Helping cities, towns and municipalities adapt to peak oil
by Randy White
As a member of the Portland Peak Oil Task Force, I am excited to see the amazing progress our team is making. The twelve members of the Task Force come from various backgrounds, including land use planners, social workers, business executives, farmers, environmental experts, and more. For readers who understand the dire consequences we face with fuel and food shortages in the not too far off future, rest assured this team has a deep understanding of complex eco and business systems. Currently, the team is interviewing businesses and organizations to understand the impacts of peak oil from a systems level down to individual citizens. While I am excited about the progress our group is making, the challenges ahead of us are staggering. The biggest issue facing the Task Force (in my opinion) is how to help businesses and citizens make changes for a reality many of them are unaware of and unprepared for. With such a complex system oil based system interdependencies, small changes will not be enough to offset the anticipated devastating impacts of peak oil. At the end of the Task Force's mission, we will submit a report to the city council with a shortlist of recommendations. While the following list of recommendations are NOT the recommendations of the Portland Peak Oil Task Force, they are my own - available to any local governments with the intestinal fortitude to heed the advice. For readers interested in what can be done on a local level, please consider taking the following suggestions and recommendations to your local government leaders. I truly believe there is no time to lose. Change school curriculum for High schoolers in grades 9 - 12 to prepare for a fast changing world Recommended texts for students: When Technology Fails, The Long Emergency, sustainable agriculture books (We will need new textbooks for schoolteachers based on sound principles of earth's reality, complete with questions and tests for students. It would be based on both needed changes to adapt to the earth's changes.) Create awareness campaigns and encourage homeowners to buy products and services from local companies that can help convert parts of or their entire lawn(s) to food gardens Continue fostering growth of Farmers Markets and Community Supported Agriculture Create "food preparation, storage and nutrition" classes for citizens Expand business and residential composting programs Mandate energy efficiency inspections for homes and buildings Offer consulting for businesses and citizens looking to prepare and make changes for Peak Oil Assess local food production abilities Encourage neighborhood grown food swaps Create program for sustainable year round water usage for urban farming Create or expand neighborhood introduction programs Continue to encourage use of public transportation, biking, walking, and carpooling Foster neighborhood co-op owned fueling stations Offer "Earth Shift" support groups Create "Wisdom of the Elders" program Create a re-use storage program Randy White is a member of the Portland Peak Oil Task Force. He works as an advertising executive for AM620 KPOJ, Portland's Progressive Talk Station Editorial NotesAuthor Randy White writes: I'm contributing this in hopes to get other municipalities thinking about solutions they can immediately implement ar explore for their own city. Search the Energy Bulletin site for "Portland" to see the city's many efforts in peak oil and public transportation. For example, Tom Whipple devoted a column to The peak oil crisis: Portland takes the lead. A conservative English poltician surveyed Portland on recent BBC broadcast and lauded the city for its excellent public transport. -BA Original article available here |
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