Energy Justice News 

Energy justice builds upon the environmental justice and climate justice movement’s outstanding work to protect the human right to a clean and healthy environment and fight against corporate extraction and pollution of our precious resources. Energy justice includes racial, economic, and social justice together in its aim to end energy burdens and inequities. It is crucial that we are able to critically look at our energy system, and analyze where our energy comes from, who uses it, and what exploitation lies in the current system.

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The main squeeze: Decolonizing Hawaiʻi’s energy transition
Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter

The main squeeze: Decolonizing Hawaiʻi’s energy transition

After 30 years since its first publication, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has finally acknowledged “colonialism" not only as a driver of the climate crisis, but also as an ongoing issue that exacerbates communities’ vulnerability to it. With hundreds of scientists and leaders from 195 countries around the world meticulously creating these reports, this acknowledgement is huge. Within this massive 3,600-page document, the IPCC informs how the world must engage Indigenous peoples and local communities if society is to have any chance at curbing the worst of climate destabilization.

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Energy justice in the news
Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter

Energy justice in the news

During the waning days of the 2022 legislative session, a bill to protect coffee — one of the state’s most valuable cash crops — was alive by a thread. Sponsored by Rep. Nicole Lowen, a Big Island lawmaker who chairs the House Energy and Environmental Protection Committee, the original measure called for tightening labeling laws to ensure that coffee labeled as, say, Kona coffee, included at least 51% coffee grown there.

By the end of session the Senate had watered down Lowen’s bill to a measure calling for a study. And with House and Senate conference committee members at an impasse on April 28 — the day before all bills faced a pass-or-fail deadline — something unusual happened.

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Follow the money
Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter

Follow the money

$1.2 Billion - Hawaiian Electric Light Company (HELCO) estimates the revenue requirements for the Hu Honua biomass facility on Hawaiʻi Island would exceed $1.2 billion over the 30-year term of the Power Purchase Agreement and would be collected from customers.

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Word of the month: Decolonization
Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter

Word of the month: Decolonization

Fundamentally, decolonization is a principled process and daily practice of undoing colonialism- “cultural, psychological, and economic freedom” for Indigenous people with the goal of achieving Indigenous sovereignty — the right and ability of Indigenous people to practice self-determination over their land, cultures, and political and economic systems.

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Learn more: Watch & listen
Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter

Learn more: Watch & listen

Listen: What Could Possibly Go Right? Conversations with Cultural Scouts Episode 79 with Stacy Mitchell

Watch: Ahupuaʻa Energy Systems & Building Local Power

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