Oil Train Blockades in the Pacific Northwest and the Transformative Power of Direct Action

Decem­ber 1st, 2014

Decem­ber 1st, 2014

A pro­test­er sits atop the apex of a tri­pod block­ing the tracks at the Glob­al Part­ners oil ter­mi­nal in Ore­gon.

Direct action can deeply trans­form par­tic­i­pants in ways crit­i­cal to mobi­liza­tion and inno­va­tion in the cli­mate move­ment

“One, two, three, lift!”

With that com­mand, a group of about eight peo­ple from Port­land Ris­ing Tide and South Sound Ris­ing Tide shoul­dered three heavy, 30-foot steel poles. Bal­anc­ing the poles, they slow­ly walked down the rail­road tracks lead­ing to the Glob­al Part­ners oil ter­mi­nal about a mile away on the Colum­bia Riv­er, and 60 miles north­east of Port­land, OR. With­in min­utes the poles were con­vert­ed into a tri­pod and Sun­ny Glover was climb­ing up and assem­bling a plat­form some 25 feet from the ground. Indi­vid­u­als were dis­patched to inform the port author­i­ties, and those on the ground await­ed word from the teams up and down the tracks in the event of an approach­ing train. No trains car­ry­ing Bakken oil would come through that day. The block­ade last­ed some nine hours into the night until the police dan­ger­ous­ly cut the tri­pod legs one by one, a cou­ple feet at a time, while Glover’s neck was still locked to one of the poles.

While the dura­tion of the block­ade was itself impres­sive, this action also con­tained some­thing lit­tle acknowl­edged, but equal­ly pow­er­ful: the abil­i­ty of this kind of direct action to trans­form the par­tic­i­pants them­selves.

The mas­sive nature of the cli­mate cri­sis and the unwill­ing­ness of exist­ing polit­i­cal lead­ers and insti­tu­tions to act has cre­at­ed a cyn­i­cism and paral­y­sis that often qui­ets us in the very moment when it is most crit­i­cal that we act. It is not suf­fi­cient for direct action to tar­get only those indi­vid­u­als and com­pa­nies respon­si­ble for the cri­sis. These actions must also offer the pos­si­bil­i­ty of a trans­for­ma­tion that changes our sense of pow­er, inspires oth­ers, and over­comes the cyn­i­cism at the heart of dis­en­gage­ment. We must also be the tar­gets of our own actions.

The Glob­al Part­ners block­ade was part of a series of actions over the sum­mer of 2014. It fol­lowed on the heels of a sim­i­lar tri­pod block­ade at the Everett rail yard sev­er­al weeks ear­li­er. In that instance, Seat­tle Ris­ing Tide blocked an oil train in the rail yard for over eight hours. One per­son sat atop the apex of the tri­pod while four oth­ers were locked to the tripod’s legs. Ear­li­er this year, Ris­ing Tide, a net­work ori­ent­ing to con­fronting the root caus­es of the cli­mate cri­sis and pro­mot­ing com­mu­ni­ty-based solu­tions, also orga­nized block­ades at the Ana­cortes refin­ery in Wash­ing­ton, which receives oil trains, and at the Arc Logis­tics oil ter­mi­nal in Port­land, OR. In both actions  indi­vid­u­als were arrest­ed after block­ing the train tracks with con­crete-filled bar­rels that they had locked them­selves to. In anoth­er event at Arc Logis­tics, five pro­test­ers block­ad­ed the entrances to the ter­mi­nal while a hun­dred sup­port­ers ral­lied near­by. In that case, the ter­mi­nal oper­a­tors pre­emp­tive­ly shut the facil­i­ty down after learn­ing of the impend­ing block­ade. When all was said and done, a total of ten peo­ple were arrest­ed in these five actions tar­get­ing the Everett rail yard, the Ana­cortes Refin­ery, Glob­al Part­ners and the Arc Logis­tics oil ter­mi­nal, which rep­re­sent just a few of the 12 pro­posed or exist­ing oil-by-rail facil­i­ties in the Pacif­ic North­west.

The surge in action dur­ing the sum­mer of 2014 came in response to indus­try pro­pos­als  that would move some 850,000 bar­rels per day via oil-by-rail to ter­mi­nals and refiner­ies in the North­west. These projects have been devel­oped in response to the fos­sil fuel boom occur­ring in North Amer­i­ca, includ­ing in the Bakken shale field, and the broad­er increase in coal, oil, and gas export facil­i­ties. The enor­mous spike in oil rail traf­fic, increas­ing from 5,000 rail cars in 2006 to 400,000 rail cars by 2013, has lead to seri­ous cat­a­stro­phes through­out North Amer­i­ca, includ­ing most sig­nif­i­cant­ly the explo­sions that killed 47 peo­ple in Lac-Mégan­tic, Que­bec in July 2013. (Read the Journal’s Sum­mer cov­er sto­ry “High­ly Flam­ma­ble,” for details.) Despite these dis­as­ters, politi­cians and exist­ing reg­u­la­to­ry agen­cies have offered only rhetor­i­cal con­cern while still enabling dan­ger­ous rail projects. As a result, cit­i­zens through­out the North­west have begun to mobi­lize.

Despite the recent announce­ment of a US-Chi­na bilat­er­al cli­mate agree­ment, those of us con­cerned with the cli­mate cri­sis have to con­front a harsh real­i­ty: In the very moment where a rapid, just tran­si­tion away from fos­sil fuels is need­ed, the oppo­site is occur­ring. A project of mas­sive fos­sil fuel expan­sion, enabled by the same admin­is­tra­tion respon­si­ble for the recent cli­mate agree­ment, threat­ens the slight and insuf­fi­cient car­bon diox­idee­mis­sions reduc­tions made by the Unit­ed States. This real­i­ty is read­i­ly trans­par­ent to the pub­lic, who cor­rect­ly under­stand that exist­ing insti­tu­tions are not mov­ing fast enough to address the cli­mate cri­sis. It is often this dis­so­nance, and the lack of forms of action that address it, that pre­vents action and caus­es many to divert their gaze from the impend­ing dis­as­ter of cli­mate change.

Protesters at the Global Partners oil terminal in Oregon. (Photo Credit: Trip Jennings)

Pro­test­ers at the Glob­al Part­ners oil ter­mi­nal in Ore­gon.

That’s why actions that offer the pos­si­bil­i­ty of a trans­for­ma­tion are essen­tial in cli­mate orga­niz­ing. Direct action presents new under­stand­ings of who we are, what kinds of pow­er we have, and broad­ens our view of the avenues pos­si­ble for social change. In this sense we should con­sid­er our­selves the tar­gets of our own actions, along­side any oth­er tar­gets we might be aim­ing for.

On the tracks at the Glob­al Part­ners oil ter­mi­nal in Ore­gon, as in oth­er places, this per­son­al trans­for­ma­tion was most def­i­nite­ly appar­ent. Not only did the block­ade restrict access to the oil ter­mi­nal and gar­ner high pro­file media atten­tion, it also cre­at­ed a new sense of being in par­tic­i­pants, revers­ing the pow­er­less­ness we often feel when try­ing to access ver­ti­cal pow­er struc­tures dom­i­nat­ed by indus­try lob­by­ists and cam­paign con­tri­bu­tions. For Glover, this kind of action “felt stronger… it upend­ed that pyra­mid a lit­tle bit because we were doing some­thing was impos­si­ble to ignore or dis­miss entire­ly.” What is more, it “felt like it encour­aged a deep­er sense of con­nec­tion… and brought peo­ple togeth­er more strong­ly.”

Key par­tic­i­pants in these block­ades, many new to this kind of direct action, described the empow­er­ing, joy­ful, lib­er­at­ing expe­ri­ence of the action on them­selves. In tak­ing action in the Everett train yard, Abby Brock­way described how the expe­ri­ence was the “first time that I’ve ever real­ly felt like I was act­ing on mak­ing a dif­fer­ence rather than expe­ri­enc­ing the frus­tra­tion of attend­ing hear­ings, or writ­ing let­ters, or meet­ing politi­cians, or vot­ing.” Par­tic­i­pa­tion in the block­ades changed who these pro­test­ers were and how they act­ed, not only dur­ing the block­ade, but also, crit­i­cal­ly, after the action was over.

Over the last decade there has been an explo­sion of cli­mate relat­ed direct action, and the cli­mate cri­sis has become bet­ter accept­ed among the gen­er­al pub­lic. “This blocka­dia movement…it’s not just this under­ground cul­ture, it’s now peo­ple that are more main­stream,” Brock­way says.

As more and more peo­ple expe­ri­ence these actions as either pas­sive observers or active par­tic­i­pants, some­thing is start­ing to hap­pen. A line is crossed in these actions from protest­ing only with­in the lim­its of what is legal, to doing what is right. From doing what we are allowed to do, to what we have a respon­si­bil­i­ty to do. From appeal­ing to oth­ers to make changes for us, to dis­cov­er­ing our own agency to cre­ate those changes. Such shifts con­sti­tute new ways of being, and par­tic­i­pants are dis­cov­er­ing entire­ly new hori­zons of what is pos­si­ble and ways in which we can rearrange our rela­tions to one anoth­er.

Direct actions that facil­i­tate these per­son­al expe­ri­ences have the poten­tial to cre­ate a cli­mate move­ment that can strike at the root caus­es of the cli­mate cri­sis while also open­ing doors to excit­ing per­son­al trans­for­ma­tion. As Glover reflect­ed, “There had been this bar­ri­er cre­at­ed about how you’re expect­ed to behave and the rules you’re expect­ed to fol­low – while it was a lit­tle scary to trans­gress, hav­ing done so once opened up a whole new area of my life. It feels real­ly free­ing and excit­ing.”