Fairbanks Climate Action Coalition Fairbanks Climate Action Coalition

Exciting Developments in our Interfaith Work

FCAC’s Interfaith Working Group works to bridge the gap amongst Fairbanks area faith communities, and find points of commonality where we can work alongside each other for climate justice. Find out more about the work we’ve been doing, and the exciting things we’re planning next!

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Fairbanks Climate Action Coalition Fairbanks Climate Action Coalition

June Energy Newsletter: Accountability

In this issue of FCAC’s Energy Update Newsletter, we’ll be talking about accountability. What does it look like to hold our leaders accountable to their energy promises, or to basic standards of transparency? How can we, as Alaskan residents, exercise our power to demand that our leaders hold up their end of the bargain?

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Fairbanks Climate Action Coalition Fairbanks Climate Action Coalition

Dunleavy’s not fooling anyone: fossil fuels aren’t sustainable

Last month I attended the “Alaska Sustainable Energy Conference” in which the Governor opened the space by asking, “How do we make energy affordable and sustainable?” The “solutions” offered by the majority of speakers over the following three days could not have been farther from the reality of what’s needed for a clean energy transition.

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Fairbanks Climate Action Coalition Fairbanks Climate Action Coalition

Celebrating freedom

This Juneteenth, we aim to celebrate the freedom, equality, and justice that have been won through the persistent and strategic organizing of previous and current generations of Black organizers, but also to remember that this work is not over, and that it is absolutely a part of our movement.

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May 2023 Energy Newsletter: Real vs. False Solutions

In this issue of FCAC’s Energy Update Newsletter, we’ll be talking about real solutions vs. false solutions. We use the term “false solutions” to encompass anything that is put forward as a solution to the climate crisis, that is, for one reason or another, not actually a solution to the climate crisis.

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Fairbanks Climate Action Coalition Fairbanks Climate Action Coalition

Welcome to the first edition of our Energy Update Newsletter! 

This is for those who are interested in learning more about energy happenings in the state, but are having a hard time keeping track of all the players and moving pieces! Luckily, we’ve got people for that, and we want to make sure you’re in the loop.

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No Alaska LNG!

We are calling on the Biden Administration and the Department of Energy to stop violently enabling the climate crisis and to instead reconsider and reverse their decision to approve the export application for the proposed Alaska Liquified Natural Gas Pipeline Project. Read more and take action at bit.ly/NOAKLNG

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Fairbanks Climate Action Coalition Fairbanks Climate Action Coalition

Founding Director transitioning off staff at the end of 2023

This movement is deep medicine for me - there is nothing more healing than being in a community moving towards a shared vision for the future - and it goes without saying that I am not leaving this movement, but by the end of this year, I will no longer be the Executive Director at FCAC.

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Building Interfaith Community

In January, members of a diverse group of Fairbanks faith communities met for soup and joy-filled conversation on how we can make our community stronger by uniting in faith, combining our efforts in earth care and care for others, and working together.

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Fairbanks Climate Action Coalition Fairbanks Climate Action Coalition

Lessons on Martin Luther King Jr. Day

On this day honoring his birthday, we’re taking a moment to reflect on the question: What can we learn from that legacy for the work we have laid before us?

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Fairbanks Climate Action Coalition Fairbanks Climate Action Coalition

Alaska’s Future Doesn’t Depend on the Fossil Fuel Industry

This future doesn’t depend on the fossil fuel industry currently destroying our shared natural communities. The steps required to advance this just transition from an unsustainable economy to one that is regenerative are numerous, but they begin with a reevaluation of the state’s relationship to fossil fuel extraction and a reclamation of Alaska’s resources for Alaskans.

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Fairbanks Climate Action Coalition Fairbanks Climate Action Coalition

How to Defend the FNSB Climate Action Plan

As Fairbanks North Star Borough residents, we are seeing the effects of climate change in sharp relief and have made our desire for climate action measures clear through broad public engagement in the process of developing a common-sense Climate Action and Adaptation Plan over the past year. Now, despite the popularity of the plan, fringe members of the assembly who are publicly opposed to climate action have taken control of the Climate Action Committee, abruptly dismissing all 6 of the highly qualified Climate Action Committee members and replacing them with a group of people who have an unclear level of commitment to seeing the plan through. This is an extremely unprecedented move and is disrespectful to the work and expertise of the former committee members.

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Organizing works

The Golden Valley Electric Association Board met Monday evening, voting to decommission Healy 2, the largest coal plant in Alaska, and invest in a wind and battery project that will be the largest of its kind in the state due to grassroots community organizing!

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What’s going on with this Nenana land sale anyway?

The State of Alaska is opening a land sale to privatize public land under the guise of “food security” even though it likely won't impact actual food supplies for three decades. Many local residents are asking that the Nenana-Totchaket land sale pause until appropriate land analysis and Tribal consultations can be completed.

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