Carrizo Comecrudo Tribe of Texas
In 2021, Climate Nexus launched an Energy Equity Regranting Project to help resource organizations, tribes, and community leaders on the frontlines of climate change and the impactful work they are doing to fight the gas industry. The energy equity transition grants prioritize grassroots groups with an annual budget of $1 million or less to boost their efforts in racially, ethnically, gender, and culturally diverse communities across the United States and at the intersections of public health and energy justice.
In our second year running the program, 11 organizations received grants ranging from $20,000 to $40,000, including the Carrizo Comecrudo Tribe of Texas, whose work is detailed below.
Overview
Based within the South Texas Rio Grande delta, the Carrizo Comecrudo Tribe of Texas has faced a multitude of threats to its historic land. As temperatures increase, the dangers of extreme heat have become a focal point of the tribe, as well as fighting the construction of pipelines across the Southwest, increasing accurate history for the Texas Education Board, and increasing proper federal recognition of their related villages as part of the tribe.
Activities
The Carrizo Comecrudo Tribe of Texas works across Texas to monitor orphaned and disposed wells, the planned construction of pipelines, fracking, and flaring violations, and to protect the sacred lands of the tribes they represent.
Fighting Pipelines
The tribe bought four tracts of land near the Valley Crossing Pipeline, as more builders want to run a pipeline adjacent to that land with the goal of connecting it to a planned liquified “natural” gas export terminal. The tribe’s primary goal is to keep sacred tribeland, the land up to the Rio Grande River, untouched. The tribe’s fight is against Enbridge Inc., the Canadian multinational pipeline and fossil fuel company behind the proposed Rio Bravo Pipeline.
Exacerbated Weather Conditions
This year, there was a record ten straight days with average temperatures of 106 degrees Fahrenheit in Texas. The Carrizo Comecrudo Tribe is concerned about the effects of extreme heat on people as well as wildlife and natural resources, like air and water. However, with the build out of LNG export facilities in the Gulf, sea life is being harmed – there has been an uptick in dead fish.
Lessons Learned
Juan Mancias, Tribal Chair of the Carrizo Comecrudo Tribe, reflected on their work to preserve the tribe’s history. “What we’re trying to do is to map where all these villages are because there are trails that are not marked, and there’s a history there that is being avoided because it has to deal with what Texas did to the original people of Texas. I’m not talking about the ones that were brought in or the ones that came running into Texas to go into Mexico, or the ones that were servants to the Spanish. We’re talking about the original people, the ones that were here first. That’s who we are.”
Future and Sustainability
Juan Mancias, Tribal Chair of the Carrizo Comecrudo Tribe, reflected on their work to preserve the tribe’s history. “What we’re trying to do is to map where all these villages are because there are trails that are not marked, and there’s a history there that is being avoided because it has to deal with what Texas did to the original people of Texas. I’m not talking about the ones that were brought in or the ones that came running into Texas to go into Mexico, or the ones that were servants to the Spanish. We’re talking about the original people, the ones that were here first. That’s who we are.”
Filter Grantees by Year:
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Earth Care
Earth Care is fighting false solutions like hydrogen and carbon capture, and is building public awareness of the health dangers of fracking.
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Sacred Places Institute for Indigenous Peoples
The Sacred Places Institute for Indigenous Peoples is a forum for tribal communities to protect sacred sites and advance environmental priorities.
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Rise to Thrive
Rise to Thrive builds community among Women and Femmes of Color across the country to catalyze a shift of power within the environmental movement.
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RENEW Worcester
RENEW Worcester advances energy projects that prioritize communities and the buildout of affordable, renewable energy.
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Viet Voices
Viet Voices educates San Diego’s Vietnamese community about sustainability, environmental health, and accessible housing.
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Society of Native Nations
The Society of Native Nations works in Texas and California to contest the oil, gas, and petrochemical buildout from the Permian Basin to the Gulf Coast.
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The Vessel Project of Louisiana
The Vessel Project is a mutual aid organization supporting people in Calcasieu Parish by meeting their emergency needs efficiently and without barriers.
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VISIÓN
VISIÓN works with community organizations to establish health and safety buffer zones between oil wells and homes and schools.
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7 Directions of Service
7 Directions of Service is fighting to cancel the Mountain Valley Pipeline’s Southgate Extension and to advance Rights of Nature laws.
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People’s Justice Council
PJC organizes not-for-profit electricity coops around Montgomery and is organizing their constituency around energy and environmental justice.
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Washington Interfaith Network (WIN)
Washington Interfaith Network is working to help low- and moderate income DC households switch from fossil fuels to clean and efficient electric heating.
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Mississippi Citizens United for Prosperity
MCUP advances energy equity in Black and Indigenous communities by training women in clean energy contracting and project management.