Energy Action Coalition

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Energy Action Coalition
Type 501(c)3
Founded 2004
Washington, D.C., United States
Headquarters
Key people Maura Cowley, Executive Director
Focus(es) Environmentalism, Global Warming, Renewable Energy
Method(s) Direct action, lobbying, petition, demonstration
Website energyactioncoalition.org

The Energy Action Coalition is a North American non-profit organization made up of 50 partner organizations in the U.S. and Canada that runs campaigns to build the youth and student clean energy movement and advocate for tangible changes on local, state, national and international levels in North America. Energy Action focuses its campaigns on campuses, communities, corporate practices, and politics. It is part of the Global Youth Climate Movement[1]

The Energy Action Coalition was founded in June 2004 at a meeting of representatives from almost 20 environmental groups in Washington, D.C. The founding of Energy Action was a result of the coordination of many local and national environmental networks in a day of action on April 1, 2004 called Fossil Fools Day which advocated for reducing dependence for energy on fossil fuels with more than 125 registered actions.[2][3][4]

Vision statement

On its official website, Energy Action Coalition defines its vision as the following:

The Energy Action coalition unites a diversity of organizations in an alliance that supports and strengthens the student and youth clean energy movement in North America. The partners of Energy Action work together to leverage our collective power and create change for a clean, efficient, just and renewable energy future. The work of Energy Action is focused on four strategic areas: campuses, communities, corporate practices, and politics.[5]

Structure

Energy Action is a coalition of 50 student and youth environmental and advocacy organizations. The coalition has full-time staff and offices in Washington, DC.[6]

The following organizations are members of the coalition:

Campaigns and events

Fossil Fools Day

The first Fossil Fools Day on April 1, 2004 was not a project of the Energy Action Coalition, but with over 125 actions coordinated by numerous organizations, it precipitated the formation of the coalition the following June.[7] The day of action featured demonstrations promoting renewable energy and protesting President George W. Bush’s energy plan.[8]

The second Fossil Fools Day on April 1, 2005, promoted in the United States and Canada by the Energy Action Coalition included more than 300 actions in Canada and the U.S., and actions in England, Nigeria and Panama.[9] One example of the a student organized event was as a bike ride organized by Middlebury College students and included students from Green Mountain College and the University of Vermont from Burlington, VT to Montpelier, VT the state capital to lobby lawmakers.[10]

Every year since 2004 and the founding of Energy Action, young people from around the U.S. and Canada have continued the collective day of action on April 1 to confront the fossil fuel industry and lobby politicians. Hundreds of campuses and communities have participated by hosting a variety of lobby and campaign events, film screenings, and protests at dirty energy sites.

The Campus Climate Challenge

Energy Action's flagship campaign, the Campus Climate Challenge, was launched in 2006 to spur a new wave of investment in renewable energy on college campuses from coast to coast. The Campaign spread like wildfire and Climate Challenge is now being run on over 700 colleges and universities across the country, and more than 550 of those campuses have made institutional commitments to become carbon neutral.

Power Shift 2007

The first national youth climate conference, Power Shift '07, took place from November 2 to 5, 2007 with between 5,000 and 6,000 students and young people in attendance. The summit featured workshops, expert panels, and speakers at the University of Maryland, College Park, a rally of between 2,000 and 3,000 people on the steps of the Capitol building and a Lobby Day.[11] The aim of the conference was to urge elected officials to pass legislation which would include three planks taken from the platform of the climate advocacy coalition 1Sky:[12]

  • The creation of a 5 million-strong Clean Energy Job Corps
  • The reduction of greenhouse gases to 80 percent below 1990 levels by 2050, which scientists say is the baseline for mitigating the worst effects of global warming
  • A moratorium on new coal plants and divestment from fossil fuel and highway subsidies.

The conference included workshops, panel discussions, and speakers focusing on addressing climate change and building a strong youth movement around clean energy and environmental justice. Keynote speakers included Van Jones, Bill McKibben, Ralph Nader, and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi.[13]

Power Vote

The 2008 election season, Energy Action Coalition ran the Power Vote campaign to harness the power of the youth vote for clean and just energy and good green jobs. Powervote was a major player at both the Democratic and Republican National Conventions, was formally endorsed and supported by renowned NASA climatologist James Hansen, had a large presence at each of the Presidential and Vice Presidential debates, was a featured project of Bill Clinton's Clinton Global Initiative, and hosted Al Gore in a live nationwide webcast. Over 350,000 young people got involved in the movement as climate voters and new leaders. Youth voters involved in the campaign raised the prominence of climate change as one of the key issues in the election and generated 100 of media stories.

Power Shift 2009

Energy Action held a second national youth climate summit, Power Shift 2009 which took place February 27 through March 2, 2009 in Washington, D.C.[14] The event drew over 12,000 student and youth climate activists, representing all 50 U.S. states, all Canadian provinces, and 13 other nations including Brazil, Austria, the United Kingdom. The goal of the conference was to "push the Obama administration and Congress to pass 'bold, comprehensive, and just national climate legislation before entering international climate negotiations in December 2009.'"[15] The official Power Shift 2009 website[16] states that the conference will bring 10,000 students and young people together to:

  • Push the new administration and the United States Congress to pass bold, comprehensive, and just national climate legislation before entering international climate negotiations in December 2009.
  • Develop a comprehensive movement strategy for 1.) continued and increased political pressure and accountability and 2.) a uniform vision/direction that helps facilitate the development and implementation of individual and group action plans for the overall growth of the clean energy movement.
  • Strengthen bonds between diverse youth constituencies.
  • Train and empower participants with the skills needed to create one movement that tackles climate change, environmental injustice, and economic failure.
  • Connect with fellow organizers and build community to strengthen our movement and sustain participant involvement over the long-run.
  • Understand the magnitude of both the challenges and opportunities at hand (climate, socioeconomic injustice, personal, etc.) and explore our own capacities to create transformative change.

The Power Shift '09 Conference was the largest gathering of young people to solve the climate crisis in history. Meeting with key strategic members in Congress, these young activists were told that they (congress) was ready to start promoting the essential legislation to achieve the just energy future we all deserve, but they needed a force (they specifically asked for an "army") on the ground spreading the word and gaining support. At Power Shift '09 we gathered in record numbers, 12,000 plus, to demonstrate that the youth climate movement is that "army."

The Power Shift'09 Summer Campaign

The Power Shift'09 Summer Campaign took the momentum rolling off of the conference and worked to organize the "army," behind a highly strategized and unified national effort to pass bold climate and energy policy in 2009. By organizing and mobilizing the thousands of youth across this country behind the urgency of a powerful "Climate" bill.

Regional Power Shifts

Thousands of young people rallied across the United States this Fall for the Power Shift '09 Regional Summits: 11 massive gatherings to exercise the political power of young voters and ask President Obama and Congress to pass a clean energy jobs plan by December to rebuild our economy, end our dependence on dirty energy, and bring America lasting security.

  • Indiana Power Shift, Oct. 10-11, Carmel, IN
  • Michigan Power Shift, Oct. 9-11, Michigan State University, Lansing, MI
  • Missouri Power Shift, Oct. 16-18, St. Louis University, St. Louis, MO
  • Carolinas Power Shift, Oct 16-18, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC
  • Northern Plains Power Shift, Oct 23-25, North Dakota State University, Fargo, ND
  • Pennsylvania Power Shift, Oct 23-25, Penn State University, State College, PA
  • Virginia Power Shift, Oct 23-25, George Mason University, Fairfax, VA
  • Appalachia Power Shift, Oct 23-25, Marshall University, Huntington, WV
  • Florida Power Shift, Oct 23-25, University of Central Florida, Orlando, FL
  • Ohio Power Shift, Nov 6-8, Oberlin College, Oberlin, OH
  • Power Shift West, Nov 6-8, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR

There couldn't have been a more important time for these summits; the Senate was working on a much needed climate and energy bill and President Obama needed such legislation to head to the International Climate Negotiations in Copenhagen with the tools necessary to lead the world toward a fair, ambitious & binding global treaty.

See also

References

  1. Energy Action Coalition
  2. Kim Teplitzky (October 25, 2004), “Declaring Independence from Dirty Energy.” Wiretap Magazine.
  3. “The Story of Energy Action Coalition”
  4. Fred Durso, Jr. “Clean Energy Goes to College.” E/The Environmental Magazine.
  5. Vision Statement of the Energy Action Coalition
  6. Energy Action Website
  7. Kim Teplitzky (October 25, 2004), “Declaring Independence from Dirty Energy.” Wiretap Magazine.
  8. Fred Durso, Jr. “Clean Energy Goes to College.” E/The Environmental Magazine.
  9. Brianna. “Fossil Fools Day: International Youth ‘Just Say No’ to Fossil Fuels” (05 April 2005).
  10. Caitlin Prentice “Students Ride for Global Climate Change” (17 March 2005).
  11. Matt Harper. "Youth Leaders Shift Attention to Environment at Power Shift Summit in D.C." Think MTV (6 November 2007)
  12. Anya Kamenetz. “Climate Change Power Shift.” The Nation (15 November 2007)
  13. Elana Sandler. "Power Shift '07 Conference." The Brandeis Hoot. (9 November 2007).
  14. Power Shift 2009 Website
  15. Bryan Farrell. "A Political Climate Change." The Indypendent. (16 January 2009).
  16. Power Shift 2009 Website

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.