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Solutions & sustainability - Aug 13
by Staff
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I was plugging along, burning about 80 percent less oil than I did before overalls became my fashion mainstay, when the world financial system nearly collapsed. Now climate change exists again (officially), and there's talk that a green-tech economy might somehow emerge from the ashes of the one torched by derivatives. But no one's sure. What if the Earth's supply of oil is half gone, with the masses in India and China just now latching on to the consumption teat? What if "cap and trade" and plug-in hybrids don't get here in time? Suddenly the end of globalization and other apocalyptic visions of the planet's near future, once the purview of Idaho survivalists, are prime-time stories on CNN. Mainstream suburban friends of mine who used to say that my experiment in neo-rugged-individualism was radically subversive have abruptly changed their minds. Now they just say it's radically unfeasible. Yet everyone seems to sense that 69-cent plastic garden buckets might one day be difficult to come by. I have a fiancee and a son to provide for, so I decided to take a hard look at our prospects for survival if our consumer safety nets went away. For now, my green lifestyle choices at my remote 41-acre outpost in the American Southwest are optional. You know, growing lettuce instead of buying Chilean. Using organic cotton diapers instead of buying Pampers. But what if one morning in, say, 2049, I wake up to milk my goats and find out that supplies are no longer streaming in from China and California? What would I do if both big-box stores and crunchy food co-ops suddenly were no more? In other words, I'm examining my place in a hypothetical post-oil, post-consumer society 40 years in the future... The concerns of the Peak Oil, Transition Intiative, and Climate Change movements are increasingly making it into the mainstream, including its media. Here is a first person account in the Washington Post of someone "trying to get petroleum out of my life and live locally." We are truly in a fast-moving, rapidly-changing situation. Shepherd I love all these articles that we have received lately about future visioning, a practice much beloved of the Transition Towns initiative (see the Transition Timeline and Transition Tales). However, what I would find more useful is not how to set up your own self-sufficient and sustainable ranch, farm, eco-town, intentional community, what-have-you but how to create resilient communities where people already live in cities, small towns, etc. Can we have more of those? -KS.
The future should be local, because only on a local level can sustainability be achieved and maintained indefinitely. The 30-minute presentation is intended for a general audience. It examines climate change, peak oil, the unsustainability of the global economic system, the reasons that the future will be local, efforts being made to move towards self-sufficiency, and places to learn more about the future. The presentation is divided into six semi-autonomous segments: 1. the overall challenge & greenhouse effect Aaron Wissner, founder of Local Future, assembled this presentation for use with community groups to help them get up to speed on the reasons that the future will and should be local. This recording was made during a lunchtime meeting of a local Rotary Club. The video is online in playlist form here: http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=D36C51DB1CD38379 The entire video of the presentation is available for download via bit torrent here in 1280x720 high definition: http://thepiratebay.org/torrent/5031157/Our_Local_Future_-_Climate_Chang... The complete set of PowerPoint slides are available here: http://www.mediafire.com/download.php?jljznd2okgl
That could change, however, as the combination of recent legislation (legalizing the conversion of garages and laneways into secondary housing) and a new company called LaneFab will make it possible for residents to convert their garages and lanes into small, attractive, efficient houses for family members or renters, thereby contributing to a denser, lower impact, more resilient city for all. Lanefab is the brainchild of the carpenter Mat Turner and the designer Bryn Davidson. The units were inspired by Davidson’s personal experiment in small-footprint living: the RAO/D Pod, a 360-square-foot condo that he and his wife gutted, renovated, and transformed into a beautifully efficient—if remarkably small—home. In the Pod, where the couple currently lives, there lies an exciting conceptual blueprint for Lanefab’s low-impact designs, which make great use of tiny spaces, and which could enable many more people to rent homes in the city’s central, walkable, and otherwise pricey areas... From the website: |
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