Sending a Message to Obama: Pipeline for Tar Sands Oil Is Not in America's Interest

Carrying this dirty fuel across six states and the Ogallala Aquifer, the source for water for the American Heartland, is inviting disaster.
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It is the fifth day of the sit-ins at the White House urging President Obama to deny a permit for the Keystone XL Pipeline. Today several environmental leaders and I sent a letter to the president saying that even if our groups do not engage in civil disobedience, we wholeheartedly share the protestors' position that the proposed tar sands oil Keystone XL Pipeline will take America in the wrong direction.

As an organization dedicated to drafting and enforcing the law, NRDC does not take part in civil disobedience. But I have followed the pipeline sit-ins with great interest.

NRDC has opposed this pipeline and tar sands development from the beginning, and I am pleased that concern about this unsafe energy source has caught fire across America and ignited this civil protest in Washington.

Environmental activist Bill McKibben organized the two-week long event, and he's been joined by farmers, ranchers, businesspeople, and landowners who live along the proposed pipeline route. They have traveled from Nebraska, Oklahoma, Kansas, and Montana because they feel so strongly that the pipeline will endanger their communities. Religious leaders and other concerned citizens from around the country have also come to tell President Obama that the pipeline is bad for America.

From all accounts, the protestors have conducted themselves with calm dignity. As many as 220 have been arrested so far, including Gus Speth, a co-founder of NRDC, the former director of President Carter's Council on Environmental Quality, and the former dean of the School of Forestry and Environmental Studies at Yale University.

Before his arrest, Speth told a reporter from Dow Jones that the pipeline would prolong America's continued reliance on fossil fuels. "If we hook up the Alberta tar sands to America's insatiable lust of gasoline, I worry they you can just kiss the planet good-bye."

I have known Speth and McKibben for years, and I have tremendous respect for them. They have both demonstrated leadership within our movement, and they do so again with this event. I applaud them for acting on their conscience.

They know that this pipeline will take America down a dangerous path. Not only does tar sands oil produces three times as much global warming pollution as regular crude, but it is also highly corrosive. Carrying this dirty fuel across six states and the Ogallala Aquifer -- the source for fresh water for the American Heartland -- is inviting disaster.

Last summer, a pipeline carrying tar sands oil exploded in Michigan, contaminating the Kalamazoo River with heavy bitumen that sank to the bottom of the river where it has failed to biodegrade. The EPA says cleaning up the Kalamazoo could take years.

The American people do not risk more disasters when cleaner solutions exist. Last month, for instance, President Obama announced new fuel efficiency standards that will reduce our oil use by 3.1 million barrels a day by 2030 and cut automobile carbon emissions in half. They will also save Americans $80 billion a year at the pump.

Tar sands oil cannot match any of those achievements. Instead, it locks America into more carbon pollution and increased risk of oil spills. This does not fit in the clean energy future President Obama is trying to build. We hope the President listens to the many people who have risked arrest in order to send him a message: the Keystone XL pipeline is not in America's national interest.

Photo Credit: Shadia Fayne Wood

This post originally appeared on NRDC's Switchboard blog.

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