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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February 2023

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Term of the month: Climate Resilient Development
Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter

Term of the month: Climate Resilient Development

A solutions framework recently developed by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) to reframe how we consider working towards climate adaptation and mitigation. “The prospects for effective action improve when governments at all levels work with citizens, civil society, educational bodies and scientific institutions, the media, investors and businesses and form partnerships with traditionally marginalized groups, including women, youth, Indigenous Peoples, local communities and ethnic minorities. In such a societal setting, scientific, Indigenous and local knowledge and practical knowhow can come together to provide more relevant effective actions. In addition, different interests, values and worldviews can be reconciled if everyone works together.”

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

Learn more: Watch & listen

Listen - Indigenous Clean Energy: In Over My Head Podcast is an exploration of living off the grid to save the planet.

Watch - A conversation with Cody Two Bears and Shailene Woodley

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Did you know? SB2510 is on the Governor’s veto list!
Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter

Did you know? SB2510 is on the Governor’s veto list!

On Monday, June 27 the Governor included SB2510 on his "Notice of Intent to Veto" list, commenting that he "could not find a single reason to support" this "misguided" measure. He now has until July 12 to follow through with an actual veto.

As usual, there is work to do to make sure SB2510 is gone for good. Now there are just a few weeks left to cross the finish line. Please join us in thanking the Governor for including this bill on his intent to veto list, and urging him to follow through by actually vetoing this problematic bill.

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The main squeeze: Feminist Energy Systems
Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter

The main squeeze: Feminist Energy Systems

In order to best understand the relevance and applicability of this Feminist Energy Systems (FES) theory, we will highlight an excerpt from work done by our energy justice friends and sector professionals- Layla Kilolu, Sebastien Selarque, and Ryan Neville, aka Team Nēnē. Their graduate level, community-based research centered on FES' alternative methods and frameworks for “evaluating potential energy projects that could be incorporated in the procurement process to holistically evaluate projects, increase community representation, support Hawaiian culture, and ultimately build engagement in the procurement process.”

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

Energy justice in the news

Local: Hu Honua Lobbyist Hosted Fundraiser for Bill
Officially – and as far as the public could tell from official disclosures – the sunset soiree was paid for by the candidate committees of four Hawaiʻi state senators: Donovan Dela Cruz, Glenn Wakai, Michelle Kidani and Bennette Misalucha.

National: Building a Resilient Indigenous Future with Sustainable Energy

​​Throughout Indigenous communities there is an abundance of renewable energy potential. Wind power alone has the potential to produce 190,000 megawatts of electricity, and solar energy potential is twenty times this amount! This wealth is an opportunity to step into a future that stands in stark contrast to the history of energy development within Indigenous nations.

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Follow the money
Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter

Follow the money

$25.1 million— Price tag to put HECO’s power lines underground in Kapolei.

Hoʻopili Community residents in Kapolei are raising concerns about Hawaiian Electric’s latest power substation, which would host large steel overhead power lines through their community. Amongst the issues of having high voltage power as close as 50 feet from homes is the lack of transparency throughout the process.

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

Word of the month: Indigenization

The importance of indigenization is that it benefits everyone. We all gain a richer understanding of the world, especially of our specific location through awareness of Indigenous knowledge, perspectives, and values systems. In that way, indigenization also contributes to a more just world by creating intentionality behind shared understandings. It opens the pathway toward reconciliation between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people. It also counters the impacts of colonization by upending a system of thinking that has discounted Indigenous knowledge and history needed today to build a truly sustainable resilient society.

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Energy justice spotlight: Shalanda Baker
Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter

Energy justice spotlight: Shalanda Baker

In early June, the WCPSC Annual Education Conference was held in Wāikiki. It comes to Hawaiʻi every fourteen years, shoutout to Hawaiʻi PUC Commissioner Potter and her staff for hosting a successful event full of informative panels for energy professionals and advocates from all over the globe.

A very special guest to the event was energy justice icon and Director of the Office of Economic Impact and Diversity at the U.S. Department of Energy, the Shalanda Baker. She spoke on a panel about facilitating equity in the renewable energy transition to a room full of regulatory and energy professionals in the public and private sector.

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

Learn more: Watch & listen

Listen: Porcupine Podcast - Episode: Exploring Reconciliation through Clean Energy in Indigenous Communities.

Watch: The Laura Flanders Show: The Future of Energy is Indigenous

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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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Did you know? HECO Battery Bonus Program
Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter

Did you know? HECO Battery Bonus Program

This is not free advertising for Hawaiian Electric but there is a pretty cool program that helps get more solar energy on the Oʻahu energy grid that isn’t utility-scale solar farms that exacerbate land use tensions. We feel this is the kind of incentive program that our corporate investor-owned utility that is making consistent profits should be offering to get us to 100% renewable by 2045.

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

Energy justice in the news

Expensive prices passed on to customers and long-term environmental impacts are among the major concerns Hawaii’s Consumer Advocate and others continue to have about Hu Honua, a proposed tree-burning power plant on the Big Island.

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Follow the money
Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter

Follow the money

$45 Million –That is the amount that AES Mt. View Solar has been telling the community their hundred-acre solar farm will provide in “economic output” during their public consultation meetings. But such a large number surely deserves a breakdown explanation.

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Word of the month: Just transition
Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter Sierra Club Hawaiʻi Chapter

Word of the month: Just transition

We have been a little obsessed with Just Transition lately. And for good reason. It has been several decades since the demand for a just transition for workers was introduced as a key goal in the efforts to tackle environmental degradation. To give some background, The Just Transition Alliance was founded in 1997 as a coalition of frontline workers from polluting industries and those that live on the fences of them to create healthy workplaces and communities.

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