Dear RALPH,. Endangered orca whales in the Northwest are being pushed to the brink of extinction by declining salmon runs, habitat loss and toxic pollution. Now the 90 remaining orcas in the Puget Sound face a new threat: proposals that would send as many as 100 million tons of coal each year on trains, barges, and supertankers along the Columbia River and Puget Sound spewing toxic coal dust and diesel emissions that would pollute the waters on which orcas rely. Help protect endangered orcas by signing the petition against construction of coal terminals in the Northwest. Thanks for all you do! Bob Fertik

National Wildlife Federation

Dear RALPH,

Endangered orca whales in the Northwest are being pushed to the brink of extinction by declining salmon runs, habitat loss and toxic pollution.

Now the 90 remaining orcas in the Puget Sound face a new threat: proposals that would send as many as 100 million tons of coal each year on trains, barges, and supertankers along the Columbia River and Puget Sound spewing toxic coal dust and diesel emissions that would pollute the waters on which orcas rely.

Help protect endangered orcas by signing the petition against construction of coal terminals in the Northwest.

Thanks for all you do!

Bob Fertik

National Wildlife Federation

Protect Endangered Orcas from Toxic Coal

Orca

Dear Activist,

Toxic chemicals and sharp declines in salmon have left the orcas that live in the waters of Puget Sound teetering on the edge of extinction—today, fewer than 90 whales remain.

Now Big Coal is planning to bring massive amounts of coal through the Northwest, which would pollute the waters and salmon that orcas depend on with toxic coal dust and soot.

Keep toxic coal pollution out of endangered orcas’ waters by signing the petition opposing these disastrous projects.

Right now, multimillion-dollar coal companies are forging ahead with plans to build massive coal terminals in the Northwest. If approved, as much as 100 million tons of coal per year would be transported by train from the Powder River Basin in Montana to massive terminals in Oregon and Washington, then loaded onto giant barges and shipped overseas—spewing coal and toxic pollution into orcas’ waters.

Not only would waterways from the Columbia River to Puget Sound be polluted, construction of the massive terminals would destroy crucial habitat. And when the coal is burned, it causes carbon pollution that drives climate change and mercury pollution that is already affecting salmon, orcas and many other species that depend on Northwest waters.

Fierce opposition in the Northwest from wildlife advocates like you has forced Big Coal to scrap some of its plans, but the fight for orcas is far from over. Three massive proposals are still on the table, and Big Coal is pulling out all the stops to push them through.

We can’t let Big Coal rake in profits at endangered orcas’ expense—sign the petition to stop coal exports through Northwest waters. 

Coal companies are spending millions of dollars to hide the full impacts of their coal export plans. Fortunately, these proposals are by no means a done deal. By demonstrating widespread opposition to our decision makers and the media, we can help stop proposed coal ports from harming orcas.

With proposals moving quickly and more popping up all the time, orcas urgently need our voices to show overwhelming national opposition to these dirty coal projects.

Add your voice TODAY—take action to protect critically endangered orcas from toxic coal. 

Thanks for all you do to protect wildlife.

Sincerely,

Andy Buchsbaum
Interim Executive Director, NWF Action Fund
info@nwa.org
Twitter: @wildlifeaction
Join us on Facebook

 

Comments

  1. What do you think we should do about our planet

Speak Your Mind

*