Tools

‘Power Paths’ to air nationally on ‘Independent Lens’

By Staff reports

SAN FRANCISCO – “Power Paths” follows the efforts of American Indian tribes as they explore ways to bring renewable energy projects into their communities. From the Sioux tribes of the Great Plains in the Midwest to the Navajo and Hopi of the Southwest, tribes are fighting to protect their land, air and water from the harmful impacts of mining and coal burning and lead the nation in transitioning to renewable energy sources like wind and solar power.

Directed by Bo Boudart and narrated by Peter Coyote, “Power Paths” will air on the Emmy and Peabody Award-winning PBS series Independent Lens Nov. 3 at 10 p.m. (check local listings).

Featured participants, in alphabetical order

Enei Begaye – a Navajo mother and co-director of the Black Mesa Water Coalition who helps organize a grassroots coalition to bring renewable energy to reservation lands for a sustainable economy.

Andy Bessler – a Southwest representative of the Sierra Club’s Tribal Partnerships Program who creates an alliance with tribal grassroots groups to stop coal fired pollution and lobby for more renewable energy projects in the Southwest.

Nicole Horseherder – a Navajo mother and director of the Navajo grassroots organization To’ Nizhoni Ani (Beautiful Water Speaks) who advocates for protecting traditional Navajo values as well as land and water conservation.

Winona LaDuke – a political and environmental leader who calls attention to Native Americans and how their resources could contribute significantly to solving the national energy crisis with appropriate new legislation to increase renewable energy.

Preben Maegaard – a Danish activist who has led his country to replace fossil fuel dependence with wind and solar energy since the 1980s.

Vernon Masayesva – a longtime Hopi activist who protested the burning of coal on Hopi tribal lands and to protect their aquifers from depletion by the coal companies.

Hermann Scheer – a politician internationally known for his efforts to pass legislation in the German Parliament, resulting in doubling the amount of renewable energy produced in Germany and guaranteeing feed-in energy tariffs for those who generate more electricity than they consume.

Leonard Selestewa – a Hopi farmer who fights coal to preserve the Hopi way of life and who was instrumental in leading the Just Transition Coalition to achieve that.

“Power Paths” explores the heated and complex debate over energy that is taking place in the halls of Congress, corporate boardrooms, and American Indian communities across the Southwest and other parts of the country. Ten percent of America’s energy comes from Native American lands, including a third of U.S. coal deposits and hydroelectric dams that feed the grid. These mines and plants brought jobs to the region but also pollution, cancer, and environmental destruction. “Power Paths” chronicles the efforts of activists from several tribes as they search for ways to bring clean, renewable energy projects into their communities.

In the 1960s, Hopi and Navajo tribal governments signed coal leases with Peabody Coal, and the area soon became the largest coal strip-mining complex in the world. While these coal-fired plants provided electricity to the growing cities of the Southwest, ironically today an estimated 18,000 Navajo families still live without electricity. After years of pressuring their tribal governments not to renew the leases, tribal grassroots leaders convinced the Navajo and Hopi governments to pass resolutions demanding an end to the destructive
mining practices.

In 2005, The Sierra Club, Grand Canyon Trust and National Parks and Conservation Association won a court-approved settlement with the owners of the huge Mohave Generating Station: Either shut down or put pollution controls in place. The owners declined to add the controls and the plant was closed. It was a bittersweet victory, miners lost their jobs and tribal
royalties ended.

The grassroots movement called the Just Transition Coalition, who shut down Mohave, is seeking to reclaim the destiny of their tribes and defend the air and water from further degradation. The film follows their efforts to prevent further coal mining while bringing a greener economy and new green jobs to Indian lands by installing solar energy and large wind turbines on their lands.

While most Americans agree that we need to embark on a new energy path, they often lack a clear understanding of how our energy systems work and what can be done to change them. As “Power Paths” reveals, many Native American tribes are not waiting for the government to act. Instead, they are actively seeking investors and a way to control their own energy and sell the rest to the power companies. The film concludes with an unprecedented and ongoing decision by the California public utilities commission who take the Just Transition plan seriously. For the first time, Native Americans may receive some economic justice for the harm caused to natural resources on tribal lands and could lead the nation on a new energy path.

To learn more about the film, visit the “Power Paths” interactive companion Web site which features detailed information on the film, including an interview with the filmmaker and links and resources pertaining to the film’s subject matter. The site also features a “Talkback” section for viewers to share ideas and opinions, preview clips of the film, and more.

Tuesday, Oct 6 at 2:48 PM Solar Options wrote ...

During the 70's funds were available for alternative energy projects, which some tribes took advantage of at minimal levels. One of the projects included installing solar panels on HUD Housing to supplement water heating. Others included solar panels to generate low level electricity, primary on tribal administrative builds. Grants were available for innovative energy development. All of these projects were short lived, most as a result of the indifference, regular maintenance and monitoring.

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Tuesday, Oct 6 at 12:09 PM Himmler said wrote ...

i'm afraid to see what navajo will say. navajo has settled for royalty payment of $.25 per ton at the start of the peabody contract. what is it now? and so far Navajo really has not done anything with Secretary Salazar & Dept of Interior. there is no attempt to bring the issue toward antitrust status of private companies literally making money while navajo gets a few cents per ton of coal.

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Tuesday, Oct 6 at 10:04 AM Smallbear wrote ...

Wind and solar need not be tied to regional grids. Every building is potentially a generating station. Decentralization of power generation guarantees that power generation is not vulnerable to natural or deliberate disruption. Manufacturing, sales, and installation of small units for remote locations could be a viable source of income and employment for tribal members. It could become a homegrown industry that eventually serves the rest of the country.

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Monday, Oct 5 at 10:45 PM Native NDN wrote ...

Solar and wind power generating grids are in most case complex and costly at the initial stages, requiring outside technical assistance. In most cases, employment opportunities for tribal members are very limited, if any. Transporting the products are also costly, requiring cooperation with existing electrical utility companies and their electrical grids. "Green Projects" should be defined as producing alternative passive or direct energy sources for Natives first and second to other markets.

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