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Curtailment & Community
by
Megan Quinn Bachman
Where Do We Go From Here?
Surviving Peak Oil, Thriving in Community
Prepared Closing Remarks, International Conference on Peak Oil and
Climate Change, Grand Rapids, Michigan, May 30-June 1, 2008.
Five years ago, when I first started giving Peak
Oil presentations, my message could more easily be ignored. The
disconnect between the picture I presented of dangerous and destructive
fossil dependence and peoples daily lives could be maintained.
Perhaps the crisis seemed too far off in distance and time to matter
in the here and now.
Today, that illusion has disappeared. The Chinese
curse, "may you live in interesting times," is an understatement.
Oil and food prices are skyrocketing as the age of cheap, abundant
fossil fuels comes to an end. A global financial system based upon
infinite growth on a finite planet is teetering, and news of water
and soil depletion, deforestation, species extinction and catastrophic
climate changes gets worse every day. Our fossil fuel dependence
is "coming home to roost."
As the global situation deteriorates, it becomes
clear that it is no longer just about being sustainable; it is about
being survivable. The question is: Can we survive the severe and
multifaceted threats facing us, from geological to geopolitical?
But just surviving is not enough its also about having
a planet worth living on.
As we speak today, a myriad of solutions are being
proposed, developed, and implemented to survive Peak Oil and climate
change from tar sands, coal-to-liquids, hydrogen, and electric
vehicles to genetic engineering and climate modification. But what
kind of world would we create with these so-called solutions?
Are we implementing solutions that maintain an extractive,
industrial society which would continue to exploit the earths
natural resources and plunder the developing world? Instead, we
should ask what kinds of solutions not only address Peak Oil and
climate change, but create a society that is more equitable and
ecological regenerative, not destructive? Those are the solutions
Im interested in.
Community Solutions, my organization, talks about
"curtailment" and "community" as the best solutions.
Both require new practices, skills, and values as we move from our
over-consumptive, high-energy, competitive way of life to a more
frugal, low-energy and cooperative way of life. Lets start
with curtailment.
Curtailment
Curtailment means simply the dramatic reduction in our fossil fuel
use and carbon dioxide generation to avoid the worst consequences
of Peak Oil and climate change. In contrast with sustainability,
curtailment recognizes that you cannot be sustainable if youre
using a finite resource that theres simply no sustainable
way to use a finite resource. So instead of trying to live "green"
or "sustainable" we need to stop using fossil fuels. Thats
the simple truth. And curtailment, in contrast with the softer concept
of "conservation," connotes that it wont be easy
to reduce our fossil fuel dependence.
Fossil fuels feed us, shelter us, warm us, and transport
us and everything else we need to survive. Consider that one gallon
of gasoline is equivalent to six weeks of human labor. U.S. daily
oil use is equivalent to 20 million years of person-labor. With
this energy we wield a tremendously destructive power, and destroy
we have slowly, over the years, with seemingly trivial decisions
about how to provide for our needs and fulfill our desires. Now,
our ability to continue to meet our needs and desires is under threat,
and yet most solutions talk about how to continue to meet them,
rather than justifying those needs and desires in the first place.
Curtailment is about reviewing our consumption,
determining what we really need, and cutting the rest. We need to
ask: What do we really need to survive? Does everything need to
keep growing? Do we need bigger houses and cars and paychecks every
year to be happy? Theres an interesting survey that asked
people how much money they needed, and it was graphed against how
much money they made. The amount that people said they needed was
always just a few thousand dollars ahead of what they made. And
when they reached that amount, they needed a few more thousand dollars.
At some point, we need to find what is sufficient what is
enough because we cannot grow indefinitely on a finite planet.
How far do we need to curtail? By 2050, with global
population projected to be about 9 to 10 billion, annual CO2 emissions
must be kept at or below 10 billion tons a year to curb rising global
temperatures. So we will need to be emitting up to only 1 ton of
CO2 per person per year. We in the U.S. now emit 20. In Europe it
is 10. The world average is 4. So we in the U.S. have to reduce
our fossil fuel use by 80 to 90 percent, if we want to decline equitably.
Thats 4 to 5 percent per year, every year. This will not be
accomplished by just changing our light bulbs we need a deep
and ongoing transformation in the way we live. So how can we make
the needed changes?
Necessity vs. Choice
Lets then assume that there are two options for change
necessity and choice. Many say that the peak in oil production along
with high prices and occasional shortages will force us to use less
oil. We hear that "people only change when they have to."
We have examples such as Cuba, which made a huge change out of necessity
when the Soviet Union collapsed and cut off its oil shipments. The
Cubans converted their agriculture to 90 percent organic, created
urban gardens, decentralized energy generation and developed shared
transportation. Theres the example of the Arab oil embargo
on the U.S. in the 1970s, which led to lowered speed limits, higher
fuel economy standards and other conservation measures.
One option is to wait for things to get worse. Unfortunately
this is a luxury which in the U.S. only the middle and upper classes
can afford. Others living closer to lifes edge in the U.S.
and especially those in the Global South dont have that luxury.
Sure, those on the edge can make changes, but at some point it becomes
very difficult for them to survive while the rest of us over-consume.
The other option for change is out of choice. This
means recognizing that the world we created with fossil fuels has
many problems the highest inequity in history, continuing
environmental degradation, declining health indicators and loss
of community being just a few. It is based upon the notion that
we can create something better. So instead of just talking about
the drawbacks of the fossil fuel paradigm, we need to also talk
about the benefits of the alternative.
There is a subtle but important difference between
necessity and choice. Its the difference between telling people
they have to change and encouraging them to want the change. We
need to recognize the importance of the intention and the motivation
with which we do something. Consider the difference between skipping
a meal because youre on a fast or you cant afford or
dont have access to food. The question is how enduring
will be the changes made out of necessity? Again, during the oil
embargo, most people viewed it as an inconvenience and a temporary
aberration. When more oil was produced and prices fell
because of discoveries in the North Sea and Alaska, consumption
went up, and what followed were the fossil-fuel guzzling decades
of the 80s and 90s. But as Bill McKibben, climate change activist
and author, recently wrote, "All of a sudden it isn't morning
in America its dusk on planet Earth."
Now, lets return to the example of Cuba. Yes,
the majority of Cubans changed their lifestyles in the early 1990s
when they were forced to by circumstances. But we learned in Cuba
that had it not been for a few pioneering researchers, Cubans would
have suffered much more during their transition. In the 1980s there
was a small group of organic agronomists at a university in Cuba
studying sustainable agriculture, which they viewed as a much more
sound and secure approach. Their policy recommendations were ignored
for years, as Cuba had the most rapidly industrializing agricultural
system in Latin America. But when the crisis hit, because these
researchers had laid the groundwork for a transition to organic
agriculture in Cuba, they were able to take leadership positions,
and the Cuban agriculture system was transformed in just a few years.
The lesson here for us activists, educators, organizers,
pioneers and early adopters, is that we cannot wait for the dire
need to change. Instead, we must plan, prepare and plot now. If
we were thrust into positions of power at our work places, schools,
or local governments, what would we do?
So its important that we begin before necessity
arises. But we also need to communicate that despite the incredible
hardships we will face in this transition, that our lives could
be happier, healthier and more fulfilling because of community.
In community we fill our lives with valued relationships not valued
possessions and can consume less, but live better. So in
choosing a more favorable future rather than having a future thrust
upon us, we can assure that the changes we make can be sustained
because its clear that were not going to get
a second chance to create a society that adheres to the limits of
nature.
Enemies of Action
No longer can we claim ignorance of the impact we have on the planet,
and the multiple grave crises we face. But why is it then, that
despite all of the educational efforts and good models of low-energy
living were creating and disseminating, we dont see
much change at the mainstream level. In fact, the saying that "things
are getting better and better, and worse and worse, faster and faster"
seems to apply.
So Im going to talk about the main reasons
why people can convince themselves to stay in denial and not take
the necessary actions to reduce their dependence on the fossil fuels
which are destroying the planet. I call these the "enemies
of action."
The first enemy of action is the savior mentality,
the belief that someone will save us. It could be corporations with
their high technology, or governments, which are, after all, supposed
to take care of us. It is questionable whether corporations and
the government have our best interest at heart. Secondly, the inability
to respond appropriately to Hurricane Katrina demonstrates that
all levels of U.S. government could be severely hindered in trying
to deal with a nationwide emergency. But even if corporations and
governments could save us, at what cost would that be? And what
would it mean for democracy and freedom? Would depending on a more
centralized authority really serve us? Should we not instead take
responsibility and realize that we have to save ourselves
but not necessarily as individuals.
One of the biggest differences between my grandparents
generation the WWII generation and mine is that they
believed that governments and corporations were looking out for
them, and my generation, the ultra-cynical generation, believes
that no one is looking out for them. As a result, we feel isolated
and react with the mentality that we all need to move out into remote
rural areas and protect our land with guns. This is another enemy
of action because it gives the impossible expectation that everyone
can provide for their own needs and their own security. My hope
is that by my grandchildrens generation, they will trust in
their community taking care of them.
Another enemy of action, and one which I see in
the younger generation as well, is the inability to deal with the
hypocrisy implicit in trying to live morally in modern industrial
society. We critique the lecturer on climate change who drove to
the presentation, or the environmentalist who eats meat. Apparently
the thinking is that we all need to go back to living in the wilderness
as wandering hunters and gatherers or do nothing at all. Its
useful to acknowledge the hypocrisy of our lives because we can
be motivated by it rather than immobilized by it motivated
to continue working to align our lifestyle with our values. But
because its not easy to live morally in such an immoral society,
there will continue to be hypocrisies.
For this we need courage. One of my favorite quotations,
attributed to American writer Ambrose Redmoon, is, "Courage
is not the absence of fear, but rather the judgment that something
else is more important than ones fear. The timid presume that
it is the lack of fear that allows the brave to act when the timid
do not. But to take action when one is not afraid is easy. To refrain
when afraid is also easy. To take action regardless of fear is brave."
Another problem is finding the sufficient level
of action. The paradox is that you dont want to make it so
daunting that people go into denial or depression and dont
do anything, or so easy that they do too little. We wouldnt
encourage everyone to cut their energy use 90 percent in the first
year. But mostly, the solutions we hear about are just not enough.
As a German architect recently said, "Incrementalism is death."
Small changes to our way-of-life and no changes both end up in failure
if we dont reduce our CO2 generation below a certain
amount, we will trigger runaway climate change and if we dont
drastically reduce our dependence on fossil fuels for our most important
needs, we will be remain vulnerable to shortages.
Still another problem is that people who think that
the solutions are easy arent preparing themselves psychologically
for the change ahead. These "easy" solutions are demonstrated
in the "Top 10" ways to save the environment, in repetition
about changing our light bulbs and recycling with little discussion
of the more difficult, yet more transformative solutions. So people
dont make the more transformative solutions because they become
complacent after sorting their recycling.
Finally, many cannot see where curtailment leads
there isnt a clearly articulated vision of the future
we are creating. At some point we cannot even begin to guess what
the future will be like, but if we assume the future will be like
the present this will doom us to that future. At the same time,
assuming the future will be nothing at all like the present may
frighten us to lose everything we know and have known and jump to
some altogether different reality. Our vision of the future must
be somewhere in the middle. We definitely wont be going backwards,
and we likely wont be without computers, electricity or modern
medical knowledge. So what is the vision of the future?
Community Solutions
We talk about community as that vision. Curtailing our energy use
has to be the number one step, but we clearly need to make structural,
systemic changes which support and advance these individual lifestyle
changes. The global industrial system, which is dependent upon cheap
fossil fuel energy and huge inputs of other non-renewable resources
and which will become an increasingly problematic and unviable
way to provide for our needs has to be replaced with something
else. We describe this community paradigm as decentralized, place
based or local, self-reliant, and low energy.
So as we curtail contributing less and less
to the destructive global industrial system we must begin
to contribute more and more to its alternative community.
We have to redevelop resiliency, or the ability of our communities
to withstand outside shocks, by meeting our most essential needs
closer to home. Financially, we can no longer put our money in the
global growth system which is undermining its own ability to continue
and thus provide returns to us. Instead, we need to invest locally
in the people, businesses and technologies that directly sustain
us and will sustain generations to come. This includes participating
in such ventures as community-supported agriculture, community-owned
renewable energy systems and small business incubators, but also
building social capital, so that "when things get hard,"
as deep ecologist Joanna Macy recently said, "we wont,
in fear, turn on each other."
Arthur Morgan, who founded my organization, Community
Solutions, nearly 70 years ago, talked about the most important
kind of community as small and local. Small refers to a more realistic
scale of human habitation, which is less centralized and operates
more as a web of interconnections among people, allowing more meaningful
relationships to develop. Our species has lived in small groups
of a few dozen to a few hundred people for 99.5 percent of its existence,
so this is a way of living that we are well suited for. Local refers
to living close to those with whom we have economic relations.
Part of the reason we can continue to allow and
contribute to the ecological devastation of the planet and the growing
misery of the worlds poor through our daily economic decisions
is that we are separated from this reality by so much distance.
Everything and everyone who provides us what we need to survive
is an abstraction. We consume brand names, not resources and people.
If we could see abused workers toiling on the industrial farms and
in sweatshops, and the falling forests and scarred landscapes, we
could not morally continue to treat them with such disregard.
So in re-developing more face-to-face economic relationships
we will come to have more respect for those who provide our necessities,
by making sure they have a fair wage and safe working conditions.
In turn, they will make sure that our health and safety are provided
for. This mutual relationship serves to improve everyones
well-being, including the well-being of nature, not just corporate
profit.
Community and really life is about
intimate interdependence. The more we separate things production
from consumption and producers from consumers the more we
hide the reality of the consequences of our decisions from our everyday
life, the more we create an illusory world. The more we forget the
connections and presume theyre not there, the more difficult
it is to come back to the real world. At its root, this movement
is about re-connecting to each other and nature, and relearning
the relationships that sustain us, physically and spiritually.
What does decentralization mean? By small, local
community, Arthur Morgan meant small towns to be sure, but urban
neighborhoods can also function as small communities. Many people
point out urban areas are denser so that less transportation is
needed and mass transit is more practical. But urban areas are without
access to sufficient land resources so they must bring in resources
from elsewhere, and dispose of their more concentrated wastes elsewhere.
Rural areas face long-distance transportation problems, though they
have land for food, water and energy procurement and waste recycling.
Due to these factors, and the increasing amount of labor needed
for sustainable agriculture and other land-based economic activities,
re-ruralization around small towns with a high degree of regional
interdependency will be the most likely form of development over
this century. The dying small towns of today may be the future economic
powerhouses and vibrant cultural centers for the agrarian revival.
In sum, community is about sharing, conserving and
living with our local resources which we acknowledge as scarce
rather than depleting, competing over, consuming and destroying
seemingly abundant global resources. But the values of community
transmitted through interdependent living are critical in helping
us through the coming challenges values such as cooperation,
moderation, frugality, charity, mutual aid, confidence, trust, courtesy,
integrity and loyalty. In community living, risks and opportunities
are shared, relationships are the highest priority, and there is
intimate personal acquaintance.
In contrast, think of some of the non-community
values which are prevalent today, and their role in creating or
exacerbating the crisis at hand individualism, selfishness,
comfort, convenience, indulgence. Wealth accumulation is the highest
priority, not relationships. We have less intimacy or intimacy with
fewer people. A study done in the U.S. showed that from 1980 to
2004 the number of "close confidants" people had had dropped
from three to two and the number of people without any close confidants
has more than doubled.
Author and farmer Wendell Berry calls the dominant
system the "global economic party" and he contrasts it
with what he calls the "community party." He says the
global party is self-aware, highly organized, small in number and
increasingly powerful. The community party is just becoming aware
of itself. Its small though potentially numerous, and weak
though latently powerful. Instead of lamenting the power the global
economic party has, lets spend our precious time and energy
developing our potential.
Time for Action
I want to end my talk and this conference with a final plea for
action. We can delay action by various measures, some of which Ive
described, but there are others as well, like blaming other people
or entities for the problems in which we find ourselves (oil companies,
the current U.S. administration). It may make us feel better temporarily,
but in reality, we, the billion or so over-consumptive middle class
people on the planet, are the greatest perpetrators of global destruction
not the small number of elite consumers or the destitute
and more self-reliant majority.
So we are the problem, but we are the solution,
as well. The changes that we make in our own lives can have more
of an impact in reducing global resource use than entire communities
in other parts of the world, or entire communities in the future.
Sometimes it may feel like the knowledge of the
impending peak and decline of oil resources and catastrophic climate
change is a curse rather than a blessing. But we have a tremendous
opportunity to use this head start to create successful models of
whats possible. We need models at every scale, in every community.
Were working on a model neighborhood-community
called "Agraria" that we intend to build in our town of
Yellow Springs, Ohio. It will consist of very small, passive houses
meaning designed so that they dont need heating or
cooling systems plus vegetable gardens which will provide
much of the food in the neighborhood. Agraria will be based on interdependent
social and economic relationships both within the neighborhood,
and within the greater community. Most importantly, we envision
it as the educational and cultural center to transform our small
town of 3,700, and a model for re-ruralization.
Cuba
Another important model is Cuba. While consuming one-eighth the
energy of the average American, Cubans have the same lifespan, a
lower infant mortality rate, a higher literacy rate, and more teachers
and doctors per capita than the U.S. In 2006, the World Wildlife
Fund identified Cuba as the only sustainable nation in the world
because of its low resource use combined with a high level of well-being.
Cuba is proof that we can live well with less.
Our film, The Power of Community: How Cuba Survived
Peak Oil, describes what the Cubans did, and importantly, how
they did it. When the crisis hit, Cubans didnt hope for someone
to save them, even their own government. They took the initiative
in their communities, and survived, revitalizing exchange at the
local level as they transitioned to a much more agrarian economy.
I believe that this is how the change will take
place, not from above, but from within. From individuals and communities
and eventually entire nations pioneering a better way to live on
this planet, and planting the seeds of a sustainable future.
I thought it appropriate to end with an epitaph.
The following is inscribed on a tomb of an Anglican Bishop in Westminster
Abbey on 1100 A.D. It says,
"When I was young and free and my imagination
had no limits, I dreamed of changing the world. As I grew older
and wiser, I discovered the world would not change, so I shortened
my sights somewhat and decided to change only my country.
But it, too, seemed immovable.
As I grew into my twilight years, in one last desperate
attempt, I settled for changing only my family, those closest to
me, but alas, they would have none of it.
And now, as I lie on my deathbed, I suddenly realize:
If I had only changed myself first, then by example I would have
changed my family.
From their inspiration and encouragement, I would
then have been able to better my country, and who knows, I may have
even changed the world."
Thank you.
Megan Quinn Bachman is the outreach director of Community Solutions,
a non-profit based in Yellow Springs, Ohio, USA which provides knowledge
and practices to support low-energy lifestyles, with a primary focus
on reducing energy consumption in the household sectors of food,
transportation and housing.
www.communitysolution.org
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