Categories
Uncategorized

People’s Climate Rally: Portsmouth

On September 8, thousands of groups are planning rallies in cities and towns around the world to demand our local leaders commit to building a fossil free world that puts people and justice before profits.

Join us in Portsmouth to hear the story of two futures. The future where the fossil fuel industry maintains its grip on our economy and our democracy and the future where we build a broad coalition of groups that stop climate change and create millions of jobs by transitioning to renewable energy.

No more stalling, no more delays: it’s time for a fast and fair transition to 100% renewable energy for all.

What: Portsmouth Rise for Climate

Where: Market Square Portsmouth, NH

When: Sept 8th, 10:00-12:00

Email griffin@350nh.org with questions.

Categories
Wind

An Open Letter to Sununu

Governor Sununu, in a radio interview last summer, you said that if the people of New Hampshire wanted to “make a case” for offshore wind, you “weren’t opposing it.”  Many of us have read about recent offshore wind advances in Maine and Massachusetts.  Department of Energy studies identify enough wind potential off our coast to significantly reduce our fossil fuel dependence, help to slow climate change, bring sustainable jobs to NH, and reduce consumer energy costs.  When we heard you say that you were open to the idea, we went ahead and made a case for it.

Enthusiastic grassroots efforts led to the passage of resolutions in twenty towns urging you to take the next steps.  There was notable support for this idea in the communities where it was considered.  Here in Nottingham, the warrant article voicing our support for offshore wind passed unanimously.  People are eager to see NH embrace renewable energy and the economic opportunity it brings. 

In April, we delivered letters to you from the towns that voted in favor of moving forward, demonstrating our support for offshore wind, which you have so far ignored.  NH’s communities deserve a response.  By ignoring this, you are effectively opposing it.  It’s your job to represent NH citizens’ interests.  We have expressed that we want to explore this potential.  

To move forward, you can simply request a task force from the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management to use already allocated federal funds for the necessary research. BOEM will work with NH to determine the economic and environmental impacts, infrastructure requirements, and overall feasibility of this endeavor.  Stop standing in the way of offshore wind, listen to the people of NH, and request this task force.  What’s the delay?


Brieghan Gardner, Nottingham

Categories
Uncategorized

Solar Energy 101 and Energy Democracy with ReVision Energy

Join us for Solar 101 with local experts and a deeper look at the systemic issues standing in the way of energy democracy and a transition to renewables in NH.  Pizza will be served!

Climate change is happening now and people around the world are paying the price.  We know that we need to transition to renewable energy to avoid catastrophic climate change but the fossil fuel industry and their stranglehold on our political system stand in the way.

Join us for a discussion on Energy Democracy and for a deeper look into solar energy, the solution happening here and now in NH.  What are the ways in which our government is holding us back, and what are green businesses like ReVision and nonprofits like 350NH doing to create systemic change?

Find out what makes your home a good site for solar panels, how much these systems cost, and what you can expect for a return on investment. How do hot water systems, efficient electric heating, and battery storage work, and could they be right for you?

  • Where: 350NH Dover Coworking Space-1 Washington St Suite #320
  • When: Thursday June 28th from 5:00-7:00
  • What: Solar 101 and Energy Democracy in NH

Check out the Facebook event here!

Categories
Uncategorized

Why I’m Fighting with 350NH

Hi, my name is Dylan and if you’re reading this, I’ll bet that we have something in common: we both have a lot to lose if we don’t address climate change. My generation has no choice but to combat the inevitable impacts of rising sea levels, increased storm surges and threats to our agricultural systems. I fear that the current immigration crisis will continue to intensify as people are driven from their homes, while global conflicts escalate over resource scarcity.

As the son of young parents, I spent a lot of time with my grandmother growing up and she taught me that we, as residents of this planet, have an obligation to preserve it. As a lifetime steward of the environment, my grandmother instilled within me the values and importance of conserving our earth. I spent countless hours at the Massachusetts Audubon Society, learning wilderness skills from both of my grandparents and hearing stories of the great experiences they have had throughout their lives. These lessons created the spark that propelled me into the line of work I find myself in today.

While at the the University of New Hampshire, I began taking courses on renewable energy, sustainability and public policy. It was in one of these classes where I first heard about 350NH and signed on as a volunteer for their offshore wind campaign. After working with them to bring clean, renewable wind energy to NH, I asked about summer internship opportunities and now find myself working on challenging and important issues around the state of New Hampshire.

As a young person, issues such as climate change, the deployment of renewable energy and promoting responsible and passionate leaders who will serve the people, instead of the fossil fuel industry, are important to me. I decided to work with 350NH in order to put these values into action. As we live in a relatively secure society here in the United States, I understand why it is easy to feel apathetic about these issues. Although our way of life may not be threatened by the impacts of climate change as rapidly as in other places, such as Puerto Rico or an island in the South Pacific, it is only a matter of time before we see and feel the impacts of climate change here at home. Lyme ticks, rising tides, and increasingly volatile weather are some of the ways that our community here in NH is already feeling the impacts of climate change. Our society has immense privilege and wealth and we are lucky to have the infrastructure to mitigate the impacts of climate change, but we are also the ones causing the problem. With our unique platform here, in the land of the free, we have the power to make real change for us and for the world.

During my time as an intern here, we have worked with communities to educate and raise awareness about issues that will have effects on our state for years to come. These include the construction of irresponsible fossil fuel infrastructure projects, such as the Granite Bridge pipeline, engaging in discussion with congressional and gubernatorial candidates about important issues in New Hampshire, working to bring offshore wind energy to the Gulf of Maine and more. We do this work through trainings, educational events, rallies, work with town governments, art creation, peaceful direct action and more.

Although we work on serious and important issues at 350NH, the communities we work and live in, the folks who volunteer with us and the many people in New Hampshire who believe in a better future, bring a unique and hopeful spirit to the work that we do. We welcome anyone who is interested to volunteer with us to fight for climate justice*.

We can make great change through community action, but it is the ideas and values of the individuals that bring strength to the community.

Dylan Reed, 350NH Summer Intern

Categories
Uncategorized

No Transmission Lines Through Little Bay

Eversource wants to build transmission lines through little bay but we don’t need them.  Here’s why.

1) We don’t need new energy infrastructure.  Eversource wants to build these transmission lines to strengthen their grip on our energy system because they are losing control.  With more households, businesses, and towns investing in community-owned solar, we don’t need any new transmission lines running across our state.

2) Running transmission lines through the bay would stir up decades of chemicals like mercury that have settled in the bay creating public health and environmental problems for years to come.

3) Over 500,000 square feet of land will need to be cleared to make way for the new transmission lines.  This will have a dramatic effect on the rural character or the Seacoast and disturb historical sites along the route of the transmission lines.

On May 29th the Site Evaluation Committee (SEC) will be deciding whether or not Eversource needs to study alternative ways of running transmission lines under the bay.  This gives us a pivotal opportunity to make this project more expensive and time-consuming for Eversource.  If the SEC forces Eversource to use a more expensive but safer method of crossing the bay it’s possible that Eversource will deem the project too expensive and pull out.

Will you join us on May 29th to tell the Site Evaluation Committee that Eversource needs to protect the bay?

Categories
Uncategorized Wind

Rally for Renewables

On April 22 we will gather at the capital to demand our state move forward with renewable energy. We are living in a moment of crisis and we have a choice: fight for a future that protects our economy, our earth, and our community or let the fossil fuel billionaires pad their pockets while sacrificing the health and well-being of all people

Over the past year, communities around New Hampshire have been passing resolutions and warrant articles demanding we achieve 100% renewable energy by 2050 and to start this process by investigating offshore wind energy. To do this Governor Sununu needs to request an offshore wind task force from the Buero of Ocean Energy Management. Last year on The Exchange Sununu said if the community wanted it he would support it.

This Earth Day is we’ll deliver letters from individuals, towns, and businesses to show Sununu there is definitive community support for bringing renewable energy to New Hampshire.

Categories
Wind

Public Comment on NH’s Energy Strategy

Governor Sununu’s staff will be traveling the state on a listening tour to hear what your community wants in NH’s 10 Year Energy Strategy.  This is a HUGE opportunity for us to push for a transition away from fossil fuels and towards renewables.  As you know, if we can transition to 100% renewable energy we will avoid catastrophic climate change and create new good paying jobs.

The listening tour will be conducted by the Office of Strategic Initiatives (previously the Office of Energy Planning). We need to attend their public comment sessions and demand…

  1. Governor Sununu requests an offshore wind task force from the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management. This is the first step in bringing offshore wind to NH.
  2. New Hampshire joins the growing list of states who commit to upholding the Paris Climate Accord by reaching 100% renewable energy by 2050.
  3. New Hampshire halts any investment or construction of new fossil fuel infrastructure.

Sign up below attend the Portsmouth, Concord or Dublin public comment session.  To see all the public comment sessions click here.

Categories
Wind

Offshore Wind Resolution Passes In Portsmouth

The Portsmouth City Council passed a resolution calling on Governor Sununu to start the process for bringing offshore wind to New Hampshire. This would mean requesting a task force from the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management.  The Task Force would survey the coast of New Hampshire and speak with the community to determine the viability of an offshore wind farm in New Hampshire.  If it seemed viable the task force would start a leasing process.

We need to transition toward renewable energy because of the harmful effects fossil fuels are having on our climate.  The construction of an offshore wind farm in NH could bring new good paying jobs to New Hampshire and stimulate our economy. Durham and Dover have already passed resolutions supporting offshore wind and Lee will be voting on a warrant article in support of offshore wind in March.  

During the campaign trail Governor Sununu said he would request an offshore wind task force if there was community support for it. 350 New Hampshire along with the Seacoast Anti-Pollution League and ECHO Action are working to pass resolutions, rally businesses, and find partner organizations to show the governor there is support for offshore wind.

See the testimonies given in support of offshore wind here, here and here.

Categories
Legislative

Optimism in the Face of Defeat

On Wednesday, March 8th, I rode in a car full of old friends and new friends alike to Concord, New Hampshire to protest House Bill 368. The bill concerns the heating of some state-owned buildings in Concord and is proposing that Concord Steam, the current facility providing the municipal heating through biomass, be replaced with a natural gas alternative.  The bill has been met with a lot of backlash from environmental groups and disapproval from some citizens in and around the Concord area, as this alternative would leave the door open for a fracked gas pipeline to be built, and would also encourage more fracking.

When we arrived, and as our driver paid for our meter, an elderly woman waiting to pay for her meter noticed our signs, smiled, and said “Oh good. You have a cause.” We all smiled and a member of our group responded, “Of course! Don’t you?” The woman smiled again, shriveled up in her jacket to avoid the cold, then started talking about the tragedies of the Dakota Access Pipeline, the Travel Ban, and general adversities of our modern day. We chatted for another chilly minute and as we left, she wished us luck and congratulated our efforts to make our voices heard.

As we entered the state house I was surprised to see the others who came to protest the bill: they were almost all elderly Concord residents; those who knew and loved the town the most. A couple of the men were wearing neon-yellow hoodies with colorful signs draped around their necks, toting slogans opposing the prospect of a pipeline. There was a chipper and energetic woman with a sign that read “#GETTHEFRACKOUTTANH!”, and another woman who was eager to see us young people from separate locations come and support the cause. Among a plethora of other long-time residents who had come to seek justice for their beloved city, there was a chorus of opposition outside the hearing room.

IMG_3390

The room quickly filled to the point where there were people standing in the back, and the hearing commenced not long after we filed in and placed our signs against the walls. The first person to speak was one in favor of the bill, and he started off by explaining his surprise at how the city was reacting to the bill. He then expressed how this matter had “nothing to do with fracking or pipelines”, a statement which was met with audible disapproval from most of the people in the room. He went on to defend the bill and deemed it necessary as there were “no other alternatives”.

Following this, a woman spoke after in opposition to the bill. She explained the numerous alternatives to heating the municipal buildings and condemned the statement made about the bill having nothing to do with fracking or pipelines. Her response was met with an applause from what sounded like every bystander in the room. The chairmen, flustered by the applause, took a moment to shout at the room, saying how out of respect, there must not be any clapping or cheering. Soon after this, a security guard approached our group and asked us to remove our signs from the room; putting them on the floor wasn’t good enough. We listened to the rest of the woman’s testimony then made our way out. As we left the state building, a member of our group said, “well, that was fun”. A woman walking in front of us overheard and replied with a hearty smile, “always!”

IMG_3412

Despite our efforts, House Bill 368 is expected to be approved and amended by the Senate. 25 state-owned buildings in the Concord area will likely no longer be heated by biomass, and natural gas will be sought to fill its place. The possibility of a pipeline being built grows larger, and the potential of continuous fracking is right there with it. But our voices were heard. Personally, it felt good to be there and to express my opinion on something that had very little to do with me as an individual. To tap into the greater good of the planet and to actively fight for a quality of life for those separate from myself made me feel and realize just what it means to be human. Grassroots activism is what changes everything; it is what drives change itself and it has the power to alter even the most deeply ingrained routines, habits, systems, and order. Today, there has never been a greater need for such activism. Now more than ever, the world needs those who are willing to speak up and engage with what they believe in. Only through this can real, palpable change occur. I was glad to be a part of such an engagement, and it is still very much up to all of us, no matter what age or where we are from, to pursue what we know is right.

-Sumner Bright