Anti-Coal Protesters Blockade Washington Power Station (U$A)

2nd March 2009
Thou­sands of demon­stra­tors braved icy winds and snow to march on the US capi­tol’s coal-fired pow­er plant on Mon­day to demand a more sane approach to ener­gy pol­i­cy. Orga­nized by Capi­tol Cli­mate Action thou­sand block­ade the five main gates to the Capi­tol Pow­er Plant in south-east Wash­ing­ton, not far from Capi­tol Hill.

Capitol coal power station blocked2nd March 2009
Thou­sands of demon­stra­tors braved icy winds and snow to march on the US capi­tol’s coal-fired pow­er plant on Mon­day to demand a more sane approach to ener­gy pol­i­cy. Orga­nized by Capi­tol Cli­mate Action thou­sand block­ade the five main gates to the Capi­tol Pow­er Plant in south-east Wash­ing­ton, not far from Capi­tol Hill.

The block­ade last­ed near­ly four hours, form­ing what orga­niz­ers called the largest dis­play of civ­il dis­obe­di­ence on the cli­mate cri­sis in U.S. his­to­ry. Police were out in force, but no one was arrest­ed.

The 99-year-old coal fired pow­er sta­tion is respon­si­ble for an esti­mat­ed one-third of the leg­isla­tive branch’s green­house gas emis­sions. It is no longer even used to gen­er­ate elec­tric­i­ty but instead acts as a glo­ri­fied boil­er pro­vid­ing steam for heat­ing and chilled water for cool­ing build­ings for the leg­isla­tive build­ings of the Capi­tol Com­plex.

Envi­ron­men­tal and cli­mate celebri­ties led the protest action, includ­ing NASA cli­ma­tol­o­gist Dr. James Hansen, who released a video on You Tube in Feb­ru­ary urg­ing peo­ple to join him March 2 at the demon­stra­tion to send a mes­sage to Con­gress and the Pres­i­dent that, “We want them to take the actions that are need­ed to pre­serve cli­mate for young peo­ple and future gen­er­a­tions and all life on the plan­et.”

“What has become clear from the sci­ence is that we can­not burn all of the fos­sil fuels with­out cre­at­ing a very dif­fer­ent plan­et,” Hansen said. “The only prac­ti­cal way to solve the prob­lem is to phase out the biggest source of car­bon and that is coal.”

Con­gres­sion­al Democ­rats have already moved to con­vert the Capi­tol Pow­er Plant to clean­er-burn­ing nat­ur­al gas. On Thurs­day, House Speak­er Nan­cy Pelosi and Sen­ate Leader Har­ry Reid released a let­ter ask­ing the Capi­tol Archi­tect to switch the Capi­tol Pow­er Plant from coal to 100 per­cent nat­ur­al gas by the end of 2009.

“The switch to nat­ur­al gas will allow the CPP to dra­mat­i­cal­ly reduce car­bon and cri­te­ria pol­lu­tant emis­sions, elim­i­nat­ing more than 95 per­cent of sul­phur oxides and at least 50 per­cent of car­bon monox­ide,” wrote Pelosi and Reid in their let­ter to Act­ing Archi­tect of the Capi­tol Stephen Ayers.

“We strong­ly encour­age you to move for­ward aggres­sive­ly with us on a com­pre­hen­sive set of poli­cies for the entire Capi­tol com­plex and the entire Leg­isla­tive Branch to quick­ly reduce emis­sions and petro­le­um con­sump­tion through ener­gy effi­cien­cy, renew­able ener­gy, and clean alter­na­tive fuels,” they wrote.

“While the costs asso­ci­at­ed with pur­chas­ing addi­tion­al nat­ur­al gas will cer­tain­ly be high­er, the invest­ment will far out­weigh its cost,” wrote Pelosi and Reid. “The con­ver­sion will also reduce the cost of stor­ing and trans­port­ing coal as well as the costs asso­ci­at­ed with clean­ing up the fly ash and waste.”

“Elim­i­nat­ing coal from the fuel mix­ture should also assist the City of Wash­ing­ton, D.C., in meet­ing and com­ply­ing with nation­al air qual­i­ty stan­dards, and demon­strate that Con­gress can be a good and con­sci­en­tious neigh­bour by mit­i­gat­ing health con­cerns for res­i­dents and work­ers around Capi­tol Hill,” the lead­ers wrote.

“We’ve been fight­ing to clean up the Capi­tol for years — it’s an impor­tant sym­bol for the whole nation,” said Friends of the Earth Pres­i­dent Brent Black­welder on Thurs­day.

Last week, Black­welder and rep­re­sen­ta­tives of Earth­jus­tice and the Sier­ra Club sent let­ters to Reid and Pelosi ask­ing that they stop using coal at the Capi­tol pow­er plant.

“Dirty coal plants all over the coun­try con­tin­ue to release heat-trap­ping gas­es and pol­lute the air we breathe, so there remains much work to be done, but today’s announce­ment is a sig­nal of a major change in direc­tion,” Black­welder said.

“Peo­ple in D.C. have been fight­ing against the plant for years, it is very dirty and locat­ed in a poor neigh­bour­hood. They haven’t had much suc­cess until now,” said Adri­an Wil­son, a San Fran­cis­co-based envi­ron­men­tal orga­niz­er with the Capi­tol Cli­mate Action coali­tion. “The fact that three days before the action, Nan­cy Pelosi and Har­ry Reid wrote let­ter for plant to be switched from coal to nat­ur­al gas shows the pow­er of direct action to make change quick­ly.”

Bruce Nilles, direc­tor of the Sier­ra Club’s Beyond Coal Cam­paign, said, “Stop­ping the use of coal at the Capi­tol Pow­er Plant will help local res­i­dents breathe eas­i­er, but the pos­i­tive impacts will stretch far beyond the Dis­trict. Bold mea­sures are need­ed right now to reduce glob­al warm­ing emis­sions and we look for­ward to con­tin­u­ing to work with Con­gress and the new admin­is­tra­tion to send a clear sig­nal to cities and states across the coun­try that after eight long years, Amer­i­ca is seri­ous about clean ener­gy and green jobs.”

The Capi­tol Pow­er Plant demon­stra­tion was part of a larg­er move­ment in the nation’s cap­i­tal on the week­end that last­ed through this evening — Pow­er Shift 2009. Some 12,000 col­lege and high school stu­dents trav­elled to DC for the sec­ond Pow­er Shift con­fer­ence, a meet­ing of stu­dents con­fronting cli­mate change, and busi­ness-as-usu­al atti­tudes in Wash­ing­ton.

Ener­gy Action, a coali­tion of 50 envi­ron­men­tal groups, orga­nized the Pow­er Shift week­end con­fer­ence and lob­by day. For three days, stu­dents attend­ed sem­i­nars on the his­to­ries of coal pow­er, direct action and ura­ni­um min­ing, media and lead­er­ship train­ing ses­sions, grass­roots orga­niz­ing and anti-oppres­sion work­shops.

For video, links to lots of pho­tos and more, http://www.capitolclimateaction.org/