Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Activist Locks Himself to Keystone XL Heavy Machinery Launching a 'Red River Showdown' Over KXL South

TUSHKA, OKLAHOMA--(ENEWSPF)--April 22 - On Earth Day 2013, to mark the close of the State Department’s public comment period for TransCanada’s proposed Keystone XL Northern Segment (KXL North) pipeline’s Environmental Impact Statement (EIS), an activist with the Great Plains Tar Sands Resistance has locked himself to a piece of Keystone XL heavy machinery in Oklahoma, temporarily halting work site construction. Alec Johnson, a 61-year old climate justice organizer from Ames, Iowa took direct action to defend the Red River in solidarity with the Mayflower, Arkansas community, which is currently reeling from last month’s massive tar sands spill. The disaster, due to a 22-foot long gash in ExxonMobil’s ruptured Pegasus tar sands pipeline, has resulted in chronic health problems for nearby residents and has left Lake Conway dangerous polluted.

“This is our environmental impact statement,” stated artist/activist and Great Plains Tar Sands Resistance spokesperson Richard Ray Whitman. “TransCanada claims its technology will prevent spills, but that same technology was used on the Pegasus line, too. That didn’t work, now, did it? We are taking a stand to protect our access to clean water. KXL South is already being constructed with or without the North, and the destruction of our waterways in its path is not a question of if, but when. No toxic pipeline is worth the gamble and no communities in Texas or Oklahoma deserve the fate of Mayflower, Arkansas.”
While the current fate of KXL North rests upon U.S. Presidential approval, KXL South’s now lies in the broad-spectrum opposition it has garnered in the form of legal cases as well as the grassroots civil disobedience campaigns by groups like Great Plain Tar Sands Resistance and Tar Sands Blockade. Should KXL North be permitted to start construction, these groups along with grassroots indigenous organizations, several Lakota Nation tribal councils, and over 60,000 others have pledged resistance in the form of non-violent direct action to halt pipeline construction.
International treaties like the Treaty to Protect the Sacred and strongly-worded tribal council resolutions like those recently passed by the Oglala and Ihanktonwan Oyate/Yankton Sioux General Councils pledging resistance to KXL North “by all means necessary” indicate a tremendous unity amongst Great Plains indigenous nations. The strong reactions come after years of inadequate consultation on the part of TransCanada with regards to impacts on the Lakota Nation communities by its toxic tar sands pipeline. In recognizing the dire threat to their first medicine, sacred water, the communities are also embracing the spirit of international solidarity with First Nation communities downstream from tar sands mining sites. After years decrying the chemical pollution and resulting destruction of traditional life ways from tar sands exploitation in what some affected indigenous peoples refer to as a “slow industrial genocide,” Cree and Dene Nations are experiencing an upsurge in sympathy and solidarity with their plight.
“I am personally amazed at how resistance to the Keystone XL tar sands pipeline and education as to what tar sands exploitation looks like continues to grow every day,” Johnson wrote in a statement prior to his action. “Because it would be irresponsible, we’re not stopping until the industry stops poisoning our futures with lies, unnecessary risks, and death for their profit. As long as the tar sands industry promises it will kill, we will blockade.”
http://www.enewspf.com/latest-news/latest-national/latest-national-news/42395-activist-locks-himself-to-keystone-xl-heavy-machinery-launching-a-red-river-showdown-over-kxl-south.html

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Ritchie Bros. offers online heavy equipment marketplace

Ritchie Bros. Auctioneers has launched an online website for heavy equipment sales that gives buyers and sellers an eBay-like experience for purchases of everything from helicopters to dump trucks.
The Burnaby-based auctioneer held the commercial launch of its online marketplace, EquipmentOne.com, in a webcast on Monday.
Chief strategic development officer Bob Armstrong walked participants through the workings of what he described as an innovative and unique addition to the used heavy equipment market.
Ritchie Bros. has a $4-billion-a year auction business specializing in industrial equipment, but Armstrong said although the company is the world's largest seller of used equipment, it has only a two-per-cent slice of the $200-billion-a-year global market.
"The size of the used-equipment market worldwide is colossal," he said.
Half of that market is handled through private negotiations between buyers and sellers.
"We recognized an opportunity because Ritchie Bros. has the reputation, knowledge and brand to bring to that side of the market."
Ritchie Bros. quietly launched the site Jan. 2, Armstrong said, but has spent the last three months refining it and getting feedback. During that period, the website did $10 million worth of transactions.
It has 606 listings, but includes links to other websites. However, its listing tool is available only to sellers in the United States at this time. Canadian sellers are expected to be able to list equipment later this year, with further international expansion planned for 2014.
Armstrong said Ritchie Bros. borrowed elements from existing buy-and-sell websites to develop its own portal. "We have taken advantage of all the great ideas that consumer websites and non-machinery equipment websites have used to create an awesome experience," he said. "It is quite different from what you are used to seeing in the equipment world."
Instead of kicking the tires of a log loader, a potential buyer has access to details about the equipment, high-resolution photos that can be zoomed in on, and market analysis showing what the going prices are for the displayed equipment. Negotiations are all visible, and Ritchie Bros. stands behind the process, Armstrong said.