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In the first article in this series we showed the link between Deborah “Debbie” Dooley and an NGO known as United States Energy Foundation.
If you haven’t read the first article yet you may access it by clicking below:
From the same February 2018 New York Times article, we cited in Part 1, Stephen Smith, Executive Director of another NGO organization known as the Southern Alliance for Clean Energy (SACE) who offered a quote about Dooley's work. “Debbie is being a little bit of a trailblazer on the climate issue, but she was always a trailblazer on clean energy.”
Stephen Smith appears on Southern Alliance for Clean Energy website shown below:

From New York Times article:

The Southern Alliance for Clean Energy website can be found at: www.cleanenergy.org.
In April 2019, their webpage published a “Guest Blog” written by Debbie Dooley and Sara Barczak. Barczak is described as a former Regional Advocacy Director with the Southern Alliance for Clean Energy.


What was the relationship between the Southern Alliance for Clean Energy and Dooley? Was she assisting them? Were they one of the “other donors” mentioned in the New York Times article? We don’t know.
As we did in Part 1, we next utilized the Datarepublican search tool to search for connections.
You can perform the same search yourself by accessing the tool at:
The Georgia Record performed the search process using “Steven Smith” and “Southern” as the search keys.
This search displayed Stephen Smith associated with Southern Alliance for Clean Energy and which displayed a link indicating USAID funding flow. See below:

The following charts show the connections between USAID, the web of NGOs and Southern Alliance for Clean Energy.
Southern Alliance appears to share a number of similarities to the USAID money flow found connected to Unites State Energy Foundation. Once again we find the National Democratic Institute for International Studies; the Institute for International Education, the George Soros Tides Center and the National Endowment for Democracy.


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DataRepuublicans notes that because funding can be moved from NGO to NGO, this funding can be mixed, split up, combined and merged it is not possible to follow individual dollars as they flow throughout this web of non-profits. However, the relationships between NGOs (who gives money to whom) can be as or more important than individual amounts transferred.
The Georgia Record herein makes no assertion of wrongdoing by any organization or individual.







Wow, dynamite. It seems that "money, money, money makes the world go round!"