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Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Earth First! activists target Virginia coal plant

Two weeks after the arrest of eight people protesting Duke Energy's plans to build a new coal-fired power plant in western North Carolina, another group of activists was detained following a similar action in Virginia.

Three people were arrested yesterday morning while blocking the entrance to Dominion Power's headquarters in Richmond. They were part of a larger group of activists with Blue Ridge Earth First! who were protesting the company's plans to build a new coal-fired power plant in southwest Virginia's Wise County.

"Climate change is jeopardizing my future and I'm not going to just sit by and let Dominion lock us into another generation of dirty coal," said Barbie Spitz, a student who participated in the roadblock.

Dominion's Wise County plant would release 5.4 million tons of carbon dioxide annually as well as 49 pounds of mercury and other hazardous pollutants. The plant's demand for coal would also accelerate the rate of mountaintop removal mining, which has already destroyed 25 percent of Wise County's mountains.

Earth First! also recently blockaded the construction site for FPL's planned gas-fired power plant in Palm Beach County, Fla. That February protest, which was organized by Everglades Earth First!, resulted in the arrest of 27 people. FPL's facility would release 12 millions tons of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere each year.

(Photo courtesy of Blue Ridge Earth First!; to see more photos from the action, click here.)

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posted by Sue Sturgis at 1:49 PM | Email this post

Wednesday, April 02, 2008

Duke Energy coal plant protesters arrested, shocked with Tasers

Eight people were arrested yesterday during a protest at the construction site for North Carolina-based Duke Energy's new Cliffside coal-fired power plant west of Charlotte. Two of those arrested were first shocked with Taser guns after locking themselves to bulldozers. The protesters were charged with trespassing and resisting arrest.

The North Carolina protest was one in a series of actions that took place as part of Fossil Fools Day, an international event organized by Rising Tide with help from other groups including the Rainforest Action Network and Earth First!.

"In the face of catastrophic climate change, building a new coal plant is tantamount to signing a death sentence for our generation," said Matt Wallace, a farmer who lives near Duke's plant and one of the protesters who locked himself to a bulldozer.

Avram Friedman is the executive director of the Canary Coalition, one of the North Carolina groups fighting Duke's plant. He said the police arrested the wrong people, since the protesters were trying to prevent a crime. Those who should be arrested are the N.C. Division of Air Quality officials who granted the facility a permit despite the fact that it doesn't meet federal standards for mercury emissions and Duke Energy officials who started construction before the permit appeals process was over, he said:
They should be arrested for defying scientific evidence, knowingly constructing a powerful instrument that will result in the death, disease and suffering of tens of thousands of people from heart and lung diseases, emphysema, asthma, chronic bronchitis. They should be arrested for contaminating water ways with toxic mercury resulting in neurological damage to children, causing autism and learning disablilities.
Other actions took place yesterday in New York, Boston, the United Kingdom, South Africa and Australia.

(Photo of Cliffside protest by Liz Veazey)

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posted by Sue Sturgis at 4:35 PM | Email this post

Southern News Update

Who Are These Folks?

CHRIS KROMM blogs three days a week for Facing South. He is Executive Director of the Institute for Southern Studies and publisher of the Institute’s award-winning magazine, Southern Exposure.

R. NEAL blogs two days a week for Facing South. Based in Knoxville, TN, R. Neal formerly ran the popular blog South Knox Bubba. He is now coordinator of KnoxViews.

SUE STURGIS blogs three days a week for Facing South. The editorial coordinator of the Institute's Gulf Coast Reconstruction Watch website, she is a freelance reporter who lives and works in Raleigh, NC.

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