Solutions

See our newest pow­er­point on waste and ener­gy solu­tions, with some great news on solar and wind becom­ing cheap­er than fos­sil fuels!

No Such Thing as “Tran­si­tion” Fuels: Why we don’t believe in “tran­si­tion” fuels / technologies

We can meet all of our elec­tric­i­ty needs and near­ly all of our trans­porta­tion and heat­ing sec­tor needs with­out burn­ing any­thing: through the use of con­ser­va­tion, effi­cien­cy, wind, solar and ener­gy stor­age.  The only sec­tors where select burn­able fuels might be nec­es­sary are in planes, boats and cer­tain indus­tri­al heat­ing applications.

A Decem­ber 2012 study from the Uni­ver­si­ty of Delaware has deter­mined that wind, solar and ener­gy stor­age could eco­nom­i­cal­ly ful­ly pow­er a util­i­ty scale elec­tric grid with 99.9% reli­a­bil­i­ty by 2030 — cheap­ly and with­out gov­ern­ment sub­si­dies, if the prop­er mix is imple­ment­ed. See the press release or the full study.

The poten­tial for 100% clean ener­gy has also been doc­u­ment­ed world­wide for all ener­gy (elec­tric­i­ty, heat­ing and trans­porta­tion) in 2009 and 2011 stud­ies out of Stan­ford Uni­ver­si­ty, which you can find in more detail here. State-by-state plans avail­able at the Solu­tions Project.

These stud­ies say it can be done by 2030, but with enough polit­i­cal will and a shift­ing of sub­si­dies from dirty ener­gy and mil­i­tarism to clean solu­tions, it can like­ly be done much sooner.

When it comes to mate­ri­als man­age­ment, the sim­pli­fied solu­tion can be summed up as the three R’s — Reduce, Reuse, Recy­cle. These are in pri­or­i­ty order.  See our Ener­gy and Waste Tech­nol­o­gy Hier­ar­chies chart to see this fleshed out.

The equiv­a­lent in the ener­gy world is:

Con­ser­va­tion, Effi­cien­cy and Clean* Renew­ables

*Clean means tech­nolo­gies which don’t cre­ate pol­lu­tion while gen­er­at­ing energy

These solu­tions have the poten­tial to fill all of our ener­gy needs, with­out need­ing nuclear pow­er, fos­sil fuels, biomass/incineration, or even large hydro dams. The tech­nol­o­gy exists, and the mon­ey exists (yet it’s being used to sub­si­dize dirty ener­gy and wars to prop up our addic­tion to these dirty ener­gy sources). What’s miss­ing is the polit­i­cal will to enact the solu­tions. We need politi­cians with­out con­nec­tions to dirty pow­er indus­tries so that we can direct pub­lic and pri­vate invest­ment dol­lars towards clean ener­gy solu­tions, rather than a con­tin­ued reliance on dirty, unsus­tain­able ener­gy sources.

Please use the infor­ma­tion on this page, and our plat­form to influ­ence any­thing in your pow­er, from the ener­gy choic­es in your home, school, work­place or local gov­ern­ment to the ener­gy poli­cies in your state or on the nation­al level.

Here is a broad out­line of the pol­i­cy solu­tions as we see them:

1) An Ener­gy Con­ser­va­tion and Effi­cien­cy Law that reduces ener­gy demand by 50% in 20 years, across all three ener­gy sec­tors (trans­porta­tion, heat­ing and elec­tric­i­ty), and then in half again with­in 50 years.  This would nec­es­sar­i­ly include many solu­tion pieces, from appli­ance effi­cien­cy stan­dards to seri­ous mass tran­sit invest­ments and much more.  See our plat­form for some more detail.

2) A Clean Ener­gy Port­fo­lio Stan­dard that meets the demands of the remain­ing ener­gy needs by phas­ing out our cur­rent reliance on coal, oil, gas, nuclear, hydro­elec­tric, biomass/incineration, and bio­fu­els, and phas­ing in wind, solar and ocean pow­er (and per­haps some small-scale micro hydro or closed-loop geot­her­mal), using ener­gy stor­age strate­gies and decen­tral­ized ener­gy pro­duc­tion to make the sys­tem sta­ble and efficient.

3) Shift the $74 bil­lion in annu­al dirty ener­gy sub­si­dies plus at least half of the mil­i­tary bud­get (a major oil and gas sub­sidy) to clean solu­tions, mak­ing the above shift possible.

4) Set a nation­al “zero waste” pol­i­cy, start­ing with a nation­al 75% waste reduc­tion, recy­cling and com­post­ing goal.  Min­i­miz­ing waste can reduce 37% of U.S. green­house gas emis­sions and will save huge amounts of ener­gy in man­u­fac­tur­ing and avoid­ed resource extraction.

5) Adopt a cli­mate-friend­ly sus­tain­able agri­cul­ture pro­gram, focus­ing on mak­ing all food organ­ic, local­iz­ing food pro­duc­tion sys­tems and encour­ag­ing eat­ing low­er on the food chain.  This can reduce over 20% of green­house gas emissions.

Not polit­i­cal­ly real­is­tic?  No effec­tive leg­is­la­tion is cur­rent­ly polit­i­cal­ly real­is­tic at the fed­er­al lev­el so long as cor­po­rate inter­ests con­trol our polit­i­cal process.  To be able to win any effec­tive changes at the fed­er­al lev­el, our first pri­or­i­ty must be clean and fair elec­tions.   We must unshack­le our democ­ra­cy from cor­po­rate con­trol and polit­i­cal bribery.  Clean ener­gy needs clean elections!

With­out wait­ing for fed­er­al pol­i­cy action, we are focus­ing where the peo­ple pow­er is: at the grass­roots lev­el, win­ning vic­to­ries and build­ing pow­er to advance the poli­cies and projects from the bot­tom up, as we reshape entire ener­gy and waste indus­tries one com­mu­ni­ty at a time.  This is what good, well-net­worked, grass­roots orga­niz­ing has been doing for decades: shut­ting down and pre­vent­ing pol­lut­ing facil­i­ties from com­ing online at the source while cre­at­ing vibrant real solu­tions right at home.


EJ Communities Map

Map of Coal and Gas Facilities

We are mapping all of the existing, proposed, closed and defeated dirty energy and waste facilities in the US. We are building a network of community groups to fight the facilities and the corporations behind them.

Our Network

Watch Us on YouTube