Very good article from The Nation. See below....
http://www.thenation.com/article/37526/spills-silver-lining
The Spill's Silver Lining?
Christine MacDonald
July 15, 2010 |
This article appeared in the August 2/9, 2010 edition of The Nation.
On the steamy hot morning of June 30, the Sierra Club's new executive director,
Michael Brune, stood on the Mall in Washington, surrounded by an estimated
10,000 American flags that had been hammered into the parched and scraggly-looking
grass by a few dozen members of the club, the oldest and largest grassroots
environmental group in the country.
Brune and his fellow demonstrators were there to call for an end to America's
dependence on oil within the next twenty years. The flags, which spelled
out "Freedom From Oil," represented "tens of thousands of
Americans who have watched the BP disaster in the gulf and want to make
sure it never happens again," Brune declared. He called for bold leadership
from President Barack Obama, who, at that moment, just happened to be flying
overhead in his Marine One helicopter. The president was headed to a town
hall–style meeting in Racine, Wisconsin, to address a subject that routinely
receives more attention than environmental woes—the economy.
But the environment has commanded the president's attention, and that of
the media and general public, ever since BP's Deepwater Horizon rig exploded
on April 20, killing eleven workers and sending millions of gallons of
crude oil cascading into the Gulf of Mexico. The onslaught of media images—oil-soaked
ospreys, burning turtles and other dead and dying wildlife—has also highlighted
the daunting environmental challenges facing the country. One potentially
positive effect of the disaster, however, has been a resurgence of hope
among environmental leaders that Congress and the president may finally
be willing not simply to talk about moving the United States off fossil
fuels and tackling climate change but to do something about it—or at least,
that official Washington may now be more susceptible to pressure from activists
pursuing that goal.
"People are watching oil spewing out into the gulf on their computers
and television sets. They are desperate to help, and it's not just the
classic greenies who live in San Francisco," says Brune, who lives
in the Bay Area, where the Club is headquartered. "The bigger challenge
is one of confidence. People don't necessarily believe that we can do it.
There is a very defeatist attitude that permeates the national conversation
on this topic." Though, he adds, "we actually do have very real-world
solutions for getting off oil, but we don't yet have politicians and corporate
leaders who have the political will."
The Sierra Club hopes to change that by applying the same tactics it used
to win perhaps the greatest victory yet achieved in the battle against
climate change. Over the past few years, the Club and its state chapters
have spearheaded a nationwide grassroots movement that has established
a de facto national moratorium on the construction of coal-fired power
plants. Uniting environmentalists, local public officials, health professionals,
youth groups (especially at colleges and universities) and others, the
Beyond Coal campaign used lobbying, demonstrations, legal challenges and
other activist tools to block 129 of some 200 planned coal plants around
the country. Now the Sierra Club will use the same methods against oil,
employing "all means" at its disposal, Brune says.
Like the coal fight, the Freedom From Oil campaign will emphasize the full
costs of producing and consuming oil—local air and water pollution; rising
fatalities from asthma, heart disease and other ailments; intensifying
climate change; and the prospect of more catastrophic accidents as companies
drill in ever more remote and risky areas to extract the earth's dwindling
oil reserves.
The Sierra Club's new campaign also borrows some elements from a long-running
one at the Rainforest Action Network, the scrappy activist outfit Brune
led before taking the Club's helm in March. Brune wants to pitch as big
a tent as possible, attracting labor, youth, churches, sports leaders and—the
big question mark—the mainstream environmental organizations headquartered
in Washington, several of which run competing initiatives to promote clean
energy.
Dale Bryk, director of the Air and Energy Program at the Natural Resources
Defense Council (NRDC), says that work by her organization and others means
that technology and policy options are well developed but that the harder
part is getting the public's attention and convincing elected officials
to take on the oil industry and its legions of lobbyists. "We have
a heavy lift," Bryk says. "The industry has a lot of money and
lots of lobbyists." (The oil and gas industry spent $38 million on
lobbying in the first four months of 2010, according to the Center for
Responsive Politics.)
But most green leaders agree that the BP disaster has created a historic
opportunity. "Largely, people are pulling in the same direction on
oil. It's been a unifying issue" for the environmental movement, says
Phil Radford, executive director of Greenpeace USA.
Still, disagreement remains on how to move forward, and even what "forward"
means. While the Sierra Club is directly challenging Big Oil, other groups
are focused more narrowly on outlawing offshore drilling and enacting reforms
to other types of oil drilling. Meanwhile, so-called Big Green groups—such
as the NRDC, the Environmental Defense Fund (EDF), the National Wildlife
Federation and others with the most brand-name recognition, the deepest
pockets and closest ties to Washington deal-makers—are intensely focused
on a last-ditch effort to pass a climate and energy bill before Congress's
August recess.
"Right now, there is the best opportunity for a president to lead
on this topic that any president has had in a decade," says EDF president
Fred Krupp, who along with eight other national groups sent an open letter
to Obama on July 2 beseeching him to draw up his own climate legislation
blueprint.
"He's done more than any president in history, but if he doesn't put
forth his own package that he wants the Senate to pass, it could lead nowhere,"
says Krupp. "Will [the upcoming climate legislation] make us energy
independent? No. Will it solve the climate problem? No. Is that a reason
not to do it? No. Now is the time to get something done."
The lack of consensus on what should be done, and how, reflects a longstanding
and growing divide within the environmental movement. Groups like EDF have
spent decades cultivating ties to corporate leaders and politicians in
anticipation of this summer's climate change showdown in the Senate. Meanwhile,
many local activists and more aggressive national environmental groups
think the Big Greens have compromised too much and want to break with their
"inside the Beltway" strategy.
The Tucson-based Center for Biological Diversity (CBD), for example, charges
that many of the Big Green groups are not only out of step with the country's
needs but tone-deaf to the public outrage over the gulf spill and the political
openings it has created. "Here is a moment when you can strike hard
and fast and really affect policy. This focus on [passing a climate] bill
is damaging to the environmental movement, especially when it's not a very
strong bill," says Kierán Suckling, CBD's executive director. "To
divert attention away from this once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to shut
down deep-sea drilling is really a shame."
Mainstream groups' determination to pass a climate bill has at times taken
them down unlikely paths. NRDC Action Fund, for instance, launched TV ads
this past spring targeting Democrats like Bill Nelson of Florida and Robert
Menendez of New Jersey, who opposed climate legislation sponsored by Senators
John Kerry and Joe Lieberman because they regarded its position on offshore
drilling as too lenient. The ads featured footage of the burning BP oil
rig, accompanied by a voiceover: "Congress won't pass a clean-energy
climate plan to cut our addiction to dirty fuels because Congress is still
addicted to big oil influence. It's time for politicians to break their
addiction, so we can break ours."
And coastal state lawmakers haven't been the only ones unwilling to accept
the White House's trade-off of increased offshore drilling in return for
a climate bill. The CBD, Sierra Club and other members of the more aggressive
wing of the environmental movement also declined to support the Kerry-Lieberman
bill, balking at its offshore drilling provision, among other things.
The move not to endorse the bill was one of the first big decisions made
by the Club after Brune took over as executive director from longtime leader
Carl Pope. The Club also declined to sign on to the joint July 2 letter
to Obama, opting instead to send a more sharply worded one of its own.
Disappointed that Obama hasn't been "twisting arms and cracking heads
to get a strong climate bill," Brune says the Sierra Club's support
for the president may not last forever. "I think Obama needs to be
reminded that he shouldn't take the environmental community for granted,"
he warns. "Millions of young people helped put him in office, and
they want what he promised: a shift to clean-energy solutions that will
fight climate change and create good jobs in a green economy." Environmental
insiders speculate that if the Club, which has a history of working with
Democratic lawmakers, turned on them, it could set off a chain of defections
among smaller groups increasingly disenchanted with the timidity of the
president and the Democratic Congress.
The Sierra Club's new campaign, however, is by no means assured of success.
Unlike the Beyond Coal fight, the anti-oil campaign must be waged on many
different fields of battle—not just the hyper-local front of one very
large coal power plant at a time. "Oil is a tricky one," says
Rebecca Tarbotton, Rainforest Action Network's interim executive director.
"Our dependence on oil is rooted in the actions of millions of individuals
across the country, not just a few giant corporations. But the public has
an unprecedented lack of trust at the moment for Big Coal, Big Oil and
Big Banks," and, she adds, "the Sierra Club is a big stage."
But is it big enough? CBD's Suckling does not believe the Sierra Club can
shut down the oil industry without a united environmental movement, including
support from the Big Green groups—which, despite the simmering discontent
at the grassroots, continue to serve as its official voice. Those groups,
he says, "have so much power that if they are willing to endorse anything
less" than the rapid end of the country's oil dependence, "the
political system will gravitate toward them."
Other grassroots activists, like Utah monkey-wrencher Tim DeChristopher,
Andy Mahler of the Heartwood environmental network and Native Forest Council
president Tim Hermach, are skeptical that the country can be weaned off
oil without a much wider societal shift. "What we are talking about
is going to war with the richest and most powerful corporations in the
world that have a stranglehold on our government," says DeChristopher,
who made headlines in 2008 when he posed as a bidder at an auction for
oil and gas leases on more than 110,000 acres of federal land, winning
thirteen leases before officials caught on and halted the auction. "There
would have to be a movement willing to raise more hell than the oil industry,
and we don't have that right now," says DeChristopher, who has started
a grassroots group aimed at building just such a civil rights–style climate
movement as he awaits trial on the federal auction disruption charges.
"If we won't do that," he says, "we're asking our politicians
to show a higher level of courage and commitment than we have shown."
Brune says the Sierra Club is undaunted by the challenge. "We're not
kidding ourselves. [This country has] been talking about getting off oil
since Nixon, and it has not yet succeeded. But today we have certain advantages:
we only have to try to convince six automakers and one decision-maker in
the White House. There are choke points, where one important leader can
make historic decisions."
"When you set a bold and ambitious goal, it inspires people to work
with you," he says.
David Willett
Deputy Director of Communications
Sierra Club
(202) 675-6698 (w)
(202) 491-6919 (m)
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http://www.sierraclub.org