Northern voices lead energy conversations

Large group of people gather for photo in front of wood paneled wall painted with Indigenous artwork.
Researchers from the Northern Regional Energy Dialogues (NRED) project, including 蹤獲扞⑹ Faculty of Environment Assistant Professor Dr. Sinead Earley (seated second from right, front row), gathered with community members in Terrace, B.C. on March 10, 2025. (Photo credit: Aaron Whitfield, Red Bike Media)

The following story was written by Philip Burgess Cox and is shared by the University of Victoria.

Victoria, B.C. - A first-of-its-kind effort to gain a detailed picture of the energy aspirations of small, rural and remote communities across northern BC has sparked new conversations that will help shape the next decade of clean energy development in the province. 

The community-led conversations are part of the  (NRED)a five-year  (ACET) project developed in partnership with the University of Victoria (UVic) and University of Northern BC (蹤獲扞⑹), with support from the  (NorthCAN). 

Led by UVic researchers Tamara Krawchenko and Kara Shaw, and Sinead Earley from 蹤獲扞⑹, the NRED team has already sat down with communities spread across 1,100 km of northern terrain in the last eight weeks.  

This month the project begins scaling up with a new series of regional dialogues that will connect dozens of communities and First Nations to think together about their shared issues and aspirations, with the aim of strengthening community resilience, expanding energy ecosystems and bolstering economic security across the region. 

Our plan is to create an open platform for community voices across this significant geographical area to share their energy needs, wants and plansbecause nothing like that has ever been done before, Sinead Earley explains. This will create a rich picture of the breadth of energy needs across the regional north, which we hope we can use to help these communities overcome some of the specific challenges theyre facing. 

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Dr. Sinead Earley is an Assistant Professor in 蹤獲扞⑹'s School of Planning and Sustainability. Earley and NRED Community Coordinator, 蹤獲扞⑹ graduate Sarah Korn, have been part of the since it was established by the in 2022. One year later, with funding from the , they worked with CEA staff to deliver the first in-person NorthCAN event at 蹤獲扞⑹'s Prince George campus. 

Since then, the network has connected 400 people from around the region who initiate and implement local climate-related solutions. Later this month, 蹤獲扞⑹ will be one of the organizations presenting the 2025 NorthCAN Forum in Prince George where NRED will be one of the featured topics.

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