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cbabe

(3,543 posts)
Thu Mar 28, 2024, 11:02 AM Mar 28

Climate protesters block Amazon's Seattle HQ to oppose fossil fuel plans

https://www.kuow.org/stories/climate-protesters-block-amazon-s-seattle-hq-to-oppose-fossil-fuel-plans

Climate protesters block Amazon’s Seattle HQ to oppose fossil fuel plans

Amy Radil
March 27, 2024 / 5:10 pm

A few dozen climate protesters blocked entrances to Amazon headquarters in Seattle for over an hour Wednesday, chanting “No fracking gas!” as they draped banners and stood across the doorways. They called on company leaders to do more to meet Amazon’s carbon emissions targets. But regular employees denied entrance to their offices were not amused by the tactic.

Protest organizers are part of a new organization called Troublemakers and said they’re trying to send a message to Amazon leadership. The group defines its focus as non-violent civil disobedience intended to raise awareness about the perils of climate change. Specifically, protesters pressed Amazon to abandon plans to use natural gas from a regional pipeline project recently approved by federal regulators — TC Energy’s Gas Transmission Northwest Xpress pipeline expansion.

Amazon is planning to use the pipeline bringing natural gas from Canada to power its new data centers in Oregon. “They use a huge amount of power, these data centers, huge amount, so that power needs to be from renewable energy," Troublemakers’ Margo Polley said.

In a statement, Amazon spokesperson Lisa Levandowski responded, noting that the company already embraces renewable energy and other tactics to combat climate change.

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Climate protesters block Amazon's Seattle HQ to oppose fossil fuel plans (Original Post) cbabe Mar 28 OP
Good on the Troublemakers! Quakerfriend Mar 28 #1
My deepest gratitude to these Troublemakers. Think. Again. Mar 28 #2
Why not hydro? They're right next to the Columbia River. mahatmakanejeeves Mar 28 #3

Think. Again.

(8,149 posts)
2. My deepest gratitude to these Troublemakers.
Thu Mar 28, 2024, 11:22 AM
Mar 28
"Do not get lost in a sea of despair. Be hopeful, be optimistic. Our struggle is not the struggle of a day, a week, a month, or a year, it is the struggle of a lifetime. Never, ever be afraid to make some noise and get in good trouble, necessary trouble." -John Lewis

mahatmakanejeeves

(57,461 posts)
3. Why not hydro? They're right next to the Columbia River.
Thu Mar 28, 2024, 02:57 PM
Mar 28

Because:

OREGON TECH
One of Oregon’s smallest utilities is suddenly among the state’s biggest polluters. Why? Amazon data centers

Updated: Feb. 18, 2024, 10:08 p.m.|Published: Feb. 17, 2024, 6:02 a.m.


Amazon has 10 data centers in Morrow and Umatilla counties and is planning 10 more. They're mostly powered by fossil fuels and transmission constrains mean it could take years to shift the data centers to renewable energy. Dave Killen / The Oregonian

By Mike Rogoway | The Oregonian/OregonLive

The rolling hills along the Columbia River in northeastern Oregon boast golden fields and farms, quiet valleys and rippling creeks — and very few people. ... Yet the region also bears an enormous, and growing, carbon footprint. ... The rural area’s power utility became one of the state’s big polluters beginning in 2018. By 2020 its carbon emissions had doubled. In 2021, it doubled again. ... The Umatilla Electric Cooperative is responsible for 1.8 million tons of carbon emissions annually, according to newly released state data, even though it has just 16,000 customers. It’s now the third-largest emitter of greenhouse gases among all Oregon utilities because of one of those customers: Amazon.

The soaring greenhouse gases are a byproduct of Oregon tax policy and represent a profound setback for the state’s energy aspirations. Amazon has capitalized on hundreds of millions of dollars in local tax breaks to subsidize a constellation of enormous, power-hungry data centers around the cities of Boardman and Hermiston, areas where the regional power grid has little access to renewable energy. ... Data centers’ power demands have upended Oregon’s fight against global warming, exposing the limitations of the state’s electrical grid and the state’s hope to move toward clean power.

Oregon is many years away from meaningfully expanding its transmission capacity, and with Amazon planning at least 10 more data centers in the region, eastern Oregon’s carbon footprint is poised to continue soaring. ... “It is really concerning and emblematic of the broader issue that we’re seeing in terms of Oregon’s ability to achieve its climate goals,” said Nora Apter, climate program director for the Oregon Environmental Council. She said Oregon regulators and lawmakers haven’t created policies and incentives that encourage economic growth powered by renewable energy.

Both Amazon and Umatilla Electric say they’re committed to fighting climate change and to finding clean energy to power the data centers. Just this month, Amazon announced a deal to start buying renewable power from a wind farm in neighboring Gilliam County. ... While that purchase will meet as little as 4% of Amazon’s existing electricity needs, climate advocates say the data centers might ultimately become powerful forces in the drive to upgrade Oregon’s transmission networks for renewable energy.

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