{"id":1915,"date":"2020-12-11T16:43:53","date_gmt":"2020-12-11T16:43:53","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.radiofree.org\/?p=138123"},"modified":"2020-12-11T16:43:53","modified_gmt":"2020-12-11T16:43:53","slug":"climate-activists-announce-national-covid-safe-day-of-action-push-back-against-wall-streets-financing-of-keystone-xl-and-minnesota-line3-tar-sands-pipelines","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/radiofree.asia\/2020\/12\/11\/climate-activists-announce-national-covid-safe-day-of-action-push-back-against-wall-streets-financing-of-keystone-xl-and-minnesota-line3-tar-sands-pipelines\/","title":{"rendered":"Climate Activists Announce National ‘Covid-Safe’ Day of Action Push Back against Wall Street\u2019s financing of Keystone XL and Minnesota Line3 Tar Sands Pipelines"},"content":{"rendered":"
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WASHINGTON – Today across the nation activists in 60 cities and 25 states will utilize Covid-safe and creative ways to deliver letters calling on major banks to distance themselves from the funding of the toxic Keystone XL and Enbridge\u2019s Line3 tar sands pipelines as part of the day of action organized by the Stop the Money Pipeline (STMP), a coalition of now over 140 groups committed to ending the financial sector\u2019s support and funding of fossil fuel projects as a key pathway towards decarbonization.<\/p>\n

Amid an intense spike in Covid related deaths and infections and stay home orders, the activists plan a \u201cCovid-safe<\/a>\u201d Day of Action where hundreds of individuals in 60 cities and 25 states have agreed to deliver letters to local bank branches and insurance offices of the major funders and insurers of fossil-fuel investments calling on them to \u201cNOT FUND or INSURE\u201d the last two tar-sands pipelines \u2013 the toxic and disruptive Keystone XL, and Enbridge Line3 projects.<\/p>\n

\u201cYou would have thought that Wall Street would have learned their lesson,\u201d said Alec Connon, Stop the Money Pipeline Coalition Co-Coordinator. \u201cIn 2016, the resistance to the Dakota Access pipeline hit the financial sector hard. Protests were held at bank branches throughout the country. Thousands of people pulled their money out of Wall Street banks. City governments stopped banking with the funders of the pipeline. Yet once again Wall Street is complicit in funding an oil pipeline that violates Indigenous treaty rights and damages our climate. They can expect the backlash to be every bit as fierce as it was at Standing Rock.\u201d<\/p>\n

In Seattle, activists will be participating in a car caravan, attaching large #DefundLine3 banners to trucks and cars, and taking the car caravan to Chase branches across the city. They will occupy the street outside of both Chase and Liberty Mutual\u2019s regional HQ, as activists go inside to deliver the letters in a COVID-safe fashion. In Portland, organizers will be taking a decommissioned fire truck to downtown Chase branches to demand that Chase helps put out the fires of the climate crisis.<\/p>\n

Actions are planned in New York City, Washington DC, San Francisco, Denver, Boston, Chicago, Cincinnati, Madison, Minneapolis, and Charlotte. In Boston, Climate Finance Action will make deliveries to Liberty Mutual and BlackRock offices. In the Bay Area, activists will visit at least twenty bank branches in cities across the region. In Washington, DC activists with Shutdown DC will be delivering the letter to a branch of Chase Bank, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, and Citibank with banker CEO puppets, signs, banners, and chants while socially distanced. In Colorado, activists in Denver, Boulder, and Colorado Springs will be participating along with others in 25 states to carry out COVID safe letter deliveries at local bank branches such as Chase, Citi, and Bank of America or Liberty Mutual insurance offices as well.<\/p>\n

This is a particularly crucial time for activists seeking to push the financial sector away from financing the Climate Emergency. Many are looking at building momentum leading up to the March 31, 2021, credit renewal date for a $2.1B credit facility renewal date for Enbridge. Eighteen banks are on the loan as lenders including the US banks Chase, Citi, and BOA. KXL is also entering a key period, and TC Energy is currently trying to secure a $4.5 billion loan for the project before year-end from some of the same banks.<\/p>\n

\u201cThese financial institutions continue to be the drivers of the climate crisis. They continue to finance, and profit from, fossil fuel projects such as Line 3, TransMountain, and the Keystone XL pipelines that knowingly violate the treaty rights of Tribal Nations. Our Tribal communities continue to push back against and resist these earth-destroying projects,\u201d said Matt Remle (Lakota), co-founder of Mazaksa Talks. \u201cPeople need to pick a side, stand with those protecting the air, water, lands, and health of communities for all peoples, or with those profiting from the destruction of the air, water, lands and health of our communities. It\u2019s that simple.\u201d  <\/p>\n

For many, the tar sands type of pipeline is extremely problematic due to the toxic impact on the environment, clean water, and rivers. These destructive impacts are only worse during a pandemic. The Enbridge Line3 project in Minnesota, if it goes through, could bring thousands of workers into tribal lands contributing to the spread of Covid. Additionally, worker camps also have been proven to contribute to sexual violence and trafficking against Indigenous women.  If built, Line 3 would release as much greenhouse gas pollution as fifty new coal-fired power plants and would violate Ojibwe treaty rights, and put the state\u2019s water, ecosystems, and communities at risk<\/p>\n

Many activists and indigenous communities are fighting against time and see this as the last line in the sand designed to hold off polluters until the incoming presidential administration of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris step in and forcibly move away from these represent anachronistic and dangerous policies as a nation committed to taking on the climate crisis with new vigor.<\/p>\n

\u201cThis pipeline isn’t about the so-called \u201csafe\u201d transportation of a necessary product it\u2019s the final gasp of a dying industry desperately trying to perpetuate fossil fuel use in a society that knows its past time to make better choices for energy use, \u201c said Amy Gray, Stop the Money Pipeline Coalition Co-Coordinator. \u201cAll tar-sands pipelines leak and they wreak havoc from the extraction at the tar sands through the route of the pipeline all the way to the communities who live in the shadow of the refineries. It\u2019s time for Wall Street to stop funding these dangerous pipelines and respect Indigenous sovereignty, frontline communities and re-invest in a just and equitable transition to renewable energy.\u201d<\/p>\n

The coalition plans to deliver the STMP cover letter<\/a>, as well as the Indigenous Women\u2019s Tar Sands letter<\/a>\u2013 sent last month to the CEOs of 70 major financial companies and insurers calling for them to respect their tribal rights and to end all ties to tar sands pipelines. 158 organizations, which collectively claim millions of supporters, have already signed on to the letter\u2019s demands to stop Line 3, Keystone XL, and all other toxic tar sands expansion projects.<\/p>\n

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QUOTE SHEET FOR DECEMBER 11th<\/sup> DAY OF ACTION <\/strong><\/p>\n

SELECT QUOTES FROM PARTNERS<\/strong><\/p>\n

\u201cLine 3, Keystone XL, and all tar sands extraction and pipelines must be stopped immediately and financial institutions much be held accountable for their role in financing these projects and perpetuating further Indigenous rights violations, destruction of the climate, escalating harms to public health during a pandemic, and increased rates of violence toward Indigenous women living near \u2018man camps\u2019 associated with pipeline construction. As multiple crises in 2020 proliferate, business as usual must not and cannot continue. We must heed the call of Indigenous women leaders,\u201d said Osprey Orielle Lake, Executive Director of the Women\u2019s Earth and Climate Action Network (WECAN) International.<\/p>\n

\u201cLine 3 and Keystone XL are fossil-fueled disasters. These pipelines violate Indigenous rights and would wreck the climate \u2014 our analysis shows constructing both would be the equivalent of building hundreds of new coal plants. Supporting projects like Line 3 and Keystone XL in 2020 is unconscionable, and we’re taking action to show financial institutions that the movement for climate justice won’t let them get away with it any longer,\u201d said Collin Rees, Senior Campaigner at Oil Change International.<\/p>\n

\u201cHere in DC, we are committed to fighting to #Stopline3 and demand #NoKXL. We came out today to put Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, and Citibank on notice that they better not fund the two remaining pipelines of the toxic tar sands project,\u201d said Liz Butler, organizer with Shut Down DC.<\/p>\n

\u201cThis project is an insult to people in younger generations like mine who will be forced to live with the disastrous consequences of climate chaos and trashed wetlands here in Minnesota. Even worse, it is an assault on the fundamental rights of Indigenous communities and an intolerable continuation of settler colonialism.\u201d – Sasha Lewis-Norelle, Sunrise St. Paul, age 21<\/p>\n

\u201cToward righting the ongoing wrongs of our European ancestors,\u201d said Cheryl Barnds, co-chair of Rapid Shift Network, \u201cwe deliver these letters in solidarity with the 41 Indigenous Women who have patiently asked CEOs of major global asset managers, banks, and insurers<\/a>: With fossil fuel corporations plowing ahead with pipeline construction in the midst of a global pandemic and massive financial meltdown, we urge your institutions to immediately decline any support for TC Energy\u2019s Keystone XL pipeline, Enbridge\u2019s Line 3 pipeline, and the Canadian government\u2019s Trans Mountain pipeline \u2013 and to cut ties with these tar sands projects and companies.\u201d<\/p>\n

As oil stocks plummeted this year, wildfires raged and clean water became more scarce than ever; somehow banks like Chase, Wells Fargo, Bank of America, and others still think it\u2019s ok to invest in fossil fuel infrastructure like Enbridge’s Line 3 and KXL. There is no logic, aside from greed. Indigenous rights abuses continue to be perpetuated by the industry, and climate chaos is not a thing of the future any more, it is NOW. We are in the final hour to save our planet from hundreds of years of runaway climate change. Big banks must stop funding fossil fuel infrastructure immediately,\u201d-said Kellie Berns, Program Director, Earth Guardians.<\/p>\n

\u201cWe must end all tar sands extraction and pipeline projects immediately! Line 3 and KXL are violating Indigenous rights and pose devastating health risks to the Indigenous communities surrounding these sites, as well as to our planet overall. It\u2019s unconscionable that these projects were even considered, let alone moving forward in the middle of a pandemic. We took action today to expose the financial institutions bankrolling these projects like Chase, Bank of America, and Wells Fargo to demand that they respect tribal rights and immediately end all ties to tar sands pipelines. Listen to Indigenous women leaders!\u201d – Erika This Patterson, Campaign Director, Action Center on Race and the Economy<\/p>\n\n

This post was originally published on Radio Free<\/a>. <\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

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