NMIPL IN THE NEWS

KUNM to Feature Stockholm Water Prize Winner on Friday

On KUNM-AM Radio’s “New Mexico People, Places and Ideas,” Friday, July 2, at 8:00 a.m.

Corrales resident Sandra Postel is the winner of the Stockholm Water Prize, considered the Nobel Prize for water is a special guest on this program on Friday morning. Host Stephen Spitz will begin the discussion with Ms. Postel’s latest book, “Replenish—the Virtuous Cycle of Water and Prosperity“.

Further discussion will include: will there be enough fresh water for the ever growing world population and what is the outlook for New Mexico and the Western United States? All this and much more, with special guest Sandra Postel. Produced with assistance of Tristan Clum and Lynn Schibeci.

Watch a Video of “Clearing the Air, Episode 1”

New Mexico is working toward oil and gas methane pollution rules that will protect health and also address climate change! Learn more and join NM IPL in acting.

LTE in Albuquerque Journal on Danger of Methane Emissions

(Kayley Shoup, an organizer for Citizens Caring for the Future, an affiliate of New Mexico Interfaith Power & Light, published this letter to the editor in the Albuquerque Journal on June 29).

A daily threat

Emissions Pose Threats to Frontline Communities

By Kayley Shoup

Carlsbad Resident

I am an organizer with Citizens Caring for the Future in Southwest New Mexico. Citizens Caring for the Future is a group of engaged citizens in the Permian (Basin) that seeks to find an informed and safe path to ensure protections for our community in the face of rapid oil and gas development. I was born and raised in Carlsbad, and I’m here to tell you that life in the middle of one of the most active oil fields in the world is an absolutely harrowing experience.

Just this month I was out in the oil fields of the Permian with Earthworks looking for emission events. It was upward of 105 degrees every single day. Prior heat records were being broken. It was something else to quite literally be feeling the effects of climate change while also seeing through a FLIR video camera the emissions that are significantly contributing to that climate change. It was memorable to say the least.

As I drove home from the oil fields each night, I thought about how scared I was that my community is breathing the emissions I had just seen into our lungs every single day. I thought about how so few people in my tiny hometown realize what danger our health is in. The risks are not communicated by industry or the agencies that are supposed to protect us. I thought about the oilfield workers that are directly exposed to the pollution every single day, and how their lives might be upended by disease in the future.  I thought about how many emissions events I had seen in just one day, and the I shuddered remembering there is only one air monitor in my town and no air inspectors in New Mexico who live in the Permian.

I thought about how cancer runs in my family, and how the pollution I’m exposed to may ensure I die young. I thought about my 51-year-old mother who has just finished treatment for ovarian cancer, and how terrified I am that pollution could contribute to the recurrence of her cancer. I thought about how everyday I am learning my community is a sacrifice zone.

I naively thought I was being protected by federal and state environmental agencies. I blindly trusted my government and I blindly trusted industry, but sometimes the truth slaps you in the face and wakes you up. I am involved today because living in a frontline community has awakened me to the fact some communities, some families, some human beings really are seen as disposable. I’ve seen first-hand a culture that values the state of the economy more than a child’s life. I realized something was wrong when I pieced together that I knew more young people with rare and aggressive cancers than the total number of people my 80-year-old grandmother has known throughout her life that had cancer.  This is a reality for you people on the front lines. Whether or not they realize that the devastation they face in their life could well be attributed to pollution caused by emissions does not change the fact that devastation exists.

Methane rules are more than just rules. These rules mean a mother doesn’t have to watch her child go through leukemia. They could mean a young man doesn’t lose his hardworking father at a young age. They could mean a grandmother could breathe easy into her old age. They could mean a young couple’s dream of a family isn’t dashed by reproductive issues.

Frontline communities suffer the most when common-sense action isn’t taken, but because of climate change everyone in the world is essentially living in a sacrifice zone in one way or another, whether their community is constantly threatened by natural disaster or riddled with disease. Methane emissions affect us all. I hope the EPA chooses to take bold and swift action to make methane rules that sustain life.

 

 

 

Carlsbad Current Argus. Sep. 3, 2020 New Mexico finalizes oil and gas wastewater regulations, lawmakers hear testimony (Rev. Nick King Quoted)

Las Cruces Sun-News,  Aug. 19, 2020, Report on solving climate crisis brings hope (Co-authored by Michael Sells, Clara Sims and Edith Yanez)

Santa Fe New Mexican, Aug. 15, 2020 Vote your values this November  (Commentary by Larry Rasmussen and Tabitha Arnold)