Organizations
What is an Organization?
These organizations are on the front lines, fighting the natural gas drilling from destroying our
neighborhoods, our water and our health.
Search for Organizations
Search here to find organizations in your area.
ORGANIZATION | DESCRIPTION | SCOPE |
---|---|---|
Slow Down the Fracking Frenzy
n.a. Athens, Ohio 45701 |
To encourage a public debate about fracking in Athens County and to work toward a moratorium of fracking until better knowledge about the risks and benefits of fracking is available. |
local |
Save Colorado from Fracking
Street Colorado Springs, Colorado 80901 |
A coalition of citizens who love Colorado. Goal: To unite all those who love Colorado to work together to save it from the numerous negative effects of oil and gas drilling. |
local |
Free the Planet / Ohio State Students Against Fracking
Columbus, Ohio 43201 |
Free the Planet is currently running the anti-fracking campaign Ohio State Students Against Fracking. |
local |
350.org Charlotte
6784928100 1704 Truman Road Charlotte, North Carolina 28205 |
We are fighting to keep Fracking illegal in North Carolina, and building the grassroots we'll need to take on the Big Fossil Fuel money in NC politics. |
local |
Shadbush Environmental Justice Collective
Street City, Pennsylvania 15201 |
The shadbush collective formed in the spring of 2010 out of a desire to develop a more radical response to the climate crisis and environmental injustice as they manifest in Pittsburgh and throughout our region. In many ways we came together around the immediate need to organize against natural gas drilling in the Marcellus Shale, which threatens even some of our own neighborhoods in Pittsburgh. This struggle is at the forefront of our work. But we do not wish to limit our work to a single campaign or issue – the destruction of communities and ecosystems under capitalism will not end with a single practice, nor will the “solutions” offered to us from above lead us to a sustainable future. Regionally, we see the need to work in solidarity with coalfield communities in Pennsylvania and throughout southern Appalachia, affected by longwall mining and mountaintop removal. Connecting struggles against coal and natural gas is critical to showing that no form of fossil fuel extraction, or consumption, is safe or clean. We also see a need to help grow community solutions to climate change and peak oil. In our city, we see the growth of so-called green businesses, development projects, and city programs heralded as the seeds of a green economy. However, these institutions often undermine our capacity for self-sufficiency by co-opting community projects and contributing to gentrification. We hope to support projects which truly build community sustainability and autonomy in Pittsburgh. |
local |