforts as a way of keeping pressure on Big Oil.
350.org is building a global movement to solve the climate crisis. You can connect with them on Facebook and Twitter, and sign up for email alerts.
Images
Bill McKibben speaking at NTC
rally: http://www.flickr.com/photos/350org/8195858617/
DC rally: picture taken by Gary Berg-Cross