Carol Berry

Solar panels may appear increasingly in the future for the Navajo Nation, some of whose members belong to the Navajo Green Economy Coalition. The nonprofit coalition advocates a variety of renewable energy projects and a return to traditional, low-impact economies that offer an opportunity for students and others to return to the reservation and find work.

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Green energy may provide an economic boost to the Navajo Nation

By Carol Berry, Today correspondent

WINDOW ROCK, Ariz. — The current thrust toward energy independence may offer the Navajo Nation an opportunity to create green jobs, initiate an economic renewal and revive traditional enterprises, according to tribal advocates.

“Indian people live off the land, so in a sense they have basically practiced green jobs,” said Joshua Lavar Butler, communications director for the Navajo Nation Council.

A new Navajo Green Economy Coalition is preparing a resolution for the council that, if approved, would allocate $6 to $10 million for a Navajo Green Energy Commission and Navajo Green Economy Fund.

“Individuals, chapters, agencies, anyone could apply for the money, with the hope that, for every $15,000 allocated, one job will be created,” said Nikke Alex, a coalition spokesperson.

The plan is to create a seven-member commission under the Navajo Nation Council similar to the Navajo Human Rights Commission to look over grant applications and to select those to be funded, she said. The plan would require council approval and buy-off by the tribal president.

The Navajo Nation is large enough that “it could be self-sustaining,” said Tony Skrelunas, Native American Program director for the Grand Canyon Trust, who said his organization is part of the coalition because “it’s very timely – green energy is a big deal.”

The renewable energy advocates were interviewed by phone before the Navajo Green Jobs Community Summit held in Window Rock Jan. 17 – 19 by the Black Mesa Water Coalition and Campus Climate Challenge.

Lawrence. T. Morgan, speaker of the Navajo Nation Council, “sees the Navajo Nation ‘going green’ to set an example and to be a template for other Native nations.”

“It was his vision to initiate green jobs on the Navajo Nation,” Butler said, noting that Morgan, who is seeking re-election, is active in the council of Large Land-Based Tribes and, with Navajo President Joe Shirley Jr., is an advocate for increased funding in the north BIA region. “His hope is that we can go back to our roots.”

The summit at Window Rock included panels and workshops reflecting the views of groups that included the Black Mesa Water Coalition, the recently formed Navajo Green Economy Coalition, Grand Canyon Trust, Sierra Club, One Sky New Mexico and other individuals and environmental and grassroots nonprofit organizations.

The Navajo Green Economy Coalition, said the group’s aim is to “create energy-efficient and low- or non-polluting jobs for the Navajo Nation,” Alex said, including small or large community renewable energy projects, textile or woolen mills, energy-efficient ventures that could involve weatherizing, weavers’ cooperatives, green construction firms and traditional agricultural renewal.

The coalition was formed to help transition and diversify the Navajo economy to one that is long-lasting, sustainable and healthy through a green jobs initiative that includes “generally, low-polluting and recycling interactions with the environment,” she said.

Grant amounts would depend on the amount of money allocated and, while the recession has affected the Nation as it has the U.S. economy as a whole, the coalition is hoping the fund will be established “as soon as possible.”

The Navajo Green Energy Coalition’s plan has the support of about one-third of the nation’s 110 chapters to date and information was distributed last fall at a number of tribal fairs, she said.

Jobs on the reservation to enable tribal members to stay or return may be a major benefit of the green jobs initiative.

“We want to encourage students to come back home and make their own jobs,” she said. “We want science and engineering students to come back, and we want to show them how the education you’re getting now is going to help this brand new economy.”

Even if the program is not funded, a channel has been established for U.S. funds to go to the nation for wind and solar energy, weatherizing homes and starting gardens, she said.

Gordon Isaac, Navajo, president of KEYA Earth Co., Shonto and Flagstaff, Ariz., said he and others are pursuing legislation through the Navajo Nation to establish the green energy fund. His company offers services that assist in planning for sustainable development.

“For a long time, NGOs (nongovernmental organizations) haven’t necessarily worked well with tribal government” because they’ve been on different sides on environmental issues, but Black Mesa Water Coalition and NGOs are working with the speaker’s office and other parts of Navajo government, Skrelunas said.

He has been working with other tribal groups to increase their involvement in the U.S. administration’s renewable energy plans and said “I think there’s enough to go around” of tribal green energy plans nationwide. He is a former director of the Nation’s Economic Development Division and Government Development Office.

Projects funded from the investment commission could provide money for reinvestment in nation-building, he said. There are renewable energy projects currently under way and there is a “high probability that several projects will go all the way to development.”

Thursday, Jun 25 at 4:15 PM John wrote ...

Native Americans should lead the way in the shift towards solar power, wind energy and other forms of green energy.

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Sunday, Mar 1 at 5:28 PM 12.88 million tons of CO2 wrote ...

Coal is the dirtiest fuel polluter. It dumps mercury, arsenic and other dangerous chemicals into streams and this is why the dirtiest trick that governments play on their citizens is the pretence they are working on "clean coal." It's true. The money hungry governments pretend to be green. Coal-fired power plants are simiply death factories. I estimated that in its lifetime it would be responsible for the extermination of about 400 species and numerous death toll on our people. Wake up. Say No!

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Sunday, Feb 22 at 12:32 AM Richie from Phoenix wrote ...

UncleSam! When are you going to change Mother Earth is hurting where are you going with your space shuttle you trash America with your lie's now your trashing space with your earthly inventions.Why? For money your dead presidents.billions of money for who? Isreal,Iraq,Iran,P.L.O.this is all from native Americans land and culture we should be the arabs of North American here we are the poorest of the poor. Here we are trying to figuare out the pligrams disease aids,diabetes,alcoholism.wakeup...

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Thursday, Feb 19 at 2:48 PM Save the Planet? wrote ...

Really mother earth is going to be fine; it should be save the humans from the humans (and sometimes mother earth too). Whether or not the energy produced is renewable or not, there are always corporate conglomerates profitting and nothing is free. Does the Navajo Nation make the wealth this time or do well-connected businessmen and their consultants that sit on the Navajo Council make the profits. "Open Your Eyes" is right to question the total story and not just the sugar-coated toppings.

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Wednesday, Feb 18 at 12:46 PM Celeste Strikes With A Gun wrote ...

I can agree with 'Open Your Eyes' about how "environmentalists" do not necessarily share common ground with us. Environmentalists were a compromise group between government and industry. Now, they are biopirates. All they want is our culture and spirituality. The U.S. did not sign Kyoto, but it seems they are realizing you can make money on climate change, i.e. trading credits for money rather than actually dealing the problem. they know poor people cannot adapt to climate change.

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Tuesday, Feb 17 at 3:57 PM MBC wrote ...

Yeah right! Get rich with natural resources? We've had coal mining for the last several decades and Navajos haven't get rich. It all goes back to Non-Indian investors who live in urban years and in some cases other countries. We do need more alternative energy sources. I live in an area that already has 2 coal burning power plants and I know plenty of people who have respiratory illness and all kinds of cancers. We don't need any more of the dirty plants. Green is the way to GO!

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Tuesday, Feb 17 at 12:15 PM Winyan wrote ...

That so great for everyone, really! Maybe now they can start to recycle!!!

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Tuesday, Feb 17 at 11:29 AM tselagai wrote ...

hi. navajo gov't has a hard time getting away from the want of paternalism. i don't. energy companies navajo owned or 'indian' owned has to come into existence, to spread the money around. one 'tribe' one casino has to stop. its better if investment opportunities are shared among indigena: this is one way to build unity. what if 'tribes' build a large solar farm in southern arizona?

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Saturday, Feb 14 at 1:32 PM spirit in the wind wrote ...

Good for them! I am trying to get this going for the Miwok people here in CA. Not only would we have solar, I will be putting in fruit trees, organic garden and various types of trees that produce nuts. So many of our native people suffer from diabetes. This will be getting them back to the way we used to eat, making them stronger and healthier. No more processed foods.

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Friday, Feb 13 at 4:45 PM A Nez wrote ...

This plan is totally needed for the Navajo Nation. Young people are losing connection with the land, family, language, and culture. And this green jobs plan is perfect, and it will help bring Navajos home. We don't have to rely on natural resources when the wind blows and the sun shines almost everyday. Not only is the land being hurt with mineral extraction, but the people and culture are getting hit hard. Good Job!

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Thursday, Feb 12 at 4:57 PM BigOil wrote ...

The easy days of resource exploitation may be slowly coming to an end. Those who benefit from this arrangement will not go quietly. Look for a full scale P.R press in which they try and undermine support for the move to green energy. Good luck to the Navajo Nation.

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Thursday, Feb 12 at 3:20 PM naatsosie wrote ...

Come on, Buckwheat- What kind of rich are you interested in? Coal is poison, oil is a friendly rattlesnake, and natural gas production has almost ruined our land up north. They are killing the Earth- why don't you get it?

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Wednesday, Feb 11 at 9:16 PM Amber Kanazbah Crotty wrote ...

"Rich" in what sense? The four corner region is saturated with polluted air resulting in increase numbers of respiratory problems for our elders and youth.

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Wednesday, Feb 11 at 4:30 PM Open Your Eyes wrote ...

This Green Initiative is a fraud by Morgan to use the well-intentioned environmentalists to help a Texas billionaire friend of Morgan's purchase a 493,000 acre ranch owned by the Navajo Nation claiming to be planning on developing a wind ranch there. The Texas developer has backed this initiative which Morgan is using as a front to help his Texas buddy. These environmentalists, as well intentioned as they are, need to wake up and realise they are being used by Morgan.

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Wednesday, Feb 11 at 12:33 PM Buckwheat wrote ...

The tribe can become rich if they developed existing resources such as coal, oil and natural gas, for themselves.

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