Above photo: From twitter @DCMediaGroup
Note: The people of Lusby and the Cove Point region along with their allies do not want a fracked gas terminal turning their community into a sacrifice zone and shortening lives, creating chronic health problems and constantly risking a catastrophic incident. We need your help to stop Dominion. Get involved in the campaign to #DumpDominion at We Are Cove Point. You can donate there to help pay the bail and legal costs of those who repelled from the top level of Bank of America to drop the banner telling BoA to Drop Dominion.
Activists Suspended From Upper Deck of Stadium During Monday Night Football to Protest Bank of America Financing of Dominion LNG Export Terminal
We Are Cove Point demands Bank of America stop financing Dominion’s Cove Point LNG export terminal and other fracked gas infrastructure
CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA — In protest of Bank of America’s role in financing the planned liquefied natural gas (LNG) export facility in Cove Point, Maryland, activists from We Are Cove Point have suspended themselves from the upper deck of Bank of America Stadium during the Monday Night Football game between the Charlotte Panthers and the Indianapolis Colts. They dropped a banner that reads, “BoA: Dump Dominion, WeAreCovePoint.org,” that was seen by the stadium audience of more than 70,000 people.
Bank of America (NYSE: BAC) has played a major role in financing Dominion Resources (NYSE: D) and its $3.8 billion LNG export facility at Cove Point through Dominion Midstream (NYSE: DM). Bank of America is part of a consortium of banks that is lending Dominion up to $4 billion to finance several planned gas infrastructure projects. In June 2013, Bank of America also underwrote $275 million to contribute to the capital expense of the Dominion Cove Point facility. We Are Cove Point activists are now calling on Bank of America and other lending institutions to stop financing Dominion.
Since oil and gas prices have plummeted, industry experts have increasingly seen LNG export facilities as bad investments, and the financial sector has been inexplicably propping up the gas industry. As recently as August, a report from Bank of America itself warned that plummeting crude oil prices have hurt the prospects of LNG export projects. President and CEO Zin Smati of Engie’s GDF Suez Energy North America said, “You cannot ship gas from the United States anymore. … Nobody really is making money from LNG now. Certainly, we are not.”
We Are Cove Point protest makes it onto Monday night football:
Fire fighters are going to cut down the #DumpDominion NFL game protesters #MondayNightFootball pic.twitter.com/1dUBKCQaEl
— Polly Mosendz (@polly) November 3, 2015
Here’s some more video:
VIDEO: protestors dangling from Bank of America Stadium #Panthers #mondaynightfootball https://t.co/0DKDGDEzep — Caroline Vandergriff (@c_vandergriff) November 3, 2015
More from Anne Meador of DC Media Group: Fracktivists with Divestment Message Perform Sky-High Rappel in Bank of America Stadium.
Dominion Cove Point is a proposed LNG export terminal that is slated to send up to 1.8 billion cubic feet of LNG to Japan and India. The facility would be the only one in the world to be built in a densely populated area, in violation of basic safety siting standards. It would drive demand for harmful fracking across the Mid-Atlantic, emit more than 20 tons of hazardous air pollutants each year, and spew two million tons of greenhouse gases, making it Maryland’s fourth-largest climate polluter. LNG exports are predicted to increase domestic gas prices, resulting in economic loss for every major sector of the US economy besides the gas industry, according to a Navigant Consulting report commissioned by Dominion Cove Point and a NERA economic consulting report commissioned by the U.S. Department of Energy.
As more communities organize against the encroachment of gas infrastructure, Bank of America and other lending institutions are facing increasing pressure to stop financing dirty energy projects that negatively impact the lives and well-being of those living near export terminals, pipelines, compressor stations, fracking wells and gas-fired power plants.
A broad, strong coalition of people has been actively resisting Dominion Cove Point at every step since the fall of 2013. We Are Cove Point is a leading part of the effort to stop Dominion Cove Point and reclaim the Cove Point community from Dominion’s grip.
Participants in tonight’s action made the following comments:
“Bank of America is allowing companies like Dominion to operate without checks and balances,” said John Nicholson. “They are giving money directly to Dominion with full knowledge of the health and safety risks of building an LNG export facility, and they need to be accountable to that.”
Rica Madrid said, “America doesn’t need more cheap fuel on the market, and we especially don’t need to export those resources overseas. Dominion is building a facility that would contribute to the economic crisis our country is facing. Bank of America is financing the Cove Point LNG plant, and the surrounding community in Southern Maryland is forced to bear the human cost. This is unacceptable.”
Protestors made it down and were immediately arrested #Panthers #MondayNightFootball pic.twitter.com/8DkILb1fLo
— Caroline Vandergriff (@c_vandergriff) November 3, 2015
For more information, visit WeAreCovePoint.org and DumpDominion.org.
Source Article from https://www.popularresistance.org/breaking-activists-hang-from-stadium-to-protest-bofa/
Related posts:
Views: 0