http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/09/14-11

Published on Wednesday, September 14, 2011 by CommonDreams.org

In the Fight Against Fossil Fuel Addiction, Bring What You Can

The Heinz Award and What I Plan to Do With It

by Sandra Steingraber

I was thrilled recently to receive a Heinz Award in recognition of my 
research and writing on environmental health. This is work made 
possible by my residency as a scholar within the Department of 
Environmental Studies at Ithaca College. Many past and present Heinz 
Award winners are personal heroes of mine--and Teresa Heinz herself 
is a champion of women's environmental health--so this recognition 
carries special meaning for me.

And it comes with a $100,000 unrestricted cash prize. Which is stunning.

As a bladder cancer survivor of 32 years, I'm intimately familiar 
with two kinds of uncertainty: the kind that comes while waiting for 
results from the pathology and radiology labs and the kind that is 
created by the medical insurance industry who decides whether or not 
to pay the pathology and radiology bills. Over the years, I've 
learned to analyze data and raise children while surrounded by 
medical and financial insecurities. It's a high-wire act.

But as an ecologist, I'm aware of a much larger insecurity: the one 
created by our nation's ruinous dependency on fossil fuels in all 
their forms. When we light them on fire, we fill the atmosphere with 
heat-trapping gases that are destabalizing the climate and acidifying 
the oceans (whose plankton stocks provide us half of the oxygen we 
breathe). When we use fossil fuels as feedstocks to make materials 
such as pesticides and solvents, we create toxic substances that 
trespass into our children's bodies (where they raises risks for 
cancer, asthma, infertility, and learning disorders).

Emancipation from our terrible enslavement to fossil fuels is 
possible. The best science shows us that the United States could, 
within two decades, entirely run on green, renewable energy if we 
chose to dedicate ourselves to that course. [1] But, right now, that 
is not the trail we are blazing.

Instead, evermore extreme and toxic methods are being deployed to 
blast fossilized carbon from the earth. We are blowing up mountains 
to get at coal, felling boreal forests to get at tar, and siphoning 
oil from the ocean deep. Most ominously, through the process called 
fracking, we are shattering the very bedrock of our nation to get at 
the petrified bubbles of methane trapped inside.

Fracking turns fresh water into poison. It fills our air with smog, 
our roadways with 18-wheelers hauling hazardous materials, and our 
fields and pastures with pipelines and toxic pits.

I am therefore announcing my intent to devote my Heinz Award to the 
fight against hydrofracking in upstate New York, where I live with my 
husband and our two children.

Some might look at my small house (with its mismatched furniture) or 
my small bank accounts (with their absence of a college fund or a 
retirement plan) and question my priorities. But the bodies of my 
children are the rearranged molecules of the air, water, and food 
streaming through them. As their mother, there is no more important 
investment that I could make right now than to support the fight for 
the integrity of the ecological system that makes their lives 
possible. As legal scholar Joseph Guth reminds us, a functioning 
biosphere is worth everything we have. [2]

This summer I traveled through the western United States and saw 
firsthand the devastation that fracking creates. In drought-crippled 
Texas where crops withered in the fields, I read a hand-lettered sign 
in a front yard that said, "I NEED WATER. U HAUL. I PAY. " And still 
the fracking trucks rolled on, carrying water to the gas wells.

This is the logic of drug addicts, not science.

I also stood on the courthouse steps in Salt Lake City while climate 
activist Tim DeChristopher was sentenced to two years in federal 
prison for an act of civil disobedience that halted the leasing of 
public land for gas and oil drilling near Arches National Park. 
Before he was hauled away by federal marshals, Tim said, "This is 
what love looks like."

After two months of travel, my children and I arrived home to the 
still unfractured state of New York. After stopping at a local farm 
stand to buy bread, tomatoes, cheese, and peaches for dinner, we 
celebrated our return along the vineyard-and-waterfall-lined shore of 
Cayuga Lake. I watched my son skip stones across its surface. Under 
his feet lay the aquifer that provides drinking water to our village.

This is what security looks like. Please join me in the struggle to 
defend the economy and ecology of upstate New York. Bring what you 
can.

Sources:

1. M.Z. Jacobson and M.A. Delucci, "A Path to Sustainable Energy by 
2030," Scientific American 301 (2009): 58-65.

2. "The Earth's biosphere seems almost magically suited to human 
beings, and indeed it is, for we evolved through eons of intimate 
immersion within it. Many of us are animated by moral and religious 
impulses to treasure and respect the creation that sustains us. We 
cannot live well without a functioning biosphere, and so it is worth 
everything we have." Joseph H. Guth, "Law for the Ecological Age," 
Vermont Journal of Environmental Law, vol. 9.

Sandra Steingraber, Ph.D. is an ecologist, author, cancer survivor, 
and an internationally recognized authority on the environment links 
to cancer and human health.  She is the author of Living Downstream: 
An Ecologist's Personal Investigation of Cancer and the Environment 
and, her most recent, Raising Elijah: Protecting Children in an Age 
of Environmental Crisis.


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