News from NativeEnergy Travel Offsets and the Sierra Club Outings program.

Dave Wiggins
Widness & Wiggins PR
Ph 303-554-8821
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Immediate Release

NativeEnergy Travel Offsets
CONTACT: Megan Epler Wood
E-MAIL: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Website: www.nativeenergy.com/NETO/index.html?NETO

Sierra Club Outings Partners with NativeEnergy Travel Offsets

BURLINGTON, VT, November 29, 2007 - The 107 year-old wilderness adventure
program of the Sierra Club, Sierra Club Outings, has signed on with
NativeEnergy Travel Offsets of Burlington, VT, to offer trip participants
the ability to calculate and offset the carbon emissions generated by their
domestic or international travel enroute to their gateway destination.

Megan Epler Wood, NativeEnergy Travel Offsets'
(www.nativeenergy.com/traveloffsets/) spokesperson, hails Sierra Club
Outings as "the conscience of the environmental community and gatekeeper to
credibility."

Through industry formulas, carbon emissions (measured in tons), primarily
from air travel, can be calculated on a per-person, per-flight basis. The
Sierra Club's trip participants may opt to pay money to "offset" these tons,
with the monies then funding NativeEnergy's renewable energy projects.

The Sierra Club Outings website (www.outings.sierraclub.org) will feature a
co-branded landing page, linked to during the trip reservation process,
where its travelers can opt to make a specific monetary commitment to offset
their travel (air or land) to the gateway of their specific trip.

"We're proud to be working with NativeEnergy Travel Offsets, who we feel
provides the best solution currently on the market for our trip
participants," says Tony Rango, director of Sierra Club Outings. The Sierra
Club Outings Program has been offering wilderness adventure since 1901. In
2006, they accommodated nearly 4,000 guests on 350 separate itineraries
around the country and abroad. In addition, the Club's chapters take about
150,000 participants yearly on local outings.

"This affiliation is in line with the Sierra Club's overall mission of
running low-impact trips," says Rango. "Travel -- especially flying -- emits
greenhouse gases that contribute to global warming.  It's unrealistic to
eliminate flying altogether, but with NativeEnergy's help we can take a step
toward reducing overall emissions."

Rango says that airline travel accounts for about 2 percent of global carbon
emissions. For example, just one roundtrip flight from San Francisco to
Paris emits over four metric tons per passenger, compared to an average
usage of 20 tons per American per year.

Rango says that the new affiliation with NativeEnergy Travel Offsets will
assist the Sierra Club in its mission to reduce U.S. emissions by 80 percent
below 1990 levels by 2050. This represents a 2 percent reduction per year
for the next 40 years. But, he cautions, carbon offsetting does not absolve
us from reducing our emissions, nor does it "undo" the carbon we emit. It
must be viewed as part of an overall strategy in addition to purchasing
fuel-efficient cars, investing in more efficient appliances, and flying less
frequently.

"Reducing your personal carbon footprint is only part of the picture," Rango
says. "It needs to be coupled with far-reaching legislation and effective
activism."

"Travel is still a positive force," Rango explains. He points out that many
international destinations, especially those in developing nations, face
tremendous economic pressures to destroy their natural resources.
Responsible, sustainable tourism can provide a strong financial incentive to
protect those resources. In addition, Sierra Club Outings educates its
participants on the environmental struggles faced by the places they visit
and gives them the opportunity to help.

Rango says the Sierra Club selected NativeEnergy (www.nativeenergy.com/)
after going through an extensive research and proposal process. NativeEnergy
came out on top for, among other attributes, its high-quality, renewable
energy projects, its transparency and customer service.

NativeEnergy Travel Offsets' team of industry veterans
(www.nativeenergy.com/NETO/team.html) is committed to reducing the
environmental impacts of the travel industry, while making these companies
work more efficiently as businesses. It is a young company (established on
October 18, 2006) that is charged by its parent firm, NativeEnergy (founded
by Tom Boucher and Tom Stoddard in 2000), to target travel companies willing
to make their operations and tours carbon neutral. (The Intertribal Council
on Utility Policy (www.intertribalcoup.org/), a non-profit organization of
Great Plains Tribes, holds a majority equity interest in NativeEnergy.)

# # #

For more information on NativeEnergy Travel Offsets, Interviews and/or
jpegs, please contact:

Sara Widness
802-234-6704
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
or
Dave Wiggins
303-554-8821
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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