Environment

Want to shut down tar sands pipeline? Occupy Exxon

A pesky little rider on the payroll tax cut extension has placed the Keystone XL pipeline decision back in the spotlight. Now it's up to environmentalists to pressure Obama not to approve the controversial project.

Want to shut down tar sands pipeline? Occupy Exxon
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Ashli Blow

A pesky little rider on the payroll tax cut extension has placed the Keystone XL pipeline decision back in the spotlight. Now it's up to environmentalists to pressure Obama not to approve the controversial project.

It  seemed like an afterthought in the payroll tax cut extension fight, a  small consolation prize for the Republicans on what should have been the  easiest of bi-partisan votes. But the two-month clock is now ticking on  whether Obama will approve the Keystone XL pipeline from Canada’s  environmentally disastrous tar sands.

If we want him to make the right  decision and deny the permit, it’s time to Occupy Exxon: with  creative protests at local Exxon/Mobil stations.

Of course we still need to  keep pressuring Obama. The bill’s deadline precludes anything close to  the kind of comprehensive environmental review that he called for after rallies and civil disobedience at the White House led him to delay approval for a year. But why not also go after the oil companies, whose influence led the Republicans to hold the rest of the unemployment and payroll tax bill hostage to the fast-track requirement.

Exxon/Mobil has long been the dirtiest  of the dirty among these companies. This makes them a logical target.

In a week heralding news of melting Arctic methane beds, and a year of record global temperatures and billion-dollar weather-related disasters, demanding Keystone’s approval was a stunning  exercise in denial. But unfortunately, that’s the deal that passed.

Our challenge now is  to convince Obama to reject the pipeline, but also to make this  raw power grab backfire. To turn the national conversation back onto oil company greed. The more  successful we are at this, the more political room we create for Obama to block  the pipeline and to act more forcefully on climate change in general.

Just as Occupy Wall Street has America talking about predatory banks,  Occupying Exxon would get Americans thinking about destructive fossil  fuel interests — whether they’re fighting for the pipeline, convincing the  Republicans to block proposed cut-backs to their massive tax subsidies,  or paying nothing in federal income taxes, as Exxon did as recently as 2009.

Targeting Exxon links an issue most Americans may have barely heard of  with a company known as an embodiment of greed. It also links Exxon’s lobbying for the pipeline with their long-time backing of climate change denial. Using strategies, scientists, and PR firms borrowed from the tobacco industry, the  contributed $16 million to groups denying human-caused climate change and spent over $55 million on lobbying between 1998 and 2005, at a time when even BP and Shell were beginning to acknowledge the reality of human-caused climate change.

Exxon has claimed that they’ve now cut this funding, but the company continues to back institutes and support politicians who promote denial.

Why does the pipeline matter? Building the Keystone XL Pipeline guarantees the acceleration of tar  sands extraction, the fuel from which contributes as much as three times the greenhouse emissions per energy unit as conventional oil. Given  the massive size of these deposits, their full exploitation, says NASA’s  leading climate scientist, James Hansen, would create “game over for the planet.” For this reason, twenty of Hansen’s most respected climate scientist peers sent a letter to Obama opposing the pipeline. So did Desmond Tutu, eight other Nobel Peace Prize winners, and every major  American environmental group, including the most conservative ones.

Given Obama’s two month decision window, we need to keep pressure on the White House, from calling and writing to  public rallies, perhaps even at Obama campaign offices. The chances of  Obama again rising to the occasion are far greater if there’s  continued public outcry about the pipeline. One powerful way to  create this is to tie the proposal and the politicians who’ve backed it  to the greed-driven agenda of the oil companies.

I’d suggest we invite  the Occupy Movement, environmental groups, and anyone else appalled at our  pay-to-play politics to show up at local Exxon/Mobil stations in  whatever nonviolent and creative ways they can, whether through  picketing, vigils, guerrilla theater, or civil disobedience.  Other oil  companies are also involved in the tar sands — like BP, Chevron, Shell,  and Conoco — but Exxon remains the most powerful symbol, because of all  they’ve done and are continuing to do in promoting blanket climate change denial.

As always, the Republicans claim this is a jobs issue. Yet a credible Cornell study points out that the pipeline could actually cost American jobs, and  even if the pipeline backers are right, the project would only create temporary positions — 5,000-6,000 two-year jobs. And that's only if we ignore the climate change  risks, and the potential for a break in the pipeline that could pollute the  massive Ogallala aquifer, which sustains America’s agricultural heartland.

The latter possibility impelled Nebraska’s Republican governor to speak  out against the pipeline, in the wake of major citizen outcry and a  42,000-gallon leak this past July that spilled into the Yellowstone River from Exxon’s Silvertip Pipeline. Any economic benefit would go largely to the project’s promoters.

For  most Americans, I suspect Keystone feels like an obscure minor issue  worth the tangible gain of extending unemployment benefits and the  payroll tax cut. I doubt they’re highly invested on either side. But we  know that the groups that lobbied for the Pipeline will go all out this  round, so staying silent or confining ourselves to virtual lobbying is a  bad option.

We can change the political context if we make Exxon and the oil companies the sleazy face  of the fight. Occupy Exxon  protests would invite people to undertake flexible and creative  approaches to the issue in their own backyards. They’d highlight the oil  companies as the heart of the issue, so if Obama allows the pipeline  he’ll be seen as supporting them, and if he blocks it he can justly  frame it as challenging corporate greed.

Exxon has long undermined the  habitability of the planet, from their day-to-day operations to their  long-term political role. Targeting them just might make their latest  destructive power grab finally backfire.

Ashli Blow

By Ashli Blow

Ashli Blow is a Seattle-based freelance writer who talks with people — in places from urban watersheds to remote wildernesses — about the environment around them. She’s been working in journal