Renewable energy installations in remote communities of developing nations encourage indigenous and rural communities to stay put and keep their traditions alive. With remarkably small power systems, these underserved villages can store vaccines in a refrigerator, pump water, light a clinic at night, or contact the outside world.
One of the key grassroots groups doing this work is Green Empowerment, which approaches all of their projects in Central/South America and Southeast Asia through a lens of generating social as well as environmental progress for communities with renewable energy & potable water delivery. GE interviews community members about what their power or water procurement needs are, recommends a system that would be appropriate -- including small hydropower, biomass, wind or solar -- supply the system, and then train a team of community members to plan, install, and maintain that system. That team can then help neighboring communities do the same, while maintaining its own.
GE is bringing two of their inspiring partners, engineer/activists from the Philippines who run NGOs there, to give folks in Seattle this Friday and Portland next Thursday a better sense of the huge possibilities of their shared projects. Highly recommended!
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Delay And Deny Posted 2:45 am
29 Feb 2008
Hey it's great that Seattle Greens have to travel to other continents to help people, when while at home they spend countless hours trying to damage and disparage their "native traditions".
I speak of the Imperial Guard in Olympia, and in the power chairs of King County and Seattle. They have no problem wanting to impose systems on the free people of the exurbs and heavy taxation that destroys our way of life.
Where are all the ethnologists now?
Why is it that massive income draining boondoggles such as the Monorail, Lite Rail and 520 bridge are allowed to destroy the free Exurbian way of life of free independent homes and vehicles that can roam the land?
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