• Home
  • Member Groups
  • Contact Us
  • Updates

The Alliance for Appalachia

« Appalachian Restoration Act (S.696) Updates
Protest in Pettus, WV Highlights Dangers of Mountaintop Removal and Sludge Dams »

Hunger Strike for Strong Climate Legislation Enters 5th Week

May 20th, 2009 by admin

From http://www.fastingforourfuture.org/

Seven people—Kathleen Breault, SKCM Curry, Ted Glick, Jere Locke, Cathy Luna-Desaulnier, Vincent Pawloski and Diane Wilson—entered the fifth week of a Fast For Our Future today. On the 29th day of this hunger strike calling for strong climate legislation, the fasters were critical of the draft legislation released last Friday by Congressman Henry Waxman and scheduled for “mark up” beginning today.

“This legislation is very problematic,” said fast coordinator Ted Glick. “It’s not even close to being a solution to our urgent climate crisis. 60% or more of the potential revenues that would come from putting a cap on carbon emissions are given free to coal, natural gas, oil and energy-intensive industries. The whole idea of a cap is to increase the price of carbon-based fuels to drive the transition to clean, renewable energy, and this legislation doesn’t do that.

“Further, the requirement for utilities to get their electricity from renewable sources is so weak it might be worse than having no federal renewables requirement at all, given the number of states that have enacted stronger renewable mandates. This is in no way the kind of legislation we need.”

Jere Locke, Director of the Texas Climate Emergency Campaign, criticized the weak target for reductions of greenhouse gas emissions. “The world’s climate negotiators are calling for the world’s industrialized countries to reduce their emissions by at least 25-40% by 2020, with 1990 as the baseline year. This bill would require no more than a few percentage points. As someone with close ties to Africa and Asia and who has worked internatonally for many years, I fear for those people in the countries of the Global South who have had little to do with the carbon pollution in the air who will be seriously hurt if we don’t act soon and strongly to address the climate crisis.”

Organizers of the Fast For Our Future intend to issue a call later this week for a worldwide “rolling fast” that would continue for the next seven months leading up to the United Nations Climate Conference in Copenhagen, Denmark in mid-December.

Posted in Uncategorized

Comments are closed.

  • Pages

    • Contact Us
    • Member Groups
      • Appalachian Voices
      • Appalshop
      • Coal River Mountain Watch
      • Heartwood
      • Kentuckians for the Commonwealth
      • MACED
      • Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition
      • Sierra Club Environmental Justice
      • Southern Appalachian Mountain Stewards
      • SouthWings
      • Statewide Organizing For Community eMpowerment
      • The Appalachian Citizens Law Center
      • West Virginia Highlands Conservancy
    • Updates
  • Pin this badge on your site.

The Alliance for Appalachia © 2010 All Rights Reserved.

Free WordPress Themes | Fresh WordPress Themes