Indigenous, community and conservation groups called on New Mexico’s congressional delegation today to oppose bailing out fossil fuel companies with emergency aid during the coronavirus pandemic.
In newspaper ads in the Santa Fe New Mexican and through a social media blitz, the groups called on the state’s U.S. House and Senate members to safeguard New Mexicans by focusing stimulus money on public health, families, workers and just-transition jobs and training. The oil industry is requesting financial aid and deregulation from the Trump administration.
Fracking has caused searing controversy in northwestern and southeastern New Mexico as industrialization and pollution threaten communities, public health, sacred sites, public lands and wildlife.
A recent study found that greenhouse gas pollution from future oil and gas development in New Mexico will thwart efforts to limit warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius and could exceed Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham’s 2030 emissions target by a factor of 10.
Groups participating in the newspaper ad buy include the Western Environmental Law Center, Diné Citizens Against Ruining Our Environment, Climate Advocates Voices Unidas, New Mexico Interfaith Power and Light, Progress Now New Mexico, Center for Biological Diversity, Oil Change International, Tewa Women United, Food & Water Action and WildEarth Guardians.
“The American people deserve political leadership that puts people over polluters and has the foresight to confront the great challenge our country is facing: a confluence of pandemic, economic and climate crises,” said Erik Schlenker-Goodrich, executive director at the Western Environmental Law Center. “Our political leadership must be able to chew gum and walk at the same time, knowing that the path to a thriving American future is in understanding our confluence of crises and charting a path that addresses each of them.
“Efforts to bail out oil producers in New Mexico during the time of COVID-19 is unconscionable, especially when the legitimate concerns of native communities with respect to the adverse impacts to their health, environment, social and cultural landscape caused by decades of oil and gas development have been ignored for too long by industry and federal agencies,” said Samual Sage, vice president at Diné Citizens Against Ruining Our Environment. “This is just downright wrong. Enough is enough. We sincerely hope our political leadership put people first.”
“Not one dollar of public money should go to fossil fuel billionaires trying to shamelessly profit off this crisis,” said Taylor McKinnon, a public lands campaigner at the Center for Biological Diversity. “New Mexico’s delegation must take the lead to ensure that emergency federal aid during the coronavirus pandemic helps people, not corporate polluters.”
“Ensuring stimulus funds flow directly to the vulnerable communities that need them most is quite literally a life-and-death issue,” said Collin Rees, a campaigner at Oil Change International. “Bailing out the failing oil and gas industry to line the pockets of Big Oil CEOs would be an unconscionable disaster. New Mexico’s delegation needs to make clear it stands with working people and marginalized communities, not big polluters.”
“While the whole world is dealing with a public health crisis, the oil and gas industry is looking for another bailout to continue fracking forever,” said Rebecca Sobel, a climate and energy campaigner for WildEarth Guardians. “Right now New Mexico is losing money by allowing more oil and gas extraction, while contributing to toxic pollution and climate change. It is shameful to consider furthering polluter profits as relief support when the oil and gas industry is killing people.”
“Millions of Americans are hurting while Donald Trump and congressional Republicans shovel billions of taxpayer dollars to rescue the fracking industry and Wall Street speculators. These giant corporations cannot be allowed to destroy our climate,” said Margaret Wadsworth at Food and Water Action. “In New Mexico fracking is damaging our air, our water and our sacred lands. New Mexico’s elected officials must join the fight to make sure that all New Mexicans are protected during this crisis, not oil and gas corporations.”
Contacts:
Erik Schlenker-Goodrich, Western Environmental Law Center, (575) 770-1295, gro.w1732517400alnre1732517400tsew@1732517400gskir1732517400e1732517400
Taylor McKinnon, Center for Biological Diversity, (801) 300-2414, gro.y1732517400tisre1732517400vidla1732517400cigol1732517400oib@n1732517400onnik1732517400cmt1732517400
Samuel Sage, Diné Citizens Against Ruining Our Environment, (505) 360-5865, moc.l1732517400iamto1732517400h@ega1732517400sleum1732517400as1732517400
Collin Rees, Oil Change International, (308) 293-3159, gro.l1732517400iofoe1732517400cirp@1732517400nillo1732517400c1732517400
Margaret Wadsworth, Senior Organizer, Food and Water Action, (505) 750-2980, gro.h1732517400ctaww1732517400f@htr1732517400owsda1732517400wm1732517400
Rebecca Sobel, WildEarth Guardians, (505) 216-6826, gro.s1732517400naidr1732517400aught1732517400raedl1732517400iw@le1732517400bosr1732517400