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| Photos Black Mesa Water Coalition |
This morning Navajo community members use solar to pump water from the Central Arizona Canal in Scottsdale, showing SRP that solar works.
MEDIA ALERT FOR 9am on Tuesday, June 18
CONTACT: Enei Begaye, Black Mesa Water Coalition, 928.380.6296, eneibegaye@gmail.com
CONTACT: Raina T. Gearon, 915.342.2624, rt_gearon@yahoo.com
Unique Demo Today in Scottsdale:
Navajo Community Members to Pump CAP Canal Water with Solar Power
Navajo Community Members to Pump CAP Canal Water with Solar Power
Event
to press Navajo Generating Station owners for transition from polluting
coal industry on Navajo Reservation that has powered CAP pumps
WHEN: promptly at 9am Tuesday, June 18; Press Conference to follow at about 10am
WHERE: Scottsdale Soleri Bridge at the intersection Camelback Rd & Scottsdale Rd.
This Action will be followed by a Press Conference in the Scottsdale Fashion Square parking lot.
WHAT:
- Navajo community members using a solar-powered generator to pump CAP canal water into trucks and barrels that Navajo Nation residents use to haul water on the reservation.
- Colorful rally by dozens of Navajo tribal members and supporters with handmade signs and banners. Event slogan: Energy Without Injustice – Power Without Pollution
More
than 50 Navajo Nation community members and supporters will park water
trucks that families use on the reservation alongside the Central
Arizona Project (CAP) canal in Scottsdale today at 9am and use a
solar-powered generator to pump water from the canal to the vehicles.
Tribal
members are staging the demonstration to send a message to the owners
of the Navajo Generating Station (NGS) coal-fired power plant near Page,
Arizona that Navajo families want a transition away from a polluting
coal industry on Navajo land that has powered CAP pumps for decades at
the expense of residents’ land, health, water, and culture. Major NGS owners include Salt River Project (SRP)(plant operator) and the U.S. government’s Department of Interior. Today SRP provides Arizonans less than 1 percent solar power.
The “Energy Without Injustice – Power Without Pollution” action demonstrates solar power as a solution. There is enough old mine land on Black Mesa to generate thousands of megawatts of solar energy, providing thousands of jobs and hundreds of millions of dollars for the regional economy.
Aging
Navajo Generating Station (NGS) is among the most polluting coal-fired
power plants in America and after decades of coal industry on Navajo
Nation, many Navajo families have not benefitted; thousands still lack
electricity and running water to their homes and haul water in trucks
every week for cooking, cleaning, and drinking.
Livestream video will be available at http://ustre.am/FAE0
Images and video will be available after the event at http://www.facebook.com/blackmesawc and twitter@blackmesawc

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