Erik Curren, Transition Voice
The Deepwater Horizon was all about peak oil. And climate change. And economic collapse. How soon we forget.
archived April 23, 2012
Erik Curren, Transition Voice
Now, living with a family in my own house-castle, the only limitation to delving into energy efficiency is our budget (and of course, the kid's willingness to turn off the lights. Except that our Edwardian townhouse also happens to be located in an official historic district. That's good news for aesthetics and for property values. But it turns out that historic districts are bad news for clean energy.
archived April 18, 2012
Erik Curren, Transition Voice
We’d heard that there were many benefits to milling your own flour, aside from being sure that your whole grain bread really gets the whole of the grain (commercial flour labelled as “whole wheat” omits the wheat germ, which would go bad too quickly on store shelves).
Flour milled at home is fresher, of course — you know it hasn’t set on those store shelves in its vulnerable ground form losing nutrients. Mainly, we thought it would be fun to process more of our food at home, encouraging us to eat more fresh whole foods while making our family more resilient.
archived April 10, 2012
Erik Curren, Transition Voice
The apocalypse is a dramatic way to talk about peak oil, climate change and economic collapse. But a new book, ‘The Last Myth,’ claims this story isn’t helpful.
archived March 30, 2012
Erik Curren, Transition Voice
I believe that Obama understands peak oil and for years I’ve been hoping that he would finally take leadership on energy. But if Ezra Klein is right, then even if Obama were a card carrying member of ASPO-USA, in today’s partisan hell, the most powerful man on Earth might be nearly helpless to make any difference on peak oil.
archived March 20, 2012
Erik Curren, Transition Voice
It was only a matter of time after we started eating local food and Buying Local from main street stores that we’d start hearing about local money...Now, Michael Shuman, the author of The Small Mart Revolution: How Local Businesses Are Beating the Global Competition (2006), wants to make local investing accessible to ordinary people.
archived March 5, 2012
Erik Curren, Transition Voice
Though there's been a flurry of books about the Occupy movement in the last few months, few of them have said much about energy and the environment. Predictably, writers have largely focused so far on the core issues that originally filled Zuccotti Park last fall, an unfair economy and politics corrupted by corporate lucre.
Now comes a new title on Occupy that takes ecological overshoot seriously, Occupy World Street: A Global Roadmap for Radical Economic and Political Reform. Refreshingly, the book also zeroes in on the issue that the energy-savvy find behind all our financial and political woes today: peak oil.
archived February 22, 2012
Erik Curren, Transition Voice
Two new books on the Occupy movement, reviewed by Transition Voice's Erik Curren.
archived January 27, 2012
Erik Curren, Transition Voice
Have you ever walked through your neighborhood, noticed a vacant lot, and wondered why nobody had bothered to plant a garden there, instead of just letting the land sit around empty?
archived January 16, 2012
Erik Curren, Transition Voice
Mason's new book, Why It's Kicking Off Everywhere: the New Global Revolutions, surveys activist actions and encampments from Tahrir to Syntagma Square in Athens to Zuccotti Park and finds that each one was driven by a group of overeducated and underemployed young people jacked into technology like no revolutionaries since The Matrix.
archived January 9, 2012
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