Title: Who are we
1(No Transcript)
2Who are we?
- A project of The Student PIRGs (MASSPIRG,
ConnPIRG, NJPIRG Student Chapters, MaryPIRG,
MoPIRG, OhioPIRG, WISPIRG, INPIRG, CoPIRG,
WashPIRG, OSPIRG, CALPIRG), Black Mesa Water
Coalition, California Student Sustainability
Coalition, Climate Campaign, Energy Justice
Network, EnviroCitizen, Environmental Justice and
Climate Change Initiative, Free The Planet!,
Global Exchange, Greenpeace, Indigenous
Environmental Network, LCVEF/Project Democracy,
National Association of Environmental Law
Societies, National Wildlife Federation's Campus
Ecology Program, Rainforest Action Network,
Student Environmental Action Coalition, Sierra
Student Coalition, Sierra Youth Coalition,
Southeast Student Energy and Climate Network,
Southern Alliance for Clean Energy, Students
United for a Responsible Global Environment,
Youth Environmental Network
3What is your name?
- Where do you come from?
- What are you working to do to make your campus
rock? - (Quickly)
- Thank you for your work
4Ben
5Contents
- Intro to the state PIRGs30 years of Student
Action for Change - Global WarmingIs there a way out?
- The State of the Nation
- Students Take the Lead
- The ChallengeLets do it, and lets talk
6CALPIRG Student Chapters
- California Student Public Interest Research
Groups - Non-partisan, student directed and funded
non-profit - Started in 1972
- Eight chapters around the state at the University
of California campus - Work on environmental, consumer, hunger and
homelessness and democracy issues. - Mission
- Educate
- Serve
- Develop leaders
- Activate
7How Ben sees CALPIRG
- Students are the Natural Born Killers of
activism - Were passionate, just getting out into the
world, and not jaded enough to roll over when a
problem of Social Change proportions comes our
way
- CALPIRG is the intentioned institutionalization
of student action - Connect students to a cadre of professional
organizers and advocates in the field and in the
Capitol to build huge groups and win big victories
8CALPIRG and Energy
- RPS20 by 2017 in CA
- Million Solar Roofs Initiative
- 7 CALPIRG student chapters ran grassroots
campaigns mixing media, visibility, and coalition
power to pressure in district Assembly Members to
co-author the bill. - More comments on Solar than gay marriage
billwhich should not be incredible, but is
9Campus Climate Challenge
- Our generations greatest challenge
- Not just pollution
- Or democracy
- Or Turtles
10Global Warming
- The Problem
- Extreme Weather
- Rampant Disease
- Human Suffering
11Extreme Weather
- In 1980s the total amount insurance2 billion
(average year) - 12 billion average since, until 1998
- 98in 1998
- One event Hurricane Katrinawe dont even know
how muchover 100 billion - Extreme firesworst fire season on record
- Extreme rains, floods
- Blizzards in Asia
12Rampant Disease
- Mosquito epidemics will increase over 100 times
over the next few decades, meanwhile cholera has
been seen in Bangladesh and Malaria is appearing
in South Africa, places that these diseases were
previously unheard of.1 - 1 http//www.heatisonline.com
- Alaskan oystersbreeding ground is now warmer
- so a bacteria that previously was unable to
exist, is now a problem threatening the species
13Human Suffering
- 150,000 people killed as a result of hurricanes
in Gulf Coast region - Facing greatest catastrophe in human history
- 1 in 6 of the worlds countries face food
shortages due to drought - Floods in Indonesia left 5,000 people dead
- Next?
14Is there a way out?
- Yup. We need to stop burning fossil fuels
- Do Americans agree?
15Pew Research Center for the People the Press
survey conducted by Princeton Survey Research
Associates International. Feb. 1-5, 2006. Adults
nationwide.
- "Would you say that the United States, as a
country, is addicted to oil, or not?" N757, MoE
4 (Form1)Â Â Â Is Is Not Unsure - 2/1-5/06 85 11 4
16What do you think America?
- "As I read some possible government policies to
address America's energy supply, tell me whether
you would favor or oppose each. Would you favor
or oppose the government see below?"      .  -   "Requiring better fuel efficiency for cars,
trucks and SUVs" N1,502, MoE 3Â Â Â - Favor Oppose Unsure
- 2/1-5/06 86 12 2
- "Increasing federal funding for research on wind,
solar and hydrogen technology" N745,MoE 4
(Form 2)Â Â Â - 2/1-5/06 82 14 4
17Lets say we could get out
- The Concept
- A New Energy Future
- That our generation will define
18Ben, is this far off
- Right now We have the potential to get 20 of
our energy from clean sources like solar and wind - In California, it is already cheaper to build a
wind farm than it is to build a new natural gas
power plant - But the industries are balking
- When they wanted the new nuclear bomb
- Saying that a country that can double the speed
of microchips every 18 months is somehow
incapable of innovating its way to energy
independence - that is for sissies, defeatists
and people who are ready to see American values
eroded at home and abroad. Thomas Friedman,
author and economist - Its up to us to create the incentive and the
model to make it happen
19And who better to do it?
- Students have always been the driving force in
large-scale social change - The Civil Rights movement
- The movement to End Vietnam
20Students will be the driving force behind this
effort
- Universities are a great demonstration of how
this can work on a big scale - Educating and Engaging the leaders of tomorrow on
this and all social and environmental issues - most of the public are in with usthey just
dont know what do!
21Huge Victories so far
- UC, CSU
- Boulder WIND!
- Rutgers Comprehensive Reduction plan
- Clean Car shows all over CA
22Key elements of the campaign
- The Message
- This is our generations challenge, and the
solutions are already at our fingertips. In the
face of inaction from the federal and state
governments, we are acting NOW. - The Coalition
- United we standdivided were silent
23Education
- Next voters
- Next consumers
- Next politicians and decision makers
- Getting this message across is challenging.
- We CAN solve global warming with determination,
leadership and focusthe first challenge - Most students agree that global warming is
happening, but are either unconvinced that it
will really affect them, or that we can really
solve it. And to make things tougher, its easy
to turn people off with negative messages. So
how can we get our points across?
24How do I start?
- What To Do
- Have fun! Make your events fun and exciting.
Make people want to know what you have to say! - Make your events and materials as visually
stimulating as possible - GO BIG!
- Be as engaging as possible, organize events that
people will want to come and see and will be
genuinely excited about! - When possible be interactive and hands-on.
Organize competitions and contests and give
prizes, have students build solar panels and wind
turbines, make them food, throw them a party! - Emphasize that the solutions you are working for
are easy, available now, and dont require major
changes in lifestyle or big sacrifices. - What NOT To Do
- Avoid simply sitting at a table with some fliers.
People wont notice you and your goal is to be
noticed! - Avoid an event with only 20 people who already
know all they need to now about the issue.
Preaching to the choir gets you nowhere. - Dont wait! Act now! Get started immediately.
25Imagine
- Everywhere you go on your campus you are exposed
to global warming solutions not merely on paper
or in theory but actually being put into
practice - Clean Car Show on the Quad or Pimp My Clean
Ride Car Show - DJ, guys and gals walking around in swimsuits
posing with the cars, an exhibition or show by
the campus dance clubs, a BBQ, games and
competitions, and a barker constantly making
announcements over a megaphone. - More ideas
- Solar Powered Events Smoothies, Concerts, Street
Fairs, The Biggest Loser, Greek Green
Challenge, - Iron Chef Clean Energy
26Policy
- 1. Develop Your Goal. Your policy goal at any
particular point should be the most ambitious
proposal that you think has a realistic chance of
being adopted by the administration. That means
that some campuses will push for something
similar to the University of Colorado Boulders
long term plan to reduce its global warming
pollution down to zero and other campuses will
push for a policy requiring all university
computers to be shut down at night like at the
University of Wisconsin Madison. - 2. Write Your Proposal. This is where you
actually research and write your policy proposal
and get it reviewed by and approved by a
supportive faculty member. - 3. Submit Your Proposal. Take your proposal to
the campus administration and sell it. - 4. Build Support for Your Proposal. This is where
you need to build support for your proposal to
show the campus administration and
decision-makers that the campus community
supports your idea. - 5. Implementation! Once your proposal has been
approved, work closely with the administration to
follow through on it and get the project
completed, all the while advocating for the next
policy goal!
27Comprehensive Policy Goals
- 1. A formal goal and timetable for reducing the
universitys global warming pollution as close to
zero as possible. - We suggest a goal of reducing global warming
pollution by 90 below 2005 levels by the year
2030, or a 4 reduction each year. The State of
California adopted a similar goal last year that
most scientists think is both aggressive and
reasonable to achieve.
282. An initial and ongoing Greenhouse Gas
Inventory.
- ?A greenhouse gas inventory is a detailed report
of exactly how much global warming pollution is
emitted by the campus and from what sources.
293. Comprehensive plans with specific benchmarks
and timetables in at least the following areas
- Renewable Energy To get as much of the
universitys electricity from renewable energy,
either from purchasing renewable energy from the
local utility or by generating more energy
on-campus from solar panels and wind turbines. - Green Building This includes either retrofitting
existing buildings to be more efficient or
committing to all new construction to the highest
efficiency standards. - Conservation/Efficiency One of the most
cost-effective ways to reduce your campus usage
of dirty energies. This can be as simple as
policies to turn off all university computers at
night, replacing all university lighting with
compact fluorescent bulbs or purchasing more
efficient appliances. - Transportation Decreasing usage of
fossil-fuel-powered transportation, using
alternative fuels and/or upgrading to more
efficient vehicles. Commuter travel to and from
campus, is usually the largest source of
emissions, so encouraging and supporting a shift
to alternative forms of transportation, such as
buses and carpools, to campus can have a large
impact on total transportation emissions.
30Students have had incredible success in this
area, including the following examples
- Purchasing renewable energy from the grid
- Generating energy through on-site solar energy
- Generating energy through on-site wind power
- Retrofitting existing buildings to be more energy
efficient - Energy efficiency in new building construction
- Campuswide conservation policies (such as using
only compact fluorescent light bulbs) - Converting university fleets to low and zero
emissions vehicles - Reducing individual automobile use to and from
campus
31Great places to Start
- The campus facilities director
- The chair of the sustainability committee (if one
exists) - An environmental studies or engineering professor
who is concerned with the issue
32Dudes, Lets get it on!
- We need to start nowso whats your plan
- Breakout discussions
- What is your next event?
- Plan walkthrough
- What are the needs of the sustainable soldiers
33Resources
- www.exxposeexxon.com
- The Clean Air, Cool Planet Greenhouse Gas
Emissions Calculator - Higher Ed Factsheet (will post)
- Apollo Alliance Reportin Coalition
- New Energy for Campuses
- Conservation, Financing Strategies, Purchasing,
Transportation - CCC Toolkit
34You and me are like Al Green (and Will, too!)
- Ben Smith
- ben_at_calpirgstudents.org
- Will Conklin
- willc_at_pirg.org