Looking For An Economic Transformation? Think 'Big Island Green'
How to restart the kamaaina economy, improve resilience, self-sufficiency, and reduce our environmental footprint.
By Tam Hunt, Noel Morin, 叠颈濒濒听叠耻驳产别别, Heather Kimball, Scott Laaback
June 26, 2020 · 8 min read
About the Authors
Noel Morin is a civic leader and environmental advocate. He is with Citizens’ Climate Lobby Hawaii.
Heather Kimball owns a consulting firm supporting communication for science-based policy and decision-making on the issues of climate change. She is also with Think B.I.G.
Hawaii鈥檚 residents are facing economic devastation not seen since the Great Depression.
Federal stimulus funds are helping to soften the blow but the $1,200 payments to individuals, and the $600 weekly increase in unemployment benefits are set to run dry by the end of July. Tourism, a critical cog in our economic engine, will likely lag for many quarters. The threat of subsequent global COVID-19 infection waves will likely result in prolonged social distancing norms that will impact school schedules, affect work schedules, and decrease the productivity of local businesses.
What are we to do to keep Hawaii island afloat?
We are indeed at a historic place and time where an economic transformation of Hawaii is warranted, an opportunity for a 21st century New Deal specific to Hawaii鈥檚 needs. Even before the pandemic a lot of discussion had taken place locally, 聽and nationally about a聽, which would combine much-needed jobs programs, stimulate local economic activity, enable net zero carbon emissions, improve social equity, and save the environment.
Hawaii鈥檚 recent statewide experiment, from 2012 to 2016, in rooftop solar energy and net metering created a statewide economic renaissance –producing the fastest economic growth for Hawaii in decades — created thousands of well-paying local jobs, new solar businesses, saved utility ratepayers substantial dollars which flowed back into the local economy, and produced a lasting effect in advancing statewide solar energy independence. This is a good example of smart policy.
What would a Green New Deal look like on the Big Island, led by local people and the county government? What would it mean to 鈥渢hink B.I.G.鈥 (Big Island Green)?
County Research & Development has recently issued a with many great ideas. It鈥檚 a full-spectrum look at what the island will need to do to meet the statewide 100% renewable energy mandate by 2045, including solid waste management. It will also set the stage for the county to meet by Hawaii鈥檚 mayors for the county to achieve 100% renewable ground transportation by 2045.
Share Your Ideas
We’re looking for bold ideas, creative solutions and informed perspectives from our state鈥檚 brightest minds.聽To submit an essay or if you just want to talk over an idea, contact:
Editor Patti Epler
patti@civilbeat.org
808-377-0561
Politics and Opinion Editor Chad Blair
cblair@civilbeat.org
808-377-0245
But a Green New Deal for the Big Island could advance the current 2045 goal of 100% clean and renewable energy for the state to 2030 or 2035 for our county.
Think B.I.G. would be a job generator based on green energy, robust local agriculture, smart buildings, smart communities, electric vehicles and public transit, composting programs, public trails and expanded parks, improved water systems, and many other 21st century infrastructure activities. Most of these initiatives will save money and our unemployed need large numbers of new jobs in the near-term.
is a new group of community members rethinking Hawaii鈥檚 economy in light of the pandemic. Their includes a list of guiding principles, the first of which states:
We are of and from this aina that ultimately sustains us. We employ strategies for economic development that place our kuleana to steward precious, limited resources in a manner that ensures our long-term horizon as a viable island people and place.
Our hope is that Think B.I.G. serves the principles described by Aina Aloha.
Here鈥檚 a partial list of what thinking B.I.G. for the Big Island could look like. These examples are meant only to spur community discussion at this point:
Energy
- A commitment by the county itself to achieve 100% green energy for all of its operations (electricity, heating and transportation) by 2030.
- A study of all county properties and parks for solar potential on rooftops, parking lots and other areas that may be solarized.
- Install hundreds of electric vehicle chargers, with solar canopies and batteries, on county facilities and public parks to charge county vehicles and public vehicles from the sun (鈥渄riving on sunshine鈥), and enable grid resiliency.
- Install commercial and community microgrids for improved resiliency and grid support.
- Complete study to determine alternative geothermal energy sites, and tidal/ocean energy sites, on and around the island.
- A commitment by the County to retrofit all County buildings to achieve either LEED (Leadership in Environmental and Energy Design) certification or Zero Net Energy with a combination of energy efficiency and solar technologies.
- Community solar facilities for all apartment buildings with roof space or parking lots for solar.
- Community wind power for areas that have decent wind resources and are otherwise suitable for small and medium-size wind turbines.
- Robust rebate programs, working with Hawaii Energy, HELCO and the state Public Utilities Commission, for energy efficiency, solar water heating, roof top solar, electric vehicle and charger purchases, and other green-energy retrofits.
- Install methane capture and power generation technologies at county sewage treatment plants and parks with composting toilets.
- Job training programs for solar technicians, energy efficiency technicians, green agriculture, and land stewardship.
Local Agriculture And Permaculture
- Improve local food independence through regenerative agriculture and permaculture design.
- Support programs for local agriculture of all sizes with focus on the local food economy rather than the international export economy; farmer trainings; workshops; nurseries; and seed banks and libraries.
- Compost and mulching programs in every community.
- Creation of food aggregation and distribution hubs following the model of Kahumana farms on Oahu.
- Identify County properties that could be re-purposed for community gardens and farmlands with low lease rates to encourage new farmers.
Waste Programs
- Community led design sessions to help identify and implement improved recycling and upcycling opportunities.
- Implement zero waste education and practices in all public schools.
- Community led design sessions to identify better mid-term and long-term waste management solutions.
- Assess the viability of industries related to extending the life of solar panels and batteries, and the recycling of these materials at their end-of-life.
- Recycling waste water for irrigation.
Parks And Trails
- Create a series of interconnected bike trails and bicycle friendly roads across the island, reducing vehicle traffic and encouraging bicycle tourism.
- Trail building programs in areas that are suitable for new trails, like county, state and national parks, and forest reserves.
- Expand existing parks where appropriate, providing additional green space, species conservation and recreation.
- Improve and expand park facilities like basketball courts, tennis courts, keiki play areas, community centers, etc.
- Identify public parks that can host food forests and community gardens and hand over management of those spaces to community groups, reducing the labor burden of county workers.
Education
- Robust education and outreach programs to alert the public to rebates, job programs, and other aspects of Think B.I.G.
- Connect Big Island programs to statewide programs working on green energy, waste, local agriculture and other Green New Deal programs.
- Encourage education curricula designed for careers in renewable energy, battery and fuel-cell vehicles, regenerative agriculture, waste management, parks maintenance, and recycling.
These programs, if implemented in the next few years, would provide literally tens of thousands of new jobs on our island, while also making the Big Island even more enjoyable to live on and reducing our environmental footprint. Hawaii island has the potential to serve as a model for the rest of the world and foster a new brand of environmentally responsible tourism.
And the last major benefit would be a dramatic improvement in our resilience against disasters of all types.
Paying For All Of This
How will all this be paid for? There are a number of possible funding options, including:
- federal stimulus (CARES) funding to state and local governments, which currently is earmarked only for coronavirus response, but will almost certainly be expanded for recovery use before long;
- state capital improvement program foundation funding 鈥 many community, state and federal foundations will be looking for community-level leadership and Hawaii County can offer that;
- federal or state community block grants; and
- county or state bond measures 鈥 if any time warrants bonds to be issued this is it.
Additional funding, possibly a large part, can come from third-party investment 鈥 companies that are willing to build the infrastructure and reap the revenue from the energy generated or saved.
When all is said and done we on the Big Island can鈥檛 afford to聽not聽fund something like Think B.I.G.
Sign up for our FREE morning newsletter and face each day more informed.
Read this next:
Tough Decisions Need Better Data And Inclusive Voices
By Victoria Fan · June 28, 2020 · 3 min read
Local reporting when you need it most
Support timely, accurate, independent journalism.
天美视频 is a nonprofit organization, and your donation helps us produce local reporting that serves all of Hawaii.
ContributeAbout the Authors
Tam Hunt is a lawyer and activist based on the Big Island. He is co-founder of Think B.I.G. and a board member for the Hawaii Electric Vehicle association.
Noel Morin is a civic leader and environmental advocate. He is with Citizens’ Climate Lobby Hawaii.
叠颈濒濒听叠耻驳产别别 is executive director of BeyondKona.com. He is a board member of the Hawaii EV Association.
Heather Kimball owns a consulting firm supporting communication for science-based policy and decision-making on the issues of climate change. She is also with Think B.I.G.
Scott Laaback is a regenerative designer, farm to table chef, and longtime permaculture activist. He is currently president of the nonprofit Center for Getting Things Started and vice-president of Hawaii Farmers Union United Puna chapter.
Latest Comments (0)
Wonderful! 冒聼聭聫冒聼聫录冒聼聭聫冒聼聫录冒聼聭聫冒聼聫录It芒聙聶s awesome to witness the collaborative efforts within our caring community, which will ultimately shift our island toward a more sustainable and resonant system.聽As a lead for Vibrant Hawai芒聙聶i and the for the establishment of Resilience Hubs, I芒聙聶m excited to know others are aligning their Wa芒聙聶a toward common actionable goals. Looking forward to implementing these brilliant ideas and so many more as we steward our resources responsibility. Mahalo Nui Loa!聽
MaggieK · 4 years ago
Could parts of the old saddle road become bike or hiking trails?
MSCar · 4 years ago
Did I read this article correctly? 聽Well-meaning people got together and created a host of good, solid goals with the serious question of how to restart a better economy on Hawai'i island to achieve those goals. 聽I sincerely thank you Tam, Noel, Bill, Heather and Scott. 聽But then your conclusion is ... We can all have great-paying, eco-friendly jobs and lives ... if only someone (else) would give us the money we need to do it? 聽 I have the Hawaii County police reports from years past and their estimates of the value of Cannabis 'eradicated':1986 - $ 聽 742,238,000.1987 - $1,737,685,000.1988 - $1,433,353,000. 聽You get the drift. 聽What could We the people do now? 聽What was stolen besides our freedom? 聽A lot. 聽Let's grow Cannabis immediately. 聽It can pay for anything we want going forward.聽 聽 聽 聽聽
RogerChristie · 4 years ago
About IDEAS
IDEAS is the place you'll find essays, analysis and opinion on public affairs in Hawaii. We want to showcase smart ideas about the future of Hawaii, from the state's sharpest thinkers, to stretch our collective thinking about a problem or an issue. Email news@civilbeat.org to submit an idea.