Environment Magazine

Two Lifelong Oklahomans Halt Construction of Keystone XL Work Site

Posted on the 16 April 2013 by Earth First! Newswire @efjournal

Eric and Gwen Stop KXL ManchinesCross Posted from gptarsandsresistance

UPDATE 10:30 AM – Firetruck on the way. Police have blocked the road and are turning back locals trying to get through.

UPDATE 10:00 AM – Police and ambulance on scene. Not sure why the ambulance is here; nobody is hurt. A dozen workers and half a dozen police officers also on scene.

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UPDATE 9:00 AM - Eric is holding strong on a tower 40 feet off the ground in the middle of the Keystone XL construction site

UPDATE 8:30 AM – Gwen is locked to KXL heavy machinery in solidarity with those affected by toxic tar sands spills

Gwen’s is holding strong and displaying a sign calling on others to remember the Kalamazoo tar sands spill and protect the all the rivers that are threatened by Keystone XL’s toxic path.

Gwen Locked Down

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Oklahoma Native Eric Whelan before his direct action in Bennington, Oklahoma

BRYAN COUNTY, OK – Tuesday, April 16, 2013, 8:00AM – Two lifelong Oklahomans have effectively halted construction on an active work site for TransCanada’s Keystone XL tar sands pipeline in Bennington, Oklahoma.

Eric Whelan, 26, who grew up in McLoud, Okla., has ascended 40 feet into the air in an aerial blockade that began at dawn this morning.

Gwen Ingram of Luther, Okla., 56, has locked herself to heavy machinery and shut down the construction site.

Today’s event marks the fourth act of civil disobedience by Great Plains Tar Sands Resistance and comes in the wake of the disastrous tar sands pipeline spill in Mayflower, Arkansas.  For the last three weeks, over 300,000 gallons of tar sands diluted bitumen have spilled into a residential neighborhood and local waterways.

“Keystone XL sounded like a bad idea from the beginning,” explained Whelan. “The Mayflower spill proves that we shouldn’t be trusting these multi-national corporations, like Exxon or TransCanada, because every spill further exposes their criminal incompetence. Now, TransCanada wants to build a toxic pipeline through the center of the country.

“I’m taking action to prevent a tragedy like that from happening in Oklahoma.”

The tar sands’ corrosive nature makes pipelines more prone to leaks than transporting crude oil, as evidenced by the Exxon’s Pegasus pipeline burst in Mayflower, Ark.

Luther resident Gwen Ingram before her direct action in Bennington, Oklahoma.

When spills inevitably do occur, the heavier diluted bitumen sinks in water and into the water table. Keystone XL’s proposed route cuts through the heartland of North America, crossing the Arbuckle Simpson and Edwards Trinity Aquifer in Oklahoma.

“The Keystone XL tar sands pipeline would carry the dirtiest fuel on the planet from Canada to America’s Gulf Coast’s refineries and ports, and then overseas for export,” said Gwen Ingram, before locking herself to TransCanada’s heavy machinery.

“I simply won’t allow this pipeline to cross our precious rivers; the North and South Canadian, The Red River, The Cimmaron and threaten our drinking water.”


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