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Changing our climate for good

by: Clem Guttata

Tue Dec 01, 2009 at 09:08:09 AM EST


By Clem Guttata

I don't know about you, but I'm pretty frustrated by the pace of change in West Virginia. I get angry when state politicians say they'll speak with 'one voice' for coal interests while ignoring the rest of us. I'm ready to send a signal that even here in Appalachia we are committed to addressing the deteriorating atmosphere.

So many of the debates going on today are remote and distant, sometimes it feels hard to impact what's going on in Charleston, Washington, or Copenhagen. I've spent a lot of time thinking about what we can do today, something that can have an positive immediate impact and I've finally found something.

Contribute today to Sustainable Economic and Energy Diversification in Coal River valley.

We've talked many times about the importance and difficulties of developing sustainable diverse economic opportunities in West Virginia. Thankfully, there are committed grass-roots activists working hard at these efforts.

Blasts have reverberated off the top of Coal River Mountain since mid-October. Each boom is a reminder of how much is at stake in the Coal River Valley. For two years, residents of the Coal River Valley campaigned for the mountain's preservation for development as an industrial-scale wind farm. A wind farm in the Coal River Valley would chart a new course for the region and pose a true threat to those who seek to demolish West Virginia's natural resources and heritage for short term profit. Though blasting has begun, the battle for Coal River Mountain is far from over, and in the valley below, residents are increasingly taking sustainable development into their own hands as part of Coal River Mountain Watch's Sustainable Economic and Energy Diversification (SEED) project.

SEED is a community organizing project designed to connect residents of the Coal River Valley to one another and the outside resources they need to make their small business and renewable energy ventures a reality. We began by meeting with twelve families in the valley over the summer and fall, and identified three inspiring projects to pursue. Two families are in the beginning stages of a community owned wind development project. One group of woodworkers are building a wood kiln to dry and increase the value of sustainably forested lumber. The SEED Community Team formed as a group of locals generating new ideas for community revival and economic diversification in monthly meetings. In their latest meeting, they resolved to build a community owned greenhouse and plan to break ground on the project in the winter. The entrepreneurial spirit is spreading!

SEED Community Building project
SEED volunteers help with construction of a community center building in Rock Creek, WV

SEED is structured to ensure accountability to community members. It begins with listening to community members, and the Community Team ensures that project organizers do not veer off course in the collaborative process of small business development.

Judy Gunnoe lives at the head of Lick Creek Hollow, nestled between two toes of Coal River Mountain. "I think there are other options beyond coal because coal's not gonna be here forever - our grandchildren and great-grandchildren, what are they gonna do when coal's not here? There needs to be some kind of other jobs besides coal. I think there's a lot of smaller businesses that would like to be in this area, but they're scared off because of the mining. If you can get a few things started, you can get a few people to work - you can even employ these high school graduates. There's not a lot of young people; what ones are here, they leave or they go in the mines because that's the only thing to do, and by the time they're 30, they're half-dead." The Gunnoes are SEED community leaders and are building a community center and hope to put wind turbines on the ridge above their home.

Organizers are working on two wind development projects in the the valley. They need to start raising funds today to be able to purchase and install a 100 kilowatt wind turbines as soon as possible and stake the community's claim on the toe of Coal River Mountain. This single-turbine installation lays the groundwork for larger wind development in the future.

Like any volunteer effort, the SEED project cannot be sustained by sweat equity alone. It needs your help. There is an immediate need for anemometers to measure wind feasibility, then there are additional costs associated with the purchase and installation of wind turbines in the Coal River Valley.

Community volunteers visit wind farm
Community members visit a wind farm in April, 2009

Barack Obama is heading to Copenhagen next week to offer an emissions-cut goal of about 17 percent by 2020.

Contribute $17, $34, or even $170 today to safe, clean, homegrown Sustainable Energy and Environmental Development for West Virginia Coal River valley. Send a clear signal that you want to that target to be at least 17%.

When we all work together, we can change our climate for good.

Photo credits: Maureen Farrell, JOBS Project

Clem Guttata :: Changing our climate for good
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For anyone who is paypal-adverse, send me an email (clem.guttata [at] gmail.com) and I can hook you up with a snail mail address for making a contribution.

1 down 100 to go! (0.00 / 0)
A huge thank you to the first contributor!

Slightly revised (0.00 / 0)
Also available in Orange (with a few revisions): Despair not, plant a seed tonight.

Energy Diversity = Energy Policy. (4.00 / 1)
I agree with you quite often Clem but you really got to the crux of the situation in the mountain top-less state when you talk about developing energy diversity, something we obviously lack, since we burn like 98% coal to produce ours and surrounding states electricity (PJM).  You know in Cali they only burn 1.5% coal because they DO have energy diversity.  What it all boils down to is the fact that WV has NO energy policy, none, squat, not a peep of diversity.  Our environmental organizations have time and again advocated for responsible energy policy, one that's good for ALL citizens not just coal companies....and unfortunately with the way our delegates and senators are predisposed, we get no chance to even voice our concerns outside of a few select interim committees and op-ed pieces in the Gazette.  How do we impress upon our beholden leaders that diversity=policy and that the future depends on it?  We have to set goals in order to attain them.  Coal is an embarrassment as a total energy (burning) policy, it's really no policy at all.

the there there (0.00 / 0)
Not that you will read anything I link to, but in case anyone else is wondering if there's any there, there... Kevin Drums has as good a summary of the situation as I've seen: Climategate.

Meanwhile, no amount of personal embarrassment to climate researchers at University of East Anglia over hacked emails is going to change these facts on the ground:

The ice sheets are both losing mass (and hence contributing to sea level rise). This was not certain at the time of the IPCC report.

Arctic sea ice has declined faster than projected by IPCC.

Greenhouse gas concentrations have continued to track the upper bounds of IPCC projections.

Observed global temperature changes remain entirely in accord with IPCC projections, i.e. an anthropogenic warming trend of about 0.2 ÂșC per decade with superimposed short-term natural variability.

Sea level has risen more than 5 centimeters over the past 15 years, about 80% higher than IPCC projections from 2001.



[ Parent ]
you are basing this (0.00 / 0)
on an internal Australian political struggle in a multi-party system where the Greens were possibly not going to vote for it because it was not strong enough based on the BBC interview I heard last night?

Nice try.  

NFTT: Support My Team or I Will Dance


[ Parent ]
Read local newspapers (0.00 / 0)
AP does a lousy job at explaining foreign news.

Liberal senators Sue Boyce and Judith Troeth voted with the government, but their support was not enough to give Labor a majority.

The crossbench, including the Australian Greens, voted with other coalition senators.

I love it when my memory turns out to be not shot.

NFTT: Support My Team or I Will Dance


[ Parent ]
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