The surprise shutdown of national climate group 350.org has the state group 350NH scrambling to assure people that they’re still very much around.
“We’re completely independent,” said Rebecca Beaulieu, communications director for the Dover-based organization. “We share a vision and goals … but [the shutdown] won’t affect us.”
350.org was formed in 2007, using a name that reflected the maximum safe percentage of carbon dioxide โ 350 parts per million โ that the atmosphere can hold to keep the planet from overheating. That CO2 figure is now at 420 ppm and rising fast, but the 350 name has stuck.
The New Hampshire chapter opened in 2012.
“When 350NH was first launched with all volunteers, 350.org helped support it to get started. In 2014, 350NH took over grant-applying and fundraising and hired our first staff, one part-time, and since then, we’ve done our own fundraising and made our own decisions,” Beaulieu said.
The state group has five staffers and an annual budget of around $450,000 with programs that include a youth organization and interns. Its goal is to “stop the climate crisis by building grassroots support for a just transition to renewable energy and an end to fossil fuel use and expansion.”
The national 350.org group said last week it plans to โtemporarily suspend programmingโ in the U.S. and other countries after its income fell some 25% in the wake of pressure from anti-environmental organizations and companies, spurred on by President Donald Trump’s oft-stated belief that climate change isn’t a real problem.
“I think we’re going to notice a difference in the national climate-movement space… they’ve been a major part of it,” said Beaulieu.
But in New Hampshire, she said, the effect will be minimal.
“I honesty I think the biggest impact is just that… because we share a piece of our name, we have to clarify with folks that we are a separate entity. We’re hoping funders don’t disappear,” she said.
350NH is one of 16 independent affiliates in the 350 Network Coalition, which coordinates action among state- and city-based groups, including those in Massachusetts and Vermont. “In the current challenging federal political landscape, much of the most meaningful and effective climate action is happening at the state and local levels,” she said.
Beaulieu pointed to a few hopeful signs.
“It’s easy to get discouraged, but we’ve seen coal come to a close in New England despite what federal policy has tried to dictate,” she said. She also noted that wind power in New England set records this autumn as Vineyard Wind’s offshore wind farm ratcheted up production.
“We’re organizing for climate justice just as much; our mission remains the same,” she said.
