Spread the word » Facebook Twitter
logo and head

Friend,

Did you see the news? President Obama completely reversed course, thanks in large part to the tens of thousands of us who emailed and signed petitions online to make the entire Atlantic Ocean off-limits to offshore drilling plans.* This is exactly the kinds of action we need from the President.

If you've ever doubted that we can get this President to to secure his legacy on climate change by keeping fossil fuels in the ground -- doubt no more. But this victory only came as a result of public pressure. If we want Obama to do even more during the last 310 days of his presidency, we need to ask him to save the Arctic and the Gulf too. Let’s find out if we can go two for two.

Will you help? Click here to sign on as part of our ObamaClimateLegacy campaign and ask the President to keep on keeping fossil fuels in the ground!

Thanks,

Drew and the climate KING crew at Environmental Action

PS - A longer email explaining the campaign details and with more footnotes is below, in case you want to send it to any friends as well.

* Associated Press, U.S. bars oil drilling off Atlantic coast in victory for environmentalists, March 15, 2016


President Obama's legacy as a climate leader hinges on whether he cancels all drilling, mining and fracking on our public lands and waters. And he's got a little over 300 days to do it. Click here to sign our petition before March 29 and send the message that we need to keep fossil fuels in the ground.

Friend,

Take a moment to consider this: we're winning the fight against fossil fuels: Global prices for oil, fracked gas and coal so low that companies are going out of business.1 And in the last nine months alone, President Obama has rejected the Keystone pipeline, canceled Arctic drilling, and paused all new coal mining on public lands.2

That's an amazing start. But scientists tell us it's just the down-payment on the climate legacy Obama needs. To avoid the worst impacts of global warming and save the planet, scientists tell use we must keep 80 percent (or more) of fossil fuels in the ground.3 President Obama can do a lot of that by banning extreme energy extraction on public lands and waters, but he's running out of time.

Barack Obama has just 315 days left in office. That's why we're teaming up with a huge coalition of allies to urge the President to secure his climate legacy by keeping fossil fuels safely in the ground. If we can gather 100,000 signatures before the end of the month, President Obama will be forced to respond with a plan to keep fossil fuels in the ground.

President Obama has shown again and again that when we join together and demand environmental action - when the whole world is watching - he can rise to the occasion and do what’s right. Sign here to demand the President to halt all drilling, mining and fracking on our public lands and waters before leaving office.



Last November, when Obama rejected the Keystone XL pipeline, he said, “If we’re going to prevent large parts of this earth from becoming not only inhospitable but uninhabitable in our lifetimes, we’re going to have to keep some fossil fuels in the ground rather than burn them and release more dangerous pollution into the sky.”4

A lot of us were surprised, and pleased, to hear the President use the phrase "Keep it In the Ground," which has become a rallying cry of sorts for climate activists and eco-warriors around the world. Two months later, we cheered again when Secretary Sally Jewell, of the Interior Department, announced a moratorium on new coal leases on federal land pending a review the coal program’s climate impacts.

Keystone was the first international oil pipeline vetoed due to climate concerns. The coal leasing pause was the first time climate change was cited as a reason to keep fossil fuels in the ground.

And the whole idea makes a ton of sense. A 2015 report showed that in order to keep global temperatures from rising more than 2°C, which is after all what President Obama and every other world leader just committed to in Paris last December, 80 percent of the planet’s fossil fuel reserves must remain underground.5 All that's missing is a sweeping Executive Order from the President of the United States that connects the dots: If Keystone is too dirty, and coal leases are too dangerous for our climate -- then it's time to halt all extreme energy extraction on public lands and waters and bring our energy policy in line with our climate ambitions.

We’ve connected our website to the White House’s “We the People” platform so that once we hit 100,000 signatures, the President is required to respond. But we need all the signatures in a single month, and we're still about 45,000 signatures from our goal. So we need you to sign, and share the campaign with your networks online, right away this week. Click here to sign on and be counted.

Thanks for getting down to Keep it In The Ground,

Drew and the climate KING crew at Environmental Action

1 - Katie Valentine, Why 175 Oil And Gas Companies Could Go Bankrupt This Year, Think Progress, February 16, 2016
2 - Coral Davenport, In Climate Move, Obama Halts New Coal Mining Leases on Public Lands, The New York Times, January 14, 2016
3 - Brad Plumer, The world’s climate scientists explain how to avoid drastic global warming. It’s not easy. The Washington Post, September 27, 2013
4 - Drew Hudson, Obama just blocked the Keystone XL oil pipeline, Environmental Action Blog, November 6, 2015
5 - Christophe McGlade & Paul Ekins, The geographical distribution of fossil fuels unused when limiting global warming to 2 °C, Nature, January 8, 2015

FacebookTwitter

You can support our work today by making a secure online contribution.

Click here to unsubscribe