Current:Home > ScamsChainkeen|Protesters Arrested for Blocking Railroad in Call for Oil-by-Rail Moratorium -MacroWatch
Chainkeen|Protesters Arrested for Blocking Railroad in Call for Oil-by-Rail Moratorium
Rekubit View
Date:2025-04-07 01:15:37
Twenty-one activists were arrested in Vancouver,Chainkeen Wash. on Saturday in a protest calling for a permanent moratorium on shipping oil by rail in Oregon and Washington, to protect people and the environment.
Approximately 100 protesters took part in the event, blocking trains along the Columbia River gorge. The protest followed the derailment of an oil train in the gorge on June 3 that erupted in flames, spilled 42,000 gallons of crude oil and forced hundreds of people to evacuate their homes.
The crash came three years after a derailment in Lac-Megantic, Quebec that killed 47 people in July 2013.
WATCH – Boom: North America’s Explosive Oil-by-Rail Problem
“It’s really important communities stand up and stop oil by rail because these trains are so unsafe,” said Mia Reback, a community organizer with Portland Rising Tide and 350 PDX! who took part in the event.
The derailment occurred 70 miles upstream from Vancouver on the opposite side of the river in Mosier, Oregon. Since then, Union Pacific, which owns and operates the tracks on the Oregon side of the river, voluntarily suspended oil-by-rail shipments through the gorge temporarily. On June 6, Oregon Governor Kate Brown and state lawmakers called on federal transportation officials to place a moratorium on oil train traffic in the gorge until they can determine what caused the derailment.
A letter from H.A. Gard of the Oregon Department of Transportation to federal rail administrator Mark Daniels on June 8 said preliminary results of an investigation suggest faulty bolts that connect the rail to underlying railroad ties was the cause. Gard also called on the U.S. Department of Transportation to impose a ban on all oil trains in Oregon until the cause of the bolt failures is understood.
The Federal Railroad Administration said its investigation of the derailment remains ongoing. “If FRA finds that railroads need to make operational changes, we will direct them to do so,” FRA spokesman Matthew Lehner said in a statement.
The derailment and subsequent protest come as energy companies Tesoro Corporation and Savage Companies are seeking approval to build the largest crude oil shipping terminal in North America in Vancouver, according to environmental group Earthjustice. The $210 million terminal would ship 360,000 barrels of crude oil per day from trains coming down the Columbia River gorge. The facility is one of several proposed rail-to-tanker terminals in the state spurred in part by the federal government’s recent lifting of a ban on exporting U.S. oil.
“There is an onslaught of proposed oil-by-rail terminals in Washington that has really become one of the hot-button issues in our state,” said Kristen Boyles, an attorney for Earthjustice.
The proposed facilities would add six to nine additional oil trains, each pulling approximately 100 tanker cars per day along the Columbia River gorge, Boyles said. Approximately three oil trains carried crude oil from the Bakken oil field in North Dakota down the river gorge each day prior to the June 3 derailment, according to Eric de Place, policy director of the Sightline Institute, an environmental think tank based in Seattle.
A new set of federal regulations were made final in May 2015 aimed at making oil by rail safer, ordering that the oldest railway cars be phased out, new braking systems be installed and mandating lower speed limits through urban areas. The industry complained that the changes were too expensive and activists argued they did not go far enough to ensure safety.
Boyles, who represents opponents of the proposed Vancouver transfer facility, said the crash near Mosier brought the issue home for local residents.
“I’m not sure we needed any more evidence that this possibility could happen since there had been plenty of other accidents across the nation showing the horrifying, propensity of this oil to explode and catch fire when there is a train derailment,” Boyles said. “But we had it right next door to where this proposal is being now vetted.”
The protesters said oil by rail along the Columbia River gorge should stop not only out of local environmental and safety concerns but also out of concern for climate change. The argument is that such infrastructure projects encourage higher U.S. production of oil and could boost world supplies for years.
“In December, at the Paris climate talks over 190 countries came together and set an agreement to limit global warming,” ideally to 1.5 degrees Celsius, Reback said. “However none of the policies laid out at the Paris climate talks get us anywhere near that goal, and communities are rising up to fill that gap.”
veryGood! (5)
Related
- The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
- South Carolina man suing Buc-ee's says he was injured by giant inflatable beaver: Lawsuit
- When might LeBron and Bronny play their first Lakers game together?
- Wyoming reporter resigned after admitting to using AI to write articles, generate quotes
- Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
- Groups opposed to gerrymandering criticize proposed language on Ohio redistricting measure
- Shine Bright With Blue Nile’s 25th Anniversary Sale— Best Savings of the Year on the Most Popular Styles
- College Football Playoff ranking release schedule: Dates, times for 2024 season
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- How Rumer Willis Is Doing Motherhood Her Way
Ranking
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Watch as frantic Texas cat with cup stuck on its head is rescued, promptly named Jar Jar
- Watch as the 1,064-HP 2025 Chevy Corvette ZR1 rips to 205 MPH
- West Virginia’s personal income tax to drop by 4% next year, Gov. Justice says
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Honolulu mayor vows tougher approach on homelessness
- Silk non-dairy milk recalled in Canada amid listeria outbreak: Deaths increased to three
- Neighbor reported smelling gas night before Maryland house explosion
Recommendation
Paris Hilton, Nicole Richie return for an 'Encore,' reminisce about 'The Simple Life'
Weeks into her campaign, Kamala Harris puts forward an economic agenda
Recalled cucumbers in salmonella outbreak sickened 449 people in 31 states, CDC reports
Groups opposed to gerrymandering criticize proposed language on Ohio redistricting measure
Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
Watch as frantic Texas cat with cup stuck on its head is rescued, promptly named Jar Jar
US prosecutors aim to try Mexican drug lord ‘El Mayo’ Zambada in New York, then in Texas
How Lubbock artists pushed back after the city ended funding for its popular art walk