Peak oil - July 21
by Staff
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He will be followed by Aaron Wissner's presentation on Peak Oil, what it is and and its far-reaching implications for our economy and our way of life, its impact on the world, our nation, our state and our community. Aaron is recent founder of Local Future Network, and a teacher and community leader, who has made it his personal mission to thoroughly educate himself on this topic and in turn, to educate his fellow citizens. Visit his website at www.localfuture.org/ David Gard of the Michigan Environmental Council, and director of the Council's energy program, will conclude the formal presentations with "Meeting Michigan's Challenges -- Energy Conservation, Efficiency and Renewable Energy Standards."with an address by our own Cool Cities Mayor, George Heartwell, on the topic, "Cities will Save the World: the Future of Renewables."
The Sustainable Lifestyles Symposium will take place Sunday August 20th - Friday 25th at Waubaushene, Ontario, about 30 minutes north of Barrie. It offers attendees three different tracks for morning sessions:
The event includes speakers (some by teleconference), demonstration projects, films, community building interludes as well as optional field trips to a local windfarm, hemp farm, two intentional communities, and a biodiesel garage. For speakers, topics, projects, timetable, see www.sustainablelifestyles.ca. Co-sponsors include The Sustainable Scale Project, Quaker Ecology Action Network, Green Enterprise Toronto. Organizer Ian Graham writes: "It's not a gabfest, doomsday wake, or conference hall talk-at event. It is the experience of rich resources at hand, demonstration projects, field trips, community building and the spirit of relocalization. The purpose is to create a platform for people ready to take their next steps into scaling their lifestyles more in keeping with energy, environment and climate constraints."
Aaron Wissner, who teaches computer classes at Wayland Union Middle School and is also president of local and regional teacher's unions, warned the Wayland Union School Board members Monday night that increased fuel costs and inflation could cause a "pinch on the district." "I want us to be able to weather any storm we may have here," Wissner said. "I don't want to see our school having to close early or anything like that. The mainstream media and educators for the most part have been oblivious to the problem." Wissner recently attended a meeting of the National Education Association in Orlando, Fla. and addressed nearly 10,000 delegates about the consequences of a looming energy crisis. Everything from student transportation and employee costs to food service could be radically affected by a shortage. ...A major curriculum shift will be needed to emphasize the necessity of food storage and farming in a predominantly local future. Wissner's plan for local self reliance is based on meeting the basic needs for survival such as food, water, heat, shelter and security within the community itself. He specifically recommends investing in food sources of lasting value such as orchards and full-size gardens, installing hand pumps for water with reservoirs, adapting homes to accommodate solar heating and securing areas by getting to know neighbors. Wissner has recently set up a soon-to-be international organization called Local Future, www.localfuture.org, whose goal is to highlight the failures of globalization and to assist various communities around the world in recognizing the looming energy problems and becoming more self efficient. Contributor Aaron Wissner writes: This is the second time I've address this board of education on this topic. I've also brought this up with the the local teacher's union, the regional union, the state union, and the national union.
Announcements like this make it most obvious that the era of cheap oil is clearly over, especially when it costs so much for the world to get that incremental barrel of oil production, especially from heretofore unconventional sources. Remember that the oilsands were supposed to be the great saviour of the world’s energy problems. It would appear that this purveyor of abundant energy is on its way to ignominity due to spiraling costs. As unfortunate as that announcement was for oilsands producers, this article isn’t about the oilsands. More interesting is what it implies for the cost of all things going forward. To wit, this article will be a general discussion on two inter-rated principles, or perhaps more accurately, two inter-related perils. One is cost-push inflation, and the other is Malthusian theory. As we’ve already said, we found the oilsands announcement to be shocking – so much so that it effectively changed the landscape. Not only is it highly inflationary, but we fear that it is the kind of inflation that threatens to pervade absolutely everything. It is difficult to envision a scenario where the cost of energy soars without impacting the cost of all things, whether good or service. Just about everything we do comes from or relies on energy. |
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