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On August 5, 2007, over a thousand miles away from each other, marchers in Iowa and New Hampshire converged on the capitols of each state calling for real global warming solutions and the creation of a clean energy economy: 80% cuts in carbon by 2050, and 2 million new clean energy jobs across the country. Click here for press coverage.

Both marches had a great turnout. But more important than the numbers was our spirit: hopeful yet determined, loud and joyful, united in our vision and our call - we are the leaders we've been waiting for to create a clean energy economy here in this country and around the world. There'll be more reflections to come, but for now, check out our photos, videos, and next steps - and thank you to all who made this journey possible!


Remarks at the Rally to ReEnergizeNH, by Jared Duval

Jared Duval

When past generations faced immense challenges, our society found ways to pull together and rise above – the Civilian Conservation Corps and other New Deal programs pulled our country out of the Great Depression, they didn't create another one. In World War II, we defeated global fascism by reorienting our entire economy, not by continuing the economy of the past. And when the promise and ideals of our country did not extend to black Americans, a principled social movement wrote new laws for our country, sharing a dream that inspired a generation even if it has yet to be fully fulfilled today.

But for the past twenty years we have heard nothing but denial, delay, and hollow rhetoric on the issue of our time, global warming. And what more consequential issue has ever faced humanity? As our problems have become larger and more complex, our politics have become more and more trivial, more tragically beneath the tasks before us. The politics of today are not worthy of our American heritage.

So it is time to restore our American spirit of resolve and hope – yes, learning from past achievements, but also writing our own, unique generational story.

We can build our own Clean Energy Corps, providing millions of young and retired Americans with service opportunities retrofitting tens of millions of low-income homes helping those who most need to save money on their energy bills and reducing pollution.


1 day to go: for the future

TOMORROW is the rally to ReEnergize New Hampshire, from noon to 3:30 on the State House lawn in Concord. We hope to see you there (or at the final rally in Des Moines, Iowa, if you're in the Midwest). We've all been marching for four hot but gloriously sunny days, and we're ready to walk the final stretch down Main Street to call on our leaders to take action for a clean energy future.
the marchers
Tomorrow is also the culmination of a summer's and in fact a whole year's hard work, but it's still only the beginning of a great movement. When we say we're marching for a clean energy future - for renewable power, new jobs at home, cleaner air, water, and skies, and healthier communities, all to confront the challenege of climate change - we're talking about renewing our hope for a better world.

"I would say," said Bishop Gene Robinson to a crowd of tired but hopeful walkers last night, "that you are holy... I think, what holy means is, to God - however you understand God, whatever that label means for you. But whatever it is that kinda makes sense out of what we're doing, anything that strives to be like that life force, in my book, is holy."

And as a friendly Manchester resident along our route said, "we're so pleased, we think it's wonderful - just to see them walk by our house is so exciting!"

We're excited, too - excited and inspired by the people who have joined this movement, the encouragement and support we've received from the towns that have so graciously hosted us and our tired feet, and we're inspired by all of you out there looking to make a difference. We'll see you tomorrow, and we'll hope to see you again soon as we work for the future.


Iowa Underway

The March to ReEnergize Iowa is under way and making quite Taking a breaka splash. Yesterday we had 50 people in Ames for our event kickoff to start the March. You may have seen us yesterday in the Des Moines Register, on the front pages of the Ames Tribune and Cityview or as the lead feature on Fox news at 9 PM.

The people marching with us are truly amazing. Yesterday we walked with Ben, an exchange student from China who marched all day yesterday despite the final exam he has today and will be back out tomorrow, with Randy, who runs a campus minstry at ISU that has been working to promote sustainability, and with scores of others. From pre-school through retirement our marchers come from a diverse background and the more the merrier!

Our lunch stop yesterday was touching. Black's Heritage Farm is several generations deep in family agriculture. Along with the best sweet corn I have ever had, the Blacks grow ahost of unconventional crops and are dedicated to sustainable farming and to stoping global warming. Over our meal, their pastor lead us in thoughts about how we can steward the earth.

Lunch stop at Blacks Heritage Farm

With today's energy efficiency project in Alleman, coverage is expected to stay steady through the final Rally on Sunday. And this is all happening on weekdays. We expect tomorrow to be our biggest day yet.

We meet tomorrow at North Polk High School, Alleman, at 9:30 AM and reach our evening program at Saylorville High School at 5 PM. See you there.

2 days to go: growing the green economy

"Welcome to Litchfield, walkers. Folks are talking amongst themselves. Come back next year and see the fruits of your labor - you got all the local farmers to participate. Hoorah!"
- Liana Eastman, farmer, Nesenkeag Coop Farm

Liana Eastman and her husband, Eero Ruutila, welcomed us last evening to their organic farm, tucked between Nesenkeag Brook and the Merrimack. This morning we awoke to sweetbreads and strawberries from the farm stand down the road, and Liana spoke of how the March had started the farmers talking – she said the participation of the farms in this event had helped forge at tighter community. "Think of the amount of work we could get done if we had this many community members coming by like this all the time," she said.

When the heat neared 90, we set off, already sweaty but powered on by a good morning swim and early press coverage on NPR, international radio, and the front page of The Nashua Telegraph. As the temperature broke 100 degrees and our voices cracked from singing "Ooo, it's hot out here" perhaps too many times, Stonyfield came to the rescue with a donation of ice cream for lunch.


A few blocks and blisters later, we arrived in a very different place than where we had started – Manchester, or fondly referred to by many as Manchvegas, a business capitol for the state. There we were greeted by Representative Lilly Mesa and others who highlighted for us the importance of business in building a green economy.

Every day we're finding the critical but scattered parts of a green economy here in New Hampshire – at the farms we stay at, from the words of the people we meet. Now we just need to piece it together.

Join us on Sunday for the Rally to ReEnergize New Hampshire, and help us piece together the workings of a clean energy economy in the Granite State - here, we can lead the nation in the right direction.

And join us tomorrow as well, as we walk from Manchester to Hooksett!


3 days to go: momentum builds

Yesterday, over a hundred people crowded before Nashua's City Hall to kick off the March to ReEnergize New Hampshire, a walk from Nashua to Concord calling for national leadership on real global warming solutions and a clean energy economy. After today, only 3 days to go until masses of Granite Staters converge on the State House lawn to send this message.



After walking from Nashua to Litchfield yesterday, the marchers will finish today's (Thursday's) journey at Bronstein Park in Manchester at 7pm, to music by the Powerkegs and speeches by business and community leaders. Join us at the park tonight! Directions may be found here.

On the steps of City Hall yesterday, addressing the marchers were Bernie Streeter, the Republican Mayor of Nashua; Martha Fuller-Clark, a Democratic State Senator; and both Rev. Fred Small and Rev. Margaret Bullit-Jonas, two co-organizers of the Massachusetts Interfaith Walk for Climate Rescue this past spring.

Among the marchers, both a wheelchair and a baby stroller were spotted; a toddler, teenagers, college students, and baby boomers, all both alarmed by the danger of global warming and inspired by the opportunity to build a prosperous, clean energy economy. All sang, drummed, and cheered as excitement grew.

Read The Nashua Telegraph's two stories on the March to ReEnergize New Hampshire here and here:

The march traveled by foot to Litchfield's Nesenkeag Farm, where we prepared ourselves for a talk by Bill McKibben and Nesenkeag owner and farmer, Eero Ruutila. We sat in a circle one hundred people wide to listen and talk about why we had come together. Bill talked about the hope that we all share - the possibility of a new future, built on clean and just jobs in a green energy economy. Eero talked about his experiences farming Nesenkeag Organic and about how he has had to struggle with a changing climate that brings floods and new insects.

We, as Bill pointed out, can make a world that is more just, more community minded, more humane than any generation past has seen. The truth that Eero presented is real and shows why we must take action, but we are walking motivated not just by the moments of fear of what could be, but of many, many more moments of hope for what will be.

Yesterday, much of our focus was on what we each can do to address global warming in our own lives. Tonight in Manchester, we'll focus on what we can and are doing in the business community. As the march gathers momentum, we're gearing up to make the largest call yet for national action on what will be seen in the history books as one of the defining challenges of the 21st century.

For info on the the march or the culminating rally on Sunday, August 5th at noon at the State House in Concord, click here:

Onward and upward!


Speech at the ReEnergize NH Kickoff, July 31st

We wanted to bring everyone together tonight, because tomorrow at 9 in the morning, dozens of us are going to leave Nashua's City Hall on foot, bound for Concord. After that, hundreds from all walks of life - young, old, conservative, progressive – will join us, clearing the way for a rally on the State House lawn on Sunday, August 5 at noon. By the time we get there, we’ll meet up with thousands of Granite Staters, and make one of the largest, loudest calls in US history for real global warming solutions.

These folks leaving Nashua tomorrow are leading the charge, so we wanted to wish them well the only way we know how: free food, live music, and good people.


Lighting up rural Iowa

When we kick-off the March to ReEnergize Iowa tomorrow, we’ll be bringing citizens together to collectively call on our leaders to take bold action to address our dwindling manufacturing sector and global warming. We’ll be taking to the streets to say enough is enough - it’s time to get moving.

And on Friday, when we arrive in the small town of Alleman, population 439, we’ll be demonstrating the benefits of smart energy decisions. Each of the 150 homes in Alleman will receive one compact fluorescent light (CFL) bulb in exchange for an energy inefficient incandescent light bulb. If every American home follows in the footsteps of Alleman and replaces one light bulb with an Energy Star qualified bulb, we would save enough energy to light more than 3 million homes for a year, more than $600 million in annual energy costs, and prevent greenhouse gases equivalent to the emissions of more than 800,000 cars.

When we come together and take action we can clearly make a big difference. That’s why we are excited for the light bulb exchange and our final rally in Des Moines:

Please join us at Nollen Plaza at 3 pm on Sunday, August 5th: http://www.climatesummer.org/iaschedule

The light bulb exchange will begin at 4 pm on Friday afternoon at North Polk High School in Alleman. Mayor Bill Bodensteiner will deliver a few inspirational remarks before the exchange begins. And be sure to read about us in the press! We're in the  Ames Tribune and the Des Moines Cityview.


4 days to go: the circle widens

I’m writing from the First Congregational Church in Nashua. Over fifty marchers are camped out in sleeping bags, spread among two floors of this beautiful building.

We’re ready to march. We sat in a circle last night, sharing all of our names and where we were from. Those of us who have been working from an office all summer saw, all at once, our circle suddenly widen. This is what our campaign is about. We will all be inspired and changed by each other, as we walk closer and closer to the State House lawn.

By the time you read this, there will be just 4 full days to go ‘til thousands converge on the State House lawn in Concord to call for real global warming solutions.

Join us at the rally: Sunday, August 5th at noon, at the State House in Concord: http://www.climatesummer.org/nhschedule

Tonight, we gathered in Greeley Park, and with music, food, and speakers, set the tone for the journey to come. I spoke about the world we are working to create; Angie Vincent from the Nashua Green Team spoke about all the work that is already happening to turn Nashua green; and Granny D shared the story of her walk across the country for clean elections, deepening our understanding of the power of walking.

Today we kick off our march, with blessings from Nashua’s Mayor Bernie Streeter, State Senator Martha Fuller Clark, and two of the organizers of the Interfaith Walk for Climate Rescue down in Massachusetts this past spring.

What a blessing to see our circle widen. I hope you can join us, especially on Sunday, August 5: http://www.climatesummer.org/nhschedule


Iowa and biofuels

corn fields

Out here in Iowa, as soon as you leave the city you are surrounded by farms primarily growing corn and soybeans. A farmer told me a couple of days ago that Iowans only eat 3% of the soybeans produced in Iowa, and that the rest is used for biodiesel production. All of the gasoline in Iowa has at least 10% ethanol, and biofuels are strongly supported by the state and national governments. However, there is concern over the environmental impacts biodiesel production causes, the amount of energy consumed during production, and the efficiency of ethanol production from various biofuel soruces.

I am not an expert on biofuels, but I am excited that in a couple of days at the March to ReEnergize Iowa we will have the opportunity to explore some of the details of biofuel production. On Thursday, our kickoff begins with a biofuels walking tour at Reiman Gardens at 9:30 am. The walking tour allows you to see what biorenewable plants look like, learn about their cultivation requirements, and learn more about the issues concerning biofuels. During the walking tour, you can see 15 different plants that are used to make ethanol. All you need for the tour is a cell phone.

Not only will we get a chance to learn about the ecological aspects of biofuels, but on Saturday night we will have the opportunity to discuss some of the current policies surrounding biofuels. During our evening program at Saydel High School, Saylorville at 5:00 pm, Ed Woolsey of the Iowa Renewable Energy Association will lead a session on biofuel policies and how individuals can get involved with biofuel issues. Also, that evening we will have sessions on coal and industry and their relationship to global warming.

These are both incredible opportunities to learn about an issue that is so dominant in Iowa, and I can't wait to be a part of it. Even if you can't make it to the march itself, I highly recommend that people check out our evening programs and the Reiman Gardens biofuels walking tour.


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