Local groups and tribes hope to 'Just Transition' from coal to clean energy

Staff Report

Winslow Mail

FLAGSTAFF ­ Navajo and Hopi tribal members and regional and national renewable energy experts gathered at Northern Arizona University last week for the first step in bringing renewable energy to northern Arizona's Indian lands on a grand scale.

The Community Tribal Investment Workshop, assembled by the Flagstaff-based Just Transition Coalition, was in part an attempt to position the tribes to receive millions of dollars that hang in the balance following the closure of the Mojave Generating Station. The workshop participants believe there's no better way to reinvest money from past coal operations than to build a renewable energy program.

By the end of the workshop, the group of about 50 participants had sketched plans for a task force to oversee the development of a multi-level renewable energy program for the reservations. The summit also yielded copious directives for the task force, ranging from the preservation of core cultural values to various legal, political and outreach strategies to use in building renewable energy programs.

"We have a positive direction we can go. We're doing a good thing," said Andy Bessler, the Flagstaff-based Southwest Tribal Partnership Representative for the Sierra Club. "Having something like this gives me hope that we can provide helpŠ to make people's lives better. Renewable energy is a way to do that."

During the course of the workshop, participants attended several informational talks about the myriad intricacies of renewable energy policy. Among the presenters were Bob Gough, Co-director of Native Wind; Winona LaDuke, Program Director of the Honor the Earth Fund; Dick Lowry, Policy Analyst at Sharp Solar and Debby Tewa, Renewable and Tribal Energy Coordinator for the Arizona Department of Commerce Energy Office. Following the presentations, workshop participants broke into various subgroups based on their expertise and interests in order to record their experiences and suggestions for the benefit of the new task force.

The task force will be partly comprised of representatives from the groups that convened the workshop ­ including Northern Arizona University, the Just Transition Coalition, Grand Canyon Trust, Sierra Club, Black Mesa Water Coalition, Native Movement and the Natural Resource Defense Council. Its members will be charged to expand on the input from the workshop as it creates a detailed business proposal for renewable energy programs on northern Arizona's Indian reservations.

In part, such a plan will serve as a tool for justifying the acquisition of funds from the closure of the Mojave Generating Station. When it's implemented, the plan could result in any number of scenarios for the build-out of renewable energy. From converting the Generating Station to a solar or wind-solar hybrid plant, to empowering rural reservation families to invest in small-scale renewable energy systems, to manufacturing sufficient sustainable-generated electricity to sell to nearby power grids in Flagstaff and Winslow.

Bessler acknowledged that it's an ambitious effort, but he mirrored the optimism of the rest of the participants when he said, "There's no road map. There's no blueprint. We're just doing it."

Roger Clark, Air and Energy Program Director for the Grand Canyon Trust and Wahleah Johns of the Black Mesa Coalition made reference to the spiritual and cultural notion of planting seeds; in this case the seeds of renewable energy programs that will help sustain Arizona's tribes.

 For more information on the Just Transition Plan, log onto www.blackmesawatercoalition.org

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