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EPA Takes Moral Action to Cut Carbon Pollution from Power Plants

June 10, 2014 By chris

On June 2nd, 2014 the EPA acted on our moral obligation to address unlimited carbon pollution coming from the nation’s power plants, the single largest source of global warming pollution in the country. The new standards will help usher in clean energy solutions like improved efficiency and solar power: things that NC Interfaith Power & Light congregations have been using in their facilities for years to reduce emissions and save money. Emerging wind and solar companies have been in a David and Goliath struggle against the well-funded coal and gas industries.

EPA Takes Moral Action to Cut Carbon Pollution from Power Plants

June 10, 2014 by chris

EPA_IPLstatement

On June 2nd, 2014 the EPA acted on our moral obligation to address unlimited carbon pollution coming from the nation’s power plants, the single largest source of global warming pollution in the country. Click here to show your support!

The new standards will help usher in clean energy solutions like improved efficiency and solar power: things that NC Interfaith Power & Light congregations have been using in their facilities for years to reduce emissions and save money.

Emerging wind and solar companies have been in a David and Goliath struggle against the well-funded coal and gas industries.

By requiring a 30% reduction in carbon pollution from power plants by 2030, the standards will create a dynamic move toward cleaner energy. IPL and its 40 state affiliates reaching 15,000 congregations strongly support the EPA’s important action.

The Rev. Canon Sally G. Bingham, President and Founder of Interfaith Power & Light, issued the following statement:

We applaud this landmark action that comes at a pivotal time when more people than ever have recognized the threat to their health and safety from unregulated pollution. These rules will safeguard our communities, our climate, and our children’s future.

As people of faith called to care for God’s people and Creation, especially the most vulnerable, we have a moral obligation to address the profound impacts of the way we use energy.

In addition to protecting our climate, curbing pollution from power plants offers many important benefits, including saving lives and reducing health risks to those suffering from heart disease and respiratory ailments such as asthma.

The EPA needs to hear that as people of faith
we support these historic landmark safeguards.

CLICK HERE TO TAKE ACTION
to help protect the blessings of clean air and water.

 

 

Filed Under: Blog, Faith in Action Homepage Card, Uncategorized

Support Solar in NC!

April 16, 2014 By chris

Tell the NC Utilities Commission (NCUC) you support net metering and solar power! Like rollover minutes on a cell phone bill, net metering gives renewable energy customers full credit on their utility bills for the excess clean power they deliver to the grid. This simple credit system is one of the most important state policies for empowering Americans to generate their own power from the sun.

Support Solar in NC!

April 16, 2014 by chris

Solar Trio Pics

Congregations across North Carolina are installing solar systems and NC Interfaith Power & Light is committed to helping forge this precedent-setting path forward.

Seeing solar panels on a house of worship becomes an iconic marker to the broader community, a demonstration of the congregation’s love of the Creator and creation, and it shows a commitment to change our relationship to energy. It becomes a moral statement, a rejection of our use of fossil fuels and the implications of damages that such use brings to all in our shared earth community, expressing a clear commitment that the broader human community cannot ignore.

It’s righteous, it’s working, and now it’s at risk.

Utilities nationwide are casting a long shadow over communities of faith that are going solar with net metering. For over a century, these monopoly interests have made money from building big, expensive power plants and transmission – and having their customers harness free sunshine and other homegrown resources is a threat to that business model.

Power companies should not be standing in the way of Creation Care practices to protect their old way of doing business.

Share your voice and send a message to NC’s Utilities Commission online.

 

NetmeteringLike rollover minutes on a cell phone bill, net metering gives renewable energy customers full credit on their utility bills for the excess clean power they deliver to the grid. This simple credit system is one of the most important state policies for empowering communities of faith to generate their own power from the sun.

Net metering content Source: http://www.oursolarrights.org/ 

 Click here for more information and resources about solar financing options for congregations.

 

Filed Under: Blog, Uncategorized Tagged With: Creation Care, duke energy, energy, net metering, solar

Lenten Reflection on Poverty and the Environment

March 4, 2014 By chris

We expect clean air and water to be plentiful. They are, after all, fundamental parts of God’s great creation. But the threats we pose to our planet and its resources are scientifically undeniable. We humans have proven to be careless in our treatment of the environment, frighteningly efficient in its destruction. And, as in so many cases, the burden for our actions falls disproportionately on the poor. The coal ash spill in the Dan River has drawn international attention in recent weeks. Coal has for years been burned at a Duke Energy power plant in Eden, and the residual ash had been dumped into a holding pond nearby. [...]

Lenten Reflection on Poverty and the Environment

March 4, 2014 by chris

Screen Shot 2014-03-04 at 4.00.01 PM

 

 

The earth is the Lord’s, and everything in it,
     the world, and all who live in it;
for he founded it on the seas
     and established it on the waters.
                                                                ~Psalm 24:1-2

 

 

We expect clean air and water to be plentiful.
They are, after all, fundamental parts of God’s great creation.

But the threats we pose to our planet and its resources are scientifically undeniable. We humans have proven to be careless in our treatment of the environment, frighteningly efficient in its destruction. And, as in so many cases, the burden for our actions falls disproportionately on the poor.

The coal ash spill in the Dan River has drawn international attention in recent weeks. Coal has for years been burned at a Duke Energy power plant in Eden, and the residual ash had been dumped into a holding pond nearby. In early February a pipe running beneath the pond collapsed, leaking tons of toxic coal ash and millions of gallons of contaminated water into the river. The coal ash has already flowed some 70 miles down the Dan, and public health officials are warning people not to touch the water or eat the fish.

Attracting less attention, a group of residents in the Royal Oak community of Brunswick County has worked against a different contamination threat in recent years. As the county has grown, it has chosen to truck construction and waste products away from gated luxury destinations and to a landfill established in the small, overwhelmingly poor community settled by freed slaves.

Residents, who have been denied waters and sewer service from the government, live with the smell, tainted water, and associated health concerns. When the county sought to expand the dump in recent years, the people of Royal Oak began working with the UNC Civil Rights Center to stop it. Like many who bear the most pressing burden of our environmental mistakes, it appears the most egregious thing anyone in the community did was be poor.

Even with the February coal-ash spill, the utility corporation had dealt with similar problems before on a smaller scale but affecting a disadvantaged community. For more than 30 years, the small, low-income neighborhood of Flemington has dealt with the health concerns posed by a nearby plant’s coal ash seepage. Ground water contamination has now become a threat to an initial fix for the area’s water supply.

Read the description of the Garden of Eden in Genesis. It is a story marked by God’s abundant generosity intended to be shared by us all. God gave us dominion over this planet with the expectation that we would serve as caregivers. Likewise, the expectation is clear that we will care for one another. So when humans damage the earth and seemingly direct the first and worst impact of that damage at those least able to counter it, we have doubly betrayed our responsibility.

So those of us with a wealth of options must commit to making healthier choices for the planet through our actions and our advocacy. And we must work so that the burden of environmental injustice does not fall heavily on those who are disadvantaged because they lack the authority that comes with money.

Prayer

Creator God, you have gifted us with land, sea and sky, and with all their inhabitants. Forgive us the choices that have damaged your precious creation and for the harm done our sisters and brothers who suffer first. Help us to build a sustainable way of life that honors your gifts to us and our responsibility to each other.

Amen.

————————

Excerpted from: NC Council of Churches “A Social Justice Study for Lent ~ 2014”
Written by:  Aleta Payne, Deputy Executive Director of the NC Council of Churches.
For a copy of the NCCC’s Lenten Resource Guide Click Here.

Resource Links
www.ncipl.org
www.ncconservationnetwork.org
www.crpe-ej.org
www.urbanhabitat.org
www.law.unc.edu

 

Filed Under: Blog, Faith Resources, Uncategorized

2014 National Preach-In on Climate Change

December 11, 2013 By chris

Download your free kit for the 2014 National Preach-In on Climate Change over Valentine’s weekend. From the comfort of your own congregation, you can join in spirit with thousands of religious leaders from […]

2014 National Preach-In on Climate Change

December 11, 2013 by chris

PreachIn_Heart

Download your free kit for the 2014 National Preach-In on Climate Change over Valentine’s weekend. From the comfort of your own congregation, you can join in spirit with thousands of religious leaders from across the country in preaching and teaching about climate change and love of Creation.

Each Preach-In Kit includes activity ideas, printable postcards to senators, bulletin inserts, a global warming fact sheet, and other helpful resources. You can also order a print version of this kit, which comes with 50 postcards, 50 bulletin inserts, and the exclusive Chasing Ice access code to view online during the Preach-In.

 Help spread the word! 

www.preachin.org

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: action, Advocacy, Climate Change, Creation Care, faith, Preach In

Peppers Picked in Prayer

November 12, 2013 By chris

Climate Change Is Real… In Many Ways… In Different Places… At The Same Time… As We All Exist.   Today I picked these peppers due to early freezing temperatures in North […]

Peppers Picked in Prayer

November 12, 2013 by chris

Peppers

Climate Change Is Real…

In Many Ways…

In Different Places…

At The Same Time…

As We All Exist.

 

Today I picked these peppers due to early freezing temperatures in North Carolina.
Although each pepper could’ve lived longer on the vine if the weather wasn’t so dangerous…
I was mindful with each pluck that all food is a blessing…
I wished I could be sharing with all those desperate for food in the Philippines.

I’m aware there is no ecological way to transport food to faraway places…
My intention is in the name of the poor, the hungry, those in need…
For all those suffering from the devastating impacts of climate change,

I offer my devotions in the form of behavioral atonement and faithful practice of Creation Care.

Prayers for Justice,
ST Sig
Director, NC Interfaith Power & Light

————————————————————–
“No nation will be immune to the impacts of climate change,” said a major World Bank report on the issue last year. “However, the distribution of impacts is likely to be inherently unequal and tilted against many of the world’s poorest regions, which have the least economic, institutional, scientific and technical capacity to cope and adapt.” — NY Times Blog, ANNIE LOWREY 11/12/13
————————————————————–

Filed Under: Blog, Uncategorized Tagged With: Climate Change, food, Philippines, Prayer

THE SOLAR EVENT OF THE SEASON!

November 4, 2013 By chris

Hundreds of people came together at the Cleaner is Cheaper: Solar Panel event in Charlotte on Saturday, Nov 16th joined by many solar power companies from North Carolina as well […]

THE SOLAR EVENT OF THE SEASON!

November 4, 2013 by chris

Hundreds of people came together at the Cleaner is Cheaper: Solar Panel event in Charlotte on Saturday, Nov 16th joined by many solar power companies from North Carolina as well as issue experts about solar energy. After the networking and panel discussion, we shared a free lunch, discussion groups and the opportunity to go on a tour of the on-site solar project. The event ended with a press conference and cleaner is cheaper community rally.

Sponsored by:
• A Phillip Randolph InstituteSolar Panel 4x5 Color
• Appalachian Institute for Renewable Energy
• Center for Community Change
• Clean Air Carolina
• Myers Park Baptist Church Earth Keepers
• Environment NC
• Greenpeace NC
• League of Conservation Voters
• League of Women Voters
• NAACP Charlotte Branch• NC Conservation Network
• NC Interfaith Power and Light
• Shift the Climate
• Sierra Club – Piedmont Chapter
• Southern Alliance for Clean Energy
• Sustain Charlotte
• U.S. Green Building Council North Carolina

Questions? Contact info@ncipl.org

 

Saturday, Nov 16 from 10:30am to 1:30pm
Myers Park Baptist Church – Shalom Hall
1900 Queens Rd, Charlotte NC 28207

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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