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Running “Off the Rails”

SwatchJunkies

March 13, 2014

ForestEthics released a new report yesterday, Off the Rails, detailing the threats posed to the Pacific Northwest by the various fossil fuel export projects currently operating in or proposed for our region. It catalogs the serious public safety, public health, pollution, and transportation disruption dangers these projects bring to Oregon, Washington, and British Columbia, as they have enjoyed astronomical and largely unchecked growth over the last several years.

Be sure to check out the whole report, which includes Sightline research, but highlights in their findings include:

  • Oil-by-rail shipments in the US have increased more than 4,100 percent over the last six years, with an estimated 400,000 rail cars of oil on America’s Class I railways in 2013 alone.
  • Four proposed coal terminals in the Northwest would export 108 million tons of coal every year via about 1,000 freighters through the Salish Sea and Pacific Coast.
  • 57 mile-plus-long coal and oil trains would travel through the region daily if all proposed export projects are built.

ForestEthics campaign director Matt Krogh summed up the enormity of what we are facing: “The pace of development proposals is dizzying—it is nearly impossible for the public to wrap their heads around it, let alone make choices about the risks they’re willing to expose themselves to.”

Let’s hope this report will help advance that conversation.

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SwatchJunkies

Talk to the Author

Eric de Place

Eric de Place spearheaded Sightline’s work on energy policy for two decades. A leading expert on coal, oil, and gas export plans in the Pacific Northwest, he is an authority on a range of issues connected to fossil fuel transport, including carbon emissions, local pollution, transportation system impacts, rail policy, and economics.

About Sightline

Sightline Institute is an independent, nonpartisan, nonprofit think tank providing leading original analysis of democracy, energy, and housing policy in the Pacific Northwest, Alaska, British Columbia, and beyond.

2 thoughts on “Running “Off the Rails””

  1. 4100%! that’s unbelievable. So for every car 6 years ago I guess there are 4100 today, right?

    I think the numbers are about 9000 back then and 400,000 today, which is about 41 times, close enough. But I guess that doesn’t look as impressive.

    • Hi, dubya. Well, 4,100 percent would be 41 times as much—same figure! So, for every 1 car six years ago, there are 41 today, not 4,100. For me, that’s still pretty astonishing…

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