Posted on 08/04/2023 8:26:43 AM PDT by Right Wing Vegan
WASHINGTON— More than 9,000 people today urged the U.S. Forest Service to halt plans to allow carbon waste from industrial sources like fossil fuel power plants to be dumped in national forests.
In June the Forest Service announced it would issue a rule as early as this month giving “perpetual right of use” for carbon waste injection in national forests. Today’s petition, signed by people and groups across the country, says a leak at a carbon waste site could suffocate or even kill people and wildlife.
“This proposal is nothing short of ludicrous,” said Laura Haight, U.S. policy director for the Partnership for Policy Integrity. “Our national forests are already home to the most viable carbon capture and storage technology on Earth — they’re called trees.”
Carbon dioxide waste injection would require building massive amounts of infrastructure, including pipelines, injection wells and well pads. Road building, construction and logging would cause additional harm to forest ecosystems and recreation.
“Turning our national forests into industrial dumping grounds is outrageous and completely wrongheaded,” said Victoria Bogdan Tejeda, an attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity’s Climate Law Institute. “There’s no place in our national forests for carbon capture scams that only benefit polluting industries. The administration should scrap this rule and enact one that protects mature and old-growth forests and trees.”
National forests provide habitat for a diverse range of plants and wildlife and offer low-cost, healthy recreation for millions of people. They’re also essential for watershed health and play a key role in fighting climate change by absorbing and storing tons of carbon.
“Carbon capture and storage is a snake oil climate solution with no upsides for anyone but the industry that created the climate crisis,” said Karen Feridun, co-founder of Better Path Coalition in Pennsylvania, home of the Allegheny National Forest. “The Forest Service must refuse to become its accomplice by scrapping the proposed rule.”
Creating carbon waste involves compressing large amounts of highly pressurized carbon dioxide, turning it into a deadly asphyxiant. First responders may not be able to get to victims of a pipeline rupture, well blowout or leak because vehicles can’t safely operate in a dense carbon dioxide plume. In addition, emergency response could be difficult since many national forests are in remote areas.
“The Indigenous Environmental Network opposes carbon capture and storage because it undermines the urgent need to reduce emissions at source and stop fossil fuel extraction,” said Tom BK Goldtooth, executive director of the Indigenous Environmental Network. “National forests are stolen Indigenous lands and home to sacred sites and are of cultural and historical significance to Indigenous peoples that must not be disturbed. We must keep fossil fuels in the ground, not expand the polluting industry by fast-tracking carbon capture and storage.”
“This proposal would perpetually endanger rural and Indigenous communities’ health and rights,” said Hudson Kingston, legal director at CURE, a Midwest organization pursuing rural environmental justice. “People who live near national forests, including those with treaty rights to hunt and gather, rely on their waters and wildlife to survive. We expect more from the Forest Service in meeting its obligations under statute and treaty.”
The petition was delivered to the U.S. Forest Service in anticipation of the agency releasing its proposed carbon-dumping rule. If the proposed rule is released, it will trigger a public comment period.
Carbon waste dumping on a carbon based planet ? LOL
Well then stick it in "xxx's neighborhood." YT's? Schools? Homeless encampments? Prisons? Etc, etc.
Wouldn’t using our petroleum reserves be far less impacting on the environment? And maybe free up money and resources for more dire environmental challenges?
Can it be used to carbonate fountain drinks?
If only there were something in national forests that could convert carbon dioxide into useful products such as cellulose.
I agree with these people. They should dump it in San Fransicko instead.
I’ve long been of the opinion that the stupidity behind the carbon capture and sequestration push really has a unmentioned goal of being able to kill many people almost instantly by sudden release of CO2.
A bit far fetched, but remembering Bhopal and considering the irrational belief that this is actually a “good thing”.
For you literalist here on FR, That is sarcasm and a rebuke.
That says it all about the Dem agenda.
It's called "Mostly peaceful riots and looting" which results in carbon being sequestered in plywood covering smashed windows.
I vote for Portland or Seattle.
If they dumped it there nobody would even notice.
So they are going to pipe concentrated CO2 into the forest to disperse it there. Basically greenhousing the forest with whatever it can absorb before the CO2 disperses into the atmosphere.
Sounds like a boondoggle for taxpayers to pay for.
They should pump it into Lake Erie along with flavoring (I prefer strawberry). Swimming in a giant tingly and drinkable carbonated lake would be cool.
Wouldn't it be much cheaper just to build coal power plants in the national forests? :-)
Well, I have to say that they are right, the cleaning waste through trees is a proven failure. I know that for a fact because ARCO took part in the experiment. They offered tours of the tree farms that were being used to clean wastes.
The experiment was a complete failure. The trees, cotton woods, sucked up the waste material with the water and stored it in the leaves, but when the leaves fall, the wastes are all put back into the ground.
ARCO has been gone for 23 years, so it is impossible to ask anyone what they were thinking at the time.
The whole thing is silly. Only thing it’s actually intended to capture is billions of $$$$ for well-connected contractors and ultimately politicians.
My thoughts exactly.
It’s more fun to watch people get bent out of shape over obvious sarcasm.
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