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'Hands Across the Sand' Protests Against Offshore Oil Drilling Returns

An annual protest against oil drilling off Florida's coasts will once again be held Saturday. Clearwater Beach will host one of the main events for

The event was born in the aftermath of the BP Gulf oil spill, and participants are trying to ensure there won't be a repeat. People will hold hands on beaches around the state, including Tarpon Springs, Palm Harbor, Indian Rocks Beach and Treasure Island. The main event will start at 11:30 a.m. on Clearwater Beach.

Among the dignitaries taking part there will be U.S. Senator Bill Nelson; Clearwater Mayor George Cretekos; Pinellas County Commissioners Pat Gerard and Janet Long; and Renee Flowers, chair of the Pinellas County School Board.

The event, which began in Florida, has now spread to 17 other states and seven countries.

Here's an excerpt from their

Hands Across the Sand / Land, founded in 2010, grew into an international movement after the BP oil disaster in April of that year. People came together to join hands, forming symbolic barriers against spilled oil and to stand against the impacts of other forms of extreme energy.

Seven years later, as millions begin to understand that President Trump’s Climate Action Plan falls short if it fails to address keeping dirty fuels in the ground, there’s a rising tide of grassroots activism demanding that we choose a clean energy future over the dangerous and dirty fuels of the 20th century.

The coalition of organizations, activists and citizens around the world bring the message of clean energy to local and world leaders.

We invite activists to organize hundreds of events and Join Hands creating a powerful image to send to our elected officials.

We invite activists to call for the President to maintain the Paris Climate Accord, reject offshore drilling, the KXL and other tar sands pipelines, hydraulic fracking, siesmic air gun blasting and call on local and state leaders to protect  our communities by rejecting projects that expand the extraction and use of fossil fuels — and instead accelerate the shift to clean, renewable energy.

In addition, these events will highlight urgent national and regional issues including:

opposing coastal, offshore and Arctic drilling, and seismic air gun blasting off the East Coast, natural gas fracking, KXL and all oil transporting pipelines protesting mountaintop removal, tar sands mining, hydraulic fracturing, and  LNG export terminals

And calling attention to the impact of climate disruption such as rising sea levels, super storms, drought, forest fires, flooding and ocean acidification.

Map of locations for Saturday's event
Credit Hands Across the Sand
Map of locations for Saturday's event

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Steve Newborn is WUSF's assistant news director as well as a reporter and producer at WUSF covering environmental issues and politics in the Tampa Bay area.