Guest post by Colette Pichon-Battle, Esq, the Executive Director of the Gulf Coast Center for Law & Policy. GCCLP is a non-profit law firm and justice center advocating for ecological equity for Gulf South communities.

Six years to the date of the BP Oil drilling disaster and the federal government has gone from being a part of injuring the people of the Gulf Coast to insulting us.  In 2010, the BP/Deepwater Horizon explosion showed how extreme energy extraction injures Gulf Coast workers, communities and ecosystems. Six years later,  we continue to witness the agony of fisherfolks, business owners and workers in the region as claims from the disaster are prolonged and denied.  

A few days ago, in New Orleans, the Bureau of Ocean and Energy Management (BOEM) hosted a public hearing on the proposed Outer Continental Shelf Oil and Gas Leasing Program for 2017-2022.  To add insult to the initial injury, the US Department of Interior is offering up hundreds of millions of acres in the Gulf of Mexico to allow for deeper oil and gas drilling in the region. What’s even more of an insult, is that later this week the US is slated to sign the Paris Accord acknowledging the need for national action as part of a global imperative to combat the impending impacts of climate change.
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We already feel the powerful impacts of climate change here in Louisiana. More than 10 years after Hurricane Katrina, we are still haunted by the fact that climate change worsens chronic justice issues and poses a particular threat to the way of life for residents of the Gulf Coast.  While BOEM holds its hearing to do more drilling in the Gulf of Mexico, Native American tribes in south Louisiana like the United Houma Nation are relocating from their historical homelands due to sea level rise and historic African American communities in New Orleans like Residents of Gordon Plaza are fighting multi-generational court battles to relocate due to the poisoning of their land and toxic exposure during extreme weather.

The extraction, refinement and burning of fossil fuels accelerates climate change – we know this.  We also know that offshore oil and gas operations negatively impact the local environment by contributing to land subsidence, coastal erosion, air and water pollution, and ecosystem disruptions.  The tension comes in balancing the economic impacts of oil and gas on local and national economies versus the human and ecological impact in a region too often used as this nation’s sacrifice zone. Communities of the Gulf Coast continue to fight oppressive government policies that have built the world’s most powerful companies while living in the nation’s poorest socioeconomic conditions – a combination of which has left us vulnerable to climate change.

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The Gulf South has sacrificed its land and people for long enough.  The negative financial, social, environmental and climate impacts of a solely extractive energy economy must no longer be ignored or denied.  The Gulf South Rising delegation to Paris reported that we have an opportunity to create a Renewable Energy future and restore democracy in our Gulf, for our nation and for our planet.  

The proposal for new offshore drilling in the Gulf and in the Arctic must be rejected. Sign this petition today to call on the federal government to stop new drilling on all of our coasts. Our business and government leaders must divine the courage to invest in a renewable energy economy with bold plans to decrease our dependence on fossil fuel extraction.  

The first step in achieving energy democracy is to listen to Louisiana’s most unique and cherished communities as they call for a just transition away from what is harming our coast and toward building healthy and sustainable communities.

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