Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Aerial Killing Season Could See Record Wolf Deaths

Watch our new video and help us stop the massacre

Sarah Palin is planning what could be the bloodiest aerial wolf killing season yet in Alaska.

Already this winter, aerial gunners in Alaska have slaughtered at least 47 wolves. More wolves were killed this past November than in any November in the past five years. And, under Governor Palin’s out-of-control wolf-killing program, nearly 600 more wolves could die before this year’s season is finished.

Wolves are dying right now, and we need your help to stop the killing.

Please
watch our new video and make a year-end tax-deductible contribution of $25.00, $50.00, $100.00 or whatever you can afford will help us end aerial killing of wolves and protect other imperiled wildlife.

With new leadership in Washington and unprecedented awareness about Governor’s Palin’s senseless killing programs, we’re now in a better position to stop this terrible, needless practice and save wolves.

With your support, we will…

  • Forcefully oppose efforts by Governor Palin and her Board of Game to arbitrarily kill even more wolves just to boost game populations for out-of-state hunting interests;
  • Shine the national spotlight on Governor Palin’s brutal wolf-killing programs and pressure her to end them;
  • Work with the incoming Obama/Biden Administration to close the loophole in the Federal Airborne Hunting Act that Governor Palin is exploiting to continue Alaska’s unfounded aerial wolf killing programs; and
  • Build support in Congress for the reintroduction and passage of the Protect America’s Wildlife Act (PAW), federal legislation to end aerial killing of wolves once and for all.

We need to raise $150,000 before December 31st to launch our new campaign in January to stop Palin’s planned wolf slaughter. Will you help?

Donate $25.00, $50.00, $100.00 or whatever amount you can afford today to help support these and other efforts to save wolves and other wildlife, and we’ll put your year-end tax-deductible contribution to work right away.

With your help, I know we can succeed. Together, we were able to stop Governor Palin’s ghastly $150 bounty for the severed paws of slaughtered wolves, block Palin’s stealth campaign to stifle the voice of Alaska’s citizens on wildlife issues and spotlight Palin’s support for aerial killing and other anti-wildlife policies in the national media.

And, with the help of caring people like you, our sister organization Defenders of Wildlife Action Fund was able to help stop Palin from becoming our next Vice President and spreading her anti-wildlife politics across the country.

We can win, but we can’t do it without you. Please make a tax-deductible contribution of whatever you can today to help us save wolves.

With Gratitude,

Rodger Schlickeisen, President Rodger Schlickeisen, President Signature

Rodger Schlickeisen
President
Defenders of Wildlife

P.S. Make a secure tax-deductible donation online today or call 1-800-385-9712 to donate over the phone.

Watch our new video on Palin’s terrible wolf-killing plans and find out how you can help stop them. Warning: Contains disturbing images.

You Can Help Stop the Killing...
Please watch our video, help us stop aerial killing of wolves, prevent this brutal practice from spreading to areas like Greater Yellowstone and help other wildlife with your tax-deductible, year-end contribution of...

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Southern forests stand a chance now

Dogwood Alliance needs you to take a stand for Southern forests today. We have a goal of 500 donations of any amount before the end of 2008. Everyone who donates - whether the amount is large or small - is entered to win one of Henry Beirenfeld's beautiful hand-turned wood pens. Every donation counts and helps us hold Big Paper accountable for the impacts irresponsible clear-cutting, toxic chemical application and conversion of life-supporting forests to sterile pine plantations in the South. Please donate now. Southern forests need you.

Before Dogwood Alliance Big Paper companies never gave a thought to how their decisions would impact the forests of the South or the communities - human or non-human-that depend on them. Dogwood Alliance gave the forests and communities of the South a chance for protection by shining the spotlight on the treasure of Southern forests and giving people a powerful way to communicate directly to the decision-makers of these companies, . Danna, Scot and Andrew talked about the amazing results we've achieved for the forests of the Cumberland Plateau and how now we are expanding that strategy for the protection of the forests of the Southern Swampland. You can watch the video here.

Please donate now to make sure Southern forests continue to stand a chance for protection.


More than a decade ago even we did not anticipate the level of success that we've been able to reach with our strategy. Before Dogwood Alliance Big Paper pretty much had free reign to do whatever they wanted to Southern forests. Constant opposition to regulation in the South left the most bio-diverse forests in North America unprotected from large scale clear-cutting and conversion to sterile monoculture tree plantations. The vast majority of our forests remain at the mercy of the marketplace. The forests of the South support more life than any other in North America and yet they continue to be chopped down, chipped up, made into paper and packaging that ends up, for the most part, in a landfill or littering the streets.

But we have achieved protection for some our forests and expect to see more protected as we continue to move the entire industry toward responsible, sustainable choices that can make a difference on the ground, in the forests, where it counts. A donation today will help Dogwood Alliance continue to hold Big Paper accountable in the South.

Southern forests stand a chance now because people like you took a stand. Thank you for helping us come so far. Will you make a donation now to help ensure that Dogwood Alliance can continue to give Southern forests a chance for protection.?


Sincerely,

Michelle Smith

Development Director

P.S. If you don't like making donations online you can drop your donation in the mail and still be eligible to win one of Henry's beautiful pens. Send your donation with your name, address, phone and email to: Dogwood Alliance, PO Box 7645, Asheville, NC 28801. You do not have to make a donation to be entered into the drawing. Official rules are here.

There's still time to help





Give a last minute lifesaving gift to the ASPCA
Give a last minute lifesaving gift to the ASPCA It's Not Too Late!
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PLEASE GIVE TODAY! THIS IS A LAST-MINUTE TAX BREAK THAT HELPS TO SAVE LIVES
Make a gift today!
Every single day, the ASPCA is there fighting for those who cannot speak for themselves. We are their voice! Because of generous supporters like you, we can continue to provide lifesaving programs, medical care and protection that abused, abandoned, lost and homeless pets desperately deserve.

You can still help make a difference in the fight to end animal cruelty and get a last minute tax deduction. Your gift today will help us continue our fight to put an end to all acts of cruelty and neglect. Animal lovers like you, who care passionately about protecting animals give us hope. Your commitment brings us one step closer each year to ending all forms of animal cruelty and finding permanent, loving homes for America's adoptable animals. Please help the ASPCA continue to fight cruelty with this last minute year end gift today!

Thank you for your support and happy holidays from the ASPCA!
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No time for half-measures

Be our Voice!
Please Donate

We've told them about the starving fur seals and endangered Steller sea lions, the humpback and fin whales, the sea otters and sea birds... all these animals who call the Bering Sea home and who depend on Alaskan pollock fish for survival. But the North Pacific Fishery "Management" Council says they can all do with less.

Last week the Council voted to reduce the 2009 Alaskan Bering Sea pollock catch limit by just 18.5 percent. For many that will do - for years the fishery council has buckled under industry pressure and taken no action. Greenpeace has been urging that the catch be reduced by 55 percent in the face of evidence that the entire pollock fishery is on the brink of collapse - This is no time for half measures.

Pollock is the world's largest food fishery. Used to make McDonald's fish sandwiches and frozen fish sticks, the population has decreased by a stunning 50 percent since last year. Factory fishing trawlers take over a million tons of pollock out of the ocean each year. The fish cannot reproduce and recover as quickly as they are being fished.

Greenpeace is determined to take our demands further, but we need your help. If you have not yet made a generous year-end gift, please click here and donate now. In these tough economic times, you know that Greenpeace will make every dollar you give count.

Thanks to the thousands of you who have already donated, we've been able to run advocacy ads on TV stations in Alaska and Washington, release a documentary of our work in the Bering Sea, deliver more than 18,000 supporter letters to the Council, send detailed comment briefings to the Council's scientific advisors, attend their meetings and present them a letter signed by more than 20 organizations and 60 ocean scientists.

Our success in Alaska will be because of the support you've given - please make a gift now so that we can increase the pressure and achieve lasting results to guarantee the survival of the Bering Sea. Change is in the air and we need to take full advantage. Please support us today.

Thank you,
John Hocevar
Oceans Campaigner


P.S. I also want to take this opportunity to thank you all for your great support in 2008 and to wish you the very best for 2009.

Drillers Eye Oil Reserves off California Coast

by: Jane Kay, The San Francisco Chronicle

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The federal government is taking steps to remove drilling restrictions from the Northern California coast. (Photo: UC Santa Barbara)

The federal government is taking steps that may open California's fabled coast to oil drilling in as few as three years, an action that could place dozens of platforms off the Sonoma, Mendocino and Humboldt coasts, and raises the specter of spills, air pollution and increased ship traffic into San Francisco Bay.

Millions of acres of oil deposits, mapped in the 1980s when then-Interior Secretary James Watt and Energy Secretary Donald Hodel pushed for California exploration, lie a few miles from the forested North Coast and near the mouth of the Russian River, as well as off Malibu, Santa Monica and La Jolla in Southern California.

"These are the targets," said Richard Charter, a lobbyist for the Defenders of Wildlife Action Fund who worked for three decades to win congressional bans on offshore drilling. "You couldn't design a better formula to create adverse impacts on California's coastal-dependent economy."

The bans that protected both of the nation's coasts beginning in 1981, from California to the Pacific Northwest to the Atlantic Coast and the Straits of Florida, ended this year when Congress let the moratorium lapse.

President-elect Barack Obama hasn't said whether he would overturn President Bush's lifting last summer of the ban on drilling, as gas prices reached a historic high. Sen. Ken Salazar, D-Col., Obama's pick as interior secretary and head of the nation's ocean-drilling agency, hasn't said what he would do in coastal waters.

The Interior Department has moved to open some or all federal waters, which begin 3 miles from shore and are outside state control, for exploration as early as 2010. Rigs could go up in 2012.

National marine sanctuaries off San Francisco and Monterey bays are off-limits in California. Areas open to drilling extend from Bodega Bay north to the Oregon border and from Morro Bay south to the U.S.-Mexico border.

Drilling foes say the impacts of explosive blasts from seismic air guns that map rock formations, increased vessel traffic and oil spills should be enough to persuade federal agencies to thwart petroleum exploration. California's treasured coast, with its migrating whales, millions of seabirds, sea otters, fish and crab feeding grounds, beaches and tidal waters, are at risk, Charter and other opponents say.

According to the Interior Department, coastal areas nationwide that were affected by the drilling ban contain 18 billion barrels of oil and 76 trillion cubic feet of natural gas in what the agency called yet-to-be-discovered fields. The estimates are conservative and are based on seismic surveys in the late 1970s and early 1980s, before the moratorium went into effect.

California's Share

The agency's last estimate puts about 10 billion barrels in California, enough to supply the nation for 17 months. That breaks down to 2.1 billion barrels from Point Arena in Mendocino County to the Oregon border, 2.3 billion from Point Arena south to San Luis Obispo County and 5.6 billion between there and Mexico.

"If you were allowed to go out and do new exploration, those numbers could go up or down. In most cases, you would expect them to go up," said Dave Smith, deputy communications officer of the Interior Department's Minerals Management Service, which oversees energy development in federal waters.

In California, any exploration and drilling would be close to shore, experts say. In contrast to the Gulf of Mexico, where drilling could occur in waters 10,000 feet deep, California's holdings lie on its narrow, shallow continental shelf, the underwater edge of land where creatures died over the millennia to produce the oil.

If the Interior Department decides to explore off California's coast, it could probably do so, some attorneys say. If a state objects to a lease plan, the president has the final say.

Once an area has been leased, the California Coastal Commission may review an oil company's plan to explore or extract resources to assess if it is consistent with the state's coastal management program. Conflicts can end up in court, said Alison Dettmer, the commission's deputy director.

Californians have generally opposed drilling since a platform blowout in 1969 splashed 3 million gallons of black, gooey crude oil on 35 miles of beaches around Santa Barbara, killing otters and seabirds. The destruction of shoreline and wildlife sparked activism and led to the creation of the Coastal Commission.

But when gas prices peaked a few months ago amid cries of "drill, baby, drill" at rallies for GOP presidential candidate John McCain and running mate Sarah Palin, 51 percent of Californians said they favored more offshore drilling, according to a survey by the Public Policy Institute of California.

In July, Interior Secretary Dirk Kempthorne jump-started the development of a new oil and natural gas leasing program and pushed up possible new coastal activity by two years.

The Interior Department is reviewing comments about which coastal areas to include in the next five-year leasing plan. Oil companies want all of the nation's coastal areas open and say they can produce oil offshore in a way that protects the environment. Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, who opposes new offshore development, has offered comments, as have environmental groups.

Obama's Energy Plans

Obama's administration and Congress will have the final say over which regions, if any, would be put up for possible lease sales. In Congress earlier this year, Salazar, Obama's nominee for interior secretary, supported a bipartisan bill allowing exploration and production 50 miles out from the southern Atlantic coast with state approval. The bill died.

"We've been encouraged that the president-elect has chosen Sen. Salazar," said Dan Naatz, vice president for federal resources with the Independent Petroleum Association of America, a group with 5,000 members that drill 90 percent of the oil and natural gas wells in the United States. "He's from the West, and he understands federal land policy, which is really key."

During this year's presidential campaign, Obama was bombarded by questions about high gas prices and said new domestic drilling wouldn't do much to lower gasoline prices but could have a place in a comprehensive energy program.

After introducing his green team of environment and energy chiefs recently, Obama said the foundation of the nation's energy independence lies in the "power of wind and solar, in new crops and new technologies, in the innovation of our scientists and entrepreneurs and the dedication and skill of our workforce."

He spoke of moving "beyond our oil addiction," creating "a new, hybrid economy" and investing in "renewable energy that will give life to new businesses and industries."

Obama didn't mention oil drilling. When a reporter asked him if he would reinstate the moratorium, he said he wasn't happy that the moratorium was allowed to lapse in Congress without a broader thought to how the country was going to reduce dependence on fossil fuels.

He reiterated his campaign position that he was open to the idea of offshore drilling if it was part of a comprehensive package, adding that he would turn over the question to his team.

In the 1970s and 1980s, before the moratorium on offshore drilling fully took effect, the federal government produced a series of maps showing areas in California of prospective interest to the oil industry. Those maps offer clues to where oil companies would bid if they had the opportunity.

North Coast

The last proposed lease sale in 1987, thwarted by the moratorium, would have opened 6.5 million acres off the North Coast. Off Mendocino and Humboldt counties, the tracts for sale lay from 3 to 27 miles offshore, and some of the 24 planned platforms, some of them 300 feet tall and each with dozens of wells, would have been visible from land.

Tourism and commercial fisheries would have been affected, according to an environmental review then, while as many as 240 new oil tanker trips from Fort Bragg and Eureka to San Francisco Bay refineries were predicted under the full development scenario. The probability of one or more spills occurring would be 94 percent for accidents involving 1,000 barrels or more, according to documents.

Rep. Lois Capps, D-Santa Barbara, a member of the House Natural Resources Committee, recently said oil drilling will be part of a comprehensive energy policy focusing on renewable sources, but she would like to see drilling occur only on land and in the Gulf of Mexico where infrastructure is in place.

Capps well remembers the Santa Barbara spill almost 40 years ago.

"I was living in Goleta. I just had two children, and my husband was a young professor at UC Santa Barbara. It was a devastating experience," she said. "The birds and other animals got trapped in the oil. So many people waded out in boots just inch by inch trying to rescue our wildlife. It ruined our tourism for many years.

"I think about it all the time, especially last week when we had had a spill at the same platform. It was a small spill, 1,000 gallons, but it was a wake-up call."