Published on Thursday, June 23, 2011 by 
CommonDreams.org<http://www.commondreams.org/>
Environmental Leaders Call for Civil Disobedience to Stop the Keystone XL 
Pipeline
by Naomi Klein, Wendell Berry, Maude Barlow, Bill McKibben and Others

Dear Friends,

This will be a slightly longer letter than common for the internet age—it’s 
serious stuff.

The short version is we want you to consider doing something hard: coming to 
Washington in the hottest and stickiest weeks of the summer and engaging in 
civil disobedience that will likely get you arrested.

The full version goes like this:

As you know, the planet is steadily warming: 2010 was the warmest year on 
record, and we’ve seen the resulting chaos in almost every corner of the earth.

And as you also know, our democracy is increasingly controlled by special 
interests interested only in their short-term profit.

These two trends collide this summer in Washington, where the State Department 
and the White House have to decide whether to grant a  certificate of ‘national 
interest’ to some of the biggest fossil fuel players on earth. These 
corporations want to build the so-called ‘Keystone XL Pipeline’ from Canada’s 
tar sands to Texas refineries.

To call this project a horror is serious understatement. The tar sands have 
wrecked huge parts of Alberta, disrupting ways of life in indigenous 
communities—First Nations communities in Canada, and tribes along the pipeline 
route in the U.S. have demanded the destruction cease. The pipeline crosses 
crucial areas like the Oglalla Aquifer where a spill would be disastrous—and 
though the pipeline companies insist they are using ‘state of the art’ 
technologies that should leak only once every 7 years, the precursor pipeline 
and its pumping stations have leaked a dozen times in the past year. These  
local impacts alone would be cause enough to block such a plan. But the 
Keystone Pipeline would also be a fifteen hundred mile fuse to the biggest 
carbon bomb on the continent, a way to make it easier and faster to trigger the 
final overheating of our planet, the one place to which we are all indigenous.

How much carbon lies in the recoverable tar sands of Alberta? A recent 
calculation from some of our foremost scientists puts the figure at about 200 
parts per million.  Even with the new pipeline they won’t be able to burn that 
much overnight—but each development like this makes it easier to get more oil 
out.  As the climatologist Jim Hansen (one of the signatories to this letter) 
explained, if we have any chance of getting back to a stable climate “the 
principal requirement is that coal emissions must be phased out by 2030 and 
unconventional fossil fuels, such as tar sands, must be left in the ground.” In 
other words, he added, “if the tar sands are thrown into the mix it is 
essentially game over.” The Keystone pipeline is an essential part of the game. 
"Unless we get increased market access, like with Keystone XL, we're going to 
be stuck," said Ralph Glass, an economist and vice-president at AJM Petroleum 
Consultants in Calgary, told a Canadian newspaper last week.

Given all that, you’d suspect that there’s no way the Obama administration 
would ever permit this pipeline. But in the last few months the president has 
signed pieces of paper opening much of Alaska to oil drilling, and permitting 
coal-mining on federal land in Wyoming that will produce as much CO2 as 300 
power plants operating at full bore.

And Secretary of State Clinton has already said she’s ‘inclined’ to recommend 
the pipeline go forward. Partly it’s because of the political commotion over 
high gas prices, though more tar sands oil would do nothing to change that 
picture. But it’s also because of intense pressure from industry. TransCanada 
Pipeline, the company behind Keystone, has hired as its chief lobbyist for the 
project a man named Paul Elliott, who served as deputy national director of 
Clinton’s presidential campaign. Meanwhile, the US Chamber of Commerce—a bigger 
funder of political campaigns than the RNC and DNC combined—has demanded that 
the administration “move quickly to approve the Keystone XL pipeline,” which is 
not so surprising—they’ve also told the U.S. EPA that if the planet warms that 
will be okay because humans can ‘adapt their physiology’ to cope. The Koch 
Brothers, needless to say, are also backing the plan, and may reap huge profits 
from it.

So we’re pretty sure that without serious pressure the Keystone Pipeline will 
get its permit from Washington.  A wonderful coalition of environmental groups 
has built a strong campaign across the continent—from Cree and Dene indigenous 
leaders to Nebraska farmers, they’ve spoken out strongly against the 
destruction of their land. We need to join them, and to say even if our own 
homes won’t be crossed by this pipeline, our joint home—the earth—will be 
wrecked by the carbon that pours down it.

And we need to say something else, too: it’s time to stop letting corporate 
power make the most important decisions our planet faces.

We don’t have the money to compete with those corporations, but we do have our 
bodies, and beginning in mid August many of us will use them. We will, each day 
through Labor Day, march on the White House, risking arrest with our trespass. 
We will do it in dignified fashion, demonstrating that in this case we are the 
conservatives, and that our foes—who would change the composition of the 
atmosphere are dangerous radicals. Come dressed as if for a business 
meeting—this is, in fact, serious business. And another sartorial tip—if you 
wore an Obama button during the 2008 campaign, why not wear it again? We very 
much still want to believe in the promise of that young Senator who told us 
that with his election the ‘rise of the oceans would begin to slow and the 
planet start to heal.’ We don’t understand what combination of bureaucratic 
obstinacy and insider dealing has derailed those efforts, but we remember his 
request that his supporters continue on after the election to pressure the 
government for change. We’ll do what we can.

And one more thing: we don’t want college kids to be the only cannon fodder in 
this fight. They’ve led the way so far on climate change—10,000 came to DC for 
the Powershift gathering earlier this spring. They’ve marched this month in 
West Virginia to protest mountaintop removal; Tim DeChristopher faces 
sentencing this summer in Utah for his creative protest.  Now it’s time for 
people who’ve spent their lives pouring carbon into the atmosphere (and whose 
careers won’t be as damaged by an arrest record) to step up too. Most of us 
signing this letter are veterans of this work, and we think it’s past time for 
elders to behave like elders. One thing we don’t want is a smash up: if you 
can’t control your passions, this action is not for you.

This won’t be a one-shot day of action. We plan for it to continue for several 
weeks, to the date in September when by law the administration can either grant 
or deny the permit for the pipeline. Not all of us can actually get 
arrested—half the signatories to this letter live in Canada, and might well 
find our entry into the U.S. barred. But we will be making plans for sympathy 
demonstrations outside Canadian consulates in the U.S., and U.S. consulates in 
Canada—the decision-makers need to know they’re being watched.

Winning this battle won’t save the climate. But losing it will mean the chances 
of runaway climate change go way up—that we’ll endure an endless future of the 
floods and droughts we’ve seen this year. And we’re fighting for the political 
future too—for the premise that we should make decisions based on science and 
reason, not political connection.  You have to start somewhere, and this is 
where we choose to begin.

If you think you might want to be a part of this action, we need you to sign up 
here<http://tarsandsaction.org/>. As plans solidify in the next few weeks we’ll 
be in touch with you to arrange nonviolence training; our colleagues at a 
variety of environmental and democracy campaigns will be coordinating the 
actual arrangements.

We know we’re asking a lot. You should think long and hard on it, and pray if 
you’re the praying type. But to us, it’s as much privilege as burden to get to 
join this fight in the most serious possible way. We hope you’ll join us.

Maude Barlow
Wendell Berry
Tom Goldtooth
Danny Glover
James Hansen
Wes Jackson
Naomi Klein
Bill McKibben
George Poitras
David Suzuki
Gus Speth

p.s.—Please pass this letter on to anyone else you think might be interested. 
We realize that what we’re asking isn’t easy, and we’re very grateful that 
you’re willing even to consider it.

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