Energy Descent Action Plans - a primer
by Adam Fenderson
The concept of Energy Descent Action Plans isn't a widely known or discussed one. Even the issue which forms the EDAP's main inspiration - Peak Oil - may not be widely appreciated. So I've written a background briefing below. It's a work in progress, and being adapted from a document written for the Melbourne Food Network, so there may be some regional assumptions. But I hope that it might be a useful source document for others. – Adam ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Introduction An Energy Descent Action Plan (EDAP) is a local plan for dealing with Peak Oil. It goes well beyond issues of energy supply, to look at across-the-board creative adaptations in the realms of health, education, economy and much more. An EDAP is a way to think ahead, to plan in an integrated, multidisciplinary way, to provide direction to local government, decision makers, groups and individuals with an interest in making the place they live into a vibrant and viable community in a post-carbon era. This document is a primer on EDAPs, designed to help spur on the process of creating them. Since the concept of an EDAP is inspired by looming Peak Oil, as well as the permaculture design system, and the inevitability of economic relocalisation — I've also included a brief introduction to these three topics. This is followed by information on Kinsale, the small Irish town where the first EDAP was written, an inspiring plan which has now been taken on board as official policy by the town council. Then a few musing on how to start the process of getting an EDAP off the ground here in Melbourne. According to a growing number of experts, within the next handful of years the world will reach the ultimate peak in global oil production. After this point, production will begin its slow but terminal decline. 'Peak Oil', as this event has become widely known, represents an historical turning point, from an era of growth, to an era of contraction. Peak gas won't be far behind. Most analysts who have carefully studied the problem agree that Peak Oil cannot be solved with 'supply side' solutions. Alternative energy sources simply can't fill all of the gap that oil and gas will leave behind, at least not without decades of investment. Massive social changes look like a given. We have to learn to make do with less energy. For more background on Peak Oil check out the Peak Oil Primer at Energy Bulletin. Internalising the implications of all this can take a fair bit of reflection — and can sometimes result in a sense of despair. However, a small but growing number of people are using Peak Oil as an opportunity to address broader social and ecological issues. Their best ideas are inspiring, creative and attractive visions of revitalised local economies, visions grounded by a connection to place and the people in it. Something sets these ideas apart from many earlier approaches to sustainability — it's a palpable desperation to be realistic and viable, to involve everyone in the community, to capture the imagination, and to succeed. Peak oil and permaculture The phrase 'energy descent' was first used by Australian permaculture co-orginator David Holmgren. He wrote in 2003 that “I use the term ‘descent’ as the least loaded word that honestly conveys the inevitable, radical reduction of material consumption and/or human numbers that will characterise the declining decades and centuries of fossil fuel abundance and availability.” Okay, you say, but permaculture — that's just a system of organic gardening, right? In a short answer: no, well not really. Permaculture is a "design system for sustainable human habitats that supply human needs in an environmentally enhancing way". Permaculture is all about functional design — ways to maximise productivity and abundance, while minimising effort, by working with nature, rather than against it. While in affluent countries permaculture is often practised because of environmental concerns, or as a mere hobby, it has been stress tested in difficult conditions all around the globe, where people's lives depend on successful use of scant resources. This includes in Cuba, when the country suffered a severe energy famine after the 1989 collapse of the Soviet Union. The collapse more than halved Cuba's oil imports virtually overnight. The documentary The Power of Community: How Cuba Survived Peak Oil, explains how permaculturists were amongst those who helped transform Cuba through this difficult period into a functional, low energy society, where infant mortality and average lifespans are now as good as in the USA. In a 2004 interview David explained the relationship between permaculture and Peak Oil:
Famed environmentalist David Suzuki has said "What permaculturists are doing is the most important activity that any group is doing on the planet." For more on permaculture try the following links:
For more on Cuban responses to their artificial 'Peak Oil' see:
Relocalised economies aren't an option - they are an invevitability. Oil supplies 95% of the world's transport energy, so global trade will diminish and we will be left to rely on local resources and skills. A positive vision can go a long way to making the transition enjoyable and dignified. Many public interest groups are already pushing for relocalisation because the many benefits it offers, with or without resource constraints.The benefits of relocalisation are as multifaceted as the problems presented by resource depletion and ecological crises:
Imagine the excitement of using your ingenuity to solve real problems: surveying the tools and resources available and mobilising them to repair, refurbish, rearrange and invent. Converging conclusions We need to be urgently investing what remains of our cheap energy into long term infrastructure for an energy descent culture. So we need as much support as possible from policy makers. When faced with Peak Oil, many people from vastly different backgrounds and political persuasions come to similar conclusions — that a 'technofix' is both unlikely and undesirable — that radical societal changes will have to take place, of which relocalisation is central. For example, see this recent quote from energy investment banker Matthew Simmons, former energy advisor to George Bush:
When an issue relating to the global energy supply has everyone from permaculturists to republican politicians talking about the same type of solutions, we know that something is going on. Given both the tangible fear of Peak Oil, as well as the potentially non-partisan nature of solutions, there seems to be some emerging opportunities for otherwise 'unrealistic' or 'idealistic' approaches to be both heard and rapidly deployed. Enter the EDAP Essentially an EDAP is a local plan for dealing with the period leading up to and following Peak Oil. It is not a plan for how to live in a sustainable world. It is a plan for the transitional period of decreasing energy — how to get to that sustainable world. The first EDAP was written in 2005 by permaculture students at a further education college in the small Irish town of Kinsale. The plan 'Kinsale 2021: An Energy Descent Action Plan' is available for download at www.FuellingTheFuture.org It includes ideas like turning the town supermarket carpark into an eco-centre, new ecologically sensitive housing development legislation, permaculture studies as part of school curriculum, community gardens, a youth council, a community currency and trading network, and lots more. As testimony to the way the plan, while visionary, retains a feeling of practicality, late last year the Kinsale town council officially adopted the plan. Of course visioning and planning is just the begining, but it's useful to reflect on how the authors of the Kinsale plan developed it and won widespead support. You can read about it here, in editor Rob Hopkins' 'Lesson from Kinsale' posts. Rob's a great writer, so I highly recommend these: Lesson One - Avoiding "Them and Us" Also check out this article by Rob Hopkins from Permaculture Activist and interviews at Global Public Media of Rob and Catherine Dunne. Catherine is involved in Transition Design, an organisation set up to continue the work started with the Kinsale EDAP. There are similar projects happening the world, some directly inspired by Kinsale. The efforts in Willits in California represents another successful approach. The Post Carbon Institute, a primarily North American organisation, has educational toolkits and other methods of supporting local groups working on Peak Oil education and relocalisation efforts, and have a couple of outposts in Australia. Breaking down the process 1) Community education, consultation and networking But what an amazing process - by the end we could be the most connected group in the region, with a remarkable sense of the character of the local communities, and probably a lot of new friends from each! We'll need their support, energy and ideas to make it really happen. 2) Research 3) Community projects and having fun 4) Producing the plan 5) Gaining council support 6) Implementation Structures, partners and funding? How could such a project be organised and funded? Questions I'm not particularly good at answering! I imagine that a fairly close knit crew of 3-4 people with complimentary skills and styles and a good working relationship would be a good number to handle central organisational and editorial tasks. But the project would need to involve a great deal many more people than that at various levels, with similarly small crews formed for the purpose - or partner organisations - handling the various sections of the plan. Small goals must be set along the way. Plus we may need people acting as facilitators, researchers, translators, fundraisers and in other roles. Does a project like this need to be associated with an incorporated body? Can it work under the auspices of another incorporated group? What partner organisations can take on responsibilities? Eg. renewable energy and conservation organisations, sustainable transport advocates, green urban planners and architects, etc. It would help if whoever is approached has or gains a solid foundation in the problem of Peak Oil, and a can take an holistic approach to design. An understanding of permaculture design principles or natural ability to think in similar ways would be a plus. Writers of the plan do not need to be relevant professionals, indeed an amateur's fresh eyes and ideas may indeed turn out to be a plus. Many questions to answer! But also an inexorable drive onward… onward… to suburban glory.
Now what? Thanks for making it this far. I hope that these ideas excite you. If you live in Melbourne you should most definitely get in contact. (If you don't, you could check out the Post Carbon Institute's Relocalisation Network which might list any existing groups in your area.) We've got a chance here to avert the worst case scenarios, create something of beauty, strength and character, and have a lot of fun in the process. Editorial NotesUpdated 31 Jan 2007 (added step 3) Rob Hopkins has been working on Transition Town Totnes, learning from Kinsale and pushing the community engagement process much further. See: TransitionTowns.org Original article available here |
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The document broke down the issues which arose locally from peak oil into sections, such as health, education, transport, housing, youth and community, food and energy. Each chapter presented an attractive vision of the town in relation to that issue, followed by a timeline of steps on how the town might get there. 
Rob's blog
If we were to embark on a similar process, here are some steps which might be involved. 




