June 12, 2020

In June 2020, Kake took one giant step toward energy independence with the delivery of the final engineering plans and financial analysis for a biomass district heating system designed by the Oregon firm, Wisewood Energy – a firm with deep experience in Southeast and many operational plants across the region.

Clay Good

Banner Photo: Kake High School currently runs on non-renewable imported oil to heat the building.

Working Together for Wood Heat Energy

Like most remote Southeast villages, Kake pays dearly for the tens of thousands of gallons of non-renewable heating oil they import each year to heat the Kake School, Senior Center, Health Center, Community Center and other public buildings – all while surrounded by thousands of acres of renewable biomass resources in the form of waste wood from second growth thinning and timber operations.  

A few years ago, retired executive director for the Organized Village of Kake, Gary Williams, took the energy lead, championing the Kake biomass district plan to make wise use of locally abundant renewable residual waste wood to displace expensive imported heating fossil fuels. 

The newly planned system could generate annual savings of over $95,000 per year for the village while also making wise use of a local renewable energy resource and creating local jobs, thus keeping more money circulating longer in the local economy. A win-win-win for the village.

Getting this far in the project requires wooch een – working together in Tlingit – for when a big lift is required like raising a clan-house corner post or hauling a giant cedar canoe up the beach. Renewable energy projects, like this, are a big lift, requiring long-term vision, years of planning and collaboration.

However, the project is far from over and will require all parties to continue wooch een in order to succeed. 

The next step is bringing all Kake energy stakeholders back to the table to commit their time and resources to construct their biomass district heat system. With Kake’s spirit and history of wooch een, along with Gary Williams’ leadership, energy independence is on the horizon. 

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Clay Good

Mountains, forests, ocean, rain and snow are the fabric of my life. These are the wild places that teach and nurture me as I live here with gratitude for all it provides. I’m employed by the Renewable Energy Alaska Project as the SSP Regional Energy Catalyst and STEM Energy Educator. From exploring the nature of energy with students in a Klawock classroom to hosting a regional teleconference on the basics of heat pumps, these are exciting days to be working with Southeast communities to achieve greater energy independence. The wide-eyed potential of Alaska’s next generation continues to inspire my work.

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