Washington -- Less than two weeks after Barack Obama won his re-election campaign, protesters gathered Sunday to call on the president and his administration to reject the proposed Keystone XL tar sands pipeline, and to act on climate change.
While Republican
candidate Mitt Romney said he would support construction of the
1,700-mile pipeline, for the jobs he said the pipeline would create,
Obama in the past has rejected rapid approval, citing what he called the
"arbitrary nature" of the deadline Republicans proposed for passage and
the need for sufficient time for the State Department to gather
information necessary for a project that crosses into the American
border.
Nearly a year ago, the
State Department announced the decision to delay until after the 2012
election consideration of the controversial project that would originate
in Alberta, Canada,'s tar sands and would extend to the Gulf of Mexico.
On Sunday, protestors
flooded Washington's Freedom Plaza, before laying down their signs and
picking up a 500-foot plastic "oil pipe," which they carried a few
blocks to the White House.


One of the event's main
organizers, founder of 350.org, Bill McKidden, said that activists may
have been silent but haven't forgotten about the project and now they've
organized to remind the administration of their commitment to
preventing fossil fuel based projects that they say are causing
increased climate change.
"They said a year ago
they would study it further, now that year is up, and in the meantime
we've had the hottest year in America history, we've had an epic
drought, we've had the Arctic melting and we've had Superstorm Sandy
flooding the subways of New York," said McKibben.
"The pipeline has come to
symbolize something much, much bigger than just one energy project,
it's come to symbolize what is our energy future, and what President
Obama is going to do on climate change," said activist Jane Kleeb of the
anti-pipeline organization Bold Nebraska, in a state where the Keystone
XL project would cut through predominantly agricultural areas.
At issue is the potential
for water and soil contamination from the 500,000 to 700,000 barrels of
crude oil that would traverse the pipeline each day.
Film director Josh Fox,
whose documentary "Gasland" examined the environmental impact of
hydraulic fracturing, also known as "fracking," was among protesters
with camera in hand. "I'm here doing a film on (McKidden's 350.org's)
"Do the Math," and the math tells us that we have more fossil fuels in
the ground than is supportable by the atmosphere without total
catastrophe and calamity," said Fox.
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