This
article makes me very sad.
All
I can say is that wishful thinking never saved the world. Why is
this wishful thinking? It can be summed up thus:
- Nuclear catastrophe at Fukushima and the problem of what to do with 200+ nuclear power stations when the power goes off;
- Runaway climate change leading to a habitat that will no longer support life.
There
is no doubt that the Transition movement, as well as the Green
movement continue to play an important role. When we are faced with
total coilapse of what goes for human “civiliation” and near-term
extinction the building up of community and practising of
permaculture is a positive response.
But
if this comes with wishful thinking and cognitive dissonance it is
quite a different matter. There is much danger in staying with ideas that were new and revolutionary ten years ago: the world today has moved on and bears no relation with today.
The transition movement may well be losing its relevance.
---Seemorerocks
“The
Transition Movement, helpful as it was years ago, has failed to grow
and adapt with the times. They are much-less influential than they
once were and many who were formerly affiliated with the movement
have dropped the name altogether to create distance. They remind me
of the hollow shell the Pacifica Radio Network has become while PRN
has exploded in size and reach. That's because we deal with things
that matter, things that are important and pressing. It's no big
loss. They'll atrophy and fade. Too bad Nafeez chose to run with
this. He's out of touch and we hope he gets it back.' “
---Mike
Ruppert
The
crisis of civilisation is an unprecedented opportunity
Converging
climate, energy, and economic crises signal the potential to
transition to a prosperous post-carbon era
26
January, 2013
Earlier
this month, I had the honour of being interviewed by Rob
Hopkins,
the founder of the Transition
Towns
movement and co-founder of the Transition
Network.
In an interview with the Guardian
back in June, Hopkins explained his inspiring vision for how
small-scale actions at a community level could change the world.
In
our conversation, Hopkins was keen to explore my take on these issues
as a journalist and academic. He quizzed me about my take on the
scale of the environmental, energy
and economic challenges we face this century, and the potential for
solving them. It was a wide-ranging and lengthy conversation covering
some of the issues I've covered in this blog and beyond, the gist of
which was that the various crises we face today - from climate change
to the economy - are not separate, distinct crises, but rather facets
of a wider
crisis of industrial civilisation in its current form.
The crisis, fundamentally, is linked to our dependence on fossil
fuels; but the reality is that whichever way one looks at it,
optimistically or pessimistically, this century signals the end of
the age of fossil fuels.
Importantly,
that's not to say that we're all doomed. Far from it: while the
crisis of civilisation shows that business-as-usual is not
sustainable - and could at worst lead to an uninhabitable planet by
the end of this century based on the consensus science projections -
I've argued that we are already in the midst of a process of
civilisational
transition
which offers unprecedented opportunities to re-envision new forms of
prosperity that can function in harmony with our environment, rather
than in conflict with it.
Below,
I've put together a few snippets from our conversation, but you can
read
the whole transcript here,
and also listen
to it here.
Rob:
You've written a lot recently about how gas fracking is being hugely
over-hyped and how we may well be looking at 'peak uranium' by 2015,
and a study that said don't do any more nuclear whatever you do.
You've written about peak
oil.
When you look at all those things coming together, you analysis is
increasingly at odds with what we encounter in the mainstream media,
this bullish optimism that a new 'golden age of fossil fuels' is
waiting round the corner. What's your take on the tension between
those two analyses and where we find ourselves as a civilisation?
Me:
There's a lot of hype in a lot of these industries. A lot of what my
reporting has focused on recently is trying to distinguish between
the hype and the facts, and how we square up the reality of the
actual costs of energy these days and the fact that energy is a lot
more expensive.
The reports I was looking at on shale gas were
from a lot of very credible sources. You had a guy, David Hughes, who
used to work for the Canadian government, assessing Canada's national
oil and gas supplies for about 30 years. Another was by Deborah
Rogers who is an advisor to the US government, on the problems with
fracking. She's actually an advisor to the US Department of the
Interior. Also there was a report from the Energy Watch Group based
in Germany which was authored by a physicist. The Energy Watch Group
is a network of European scientists who have been looking at these
issues for a while.
The
overall result of the research that these guys put out was that if
you take into account these overestimations and underestimations, the
picture you come away with is actually quite worrying, to the extent
that we're looking at the idea that shale gas could really just be a
Ponzi scheme. This is industry just keeping things afloat but it's
not really going to solve our energy problem in the long run.
This
century is the end of the age of fossil fuels and it doesn't matter
which way you look at it, even if you look at it from an optimistic
perspective, you're still looking at declining and depleting during
the first quarter of this century.
You're
looking at us running pretty low, costs getting high, and that
impacting the economy, impacting our contemporary industrial way of
life and causing a lot of problems if we don't make those choices now
to change the way we do things. People get very bogged down with the
detail of whether we're going to peak in 2015 or if we're going to
peak in 2020 or 2035. For me, the peak in 2025 or 2030 is bad enough.
We need to start preparing for these issues now.
If
we are looking at the end of the age of fossil fuels for a variety of
reasons this century, then what does the alternative look like and
how do we get there?
Rob:
What do you think the convergence of the challenges that you identify
and the things that you write about mean for economic growth, what
are the implications for economic growth?
Me:
At the moment we face such an amazing convergence of different
challenges, with environmental degradation, climate change, resource
depletion, and these are obviously affecting our societies here and
now. People talk about what's going to happen in the future but we're
already seeing the impact on our societies in terms of food
production, in terms of challenges to the way in which our societies
are able to live and source their general industrial production.
We're
now moving into the age of very expensive energy, whichever way you
look at it. Our complete and utter dependence on cheap fossil fuels
to basically do everything means that as we enter this age of more
expensive forms of energy we're facing this fundamental baseline
problem, which is undermining the ability of industrial civilisation
to do the things that it is used to doing at the cost at which it is
used to doing them.
Of
course, people often talk about debt and the problem of debt. But
missing from mainstream analyses is the extent to which the growth
that we've had since the Second World War, astronomical levels of
growth, have been correlated with two things. One, the exploitation
of energy, cheap fossil fuels. And two, they've also been correlated
with the expansion of debt. What's interesting really about this
period is that, especially since the 1970s, when the economic system
began to face certain challenges, rates of profit were declining.
There was an effort to outsource manufacturing to poorer developed
countries to keep costs down and to maintain higher profits. All of
that stopped working.
What
happened is, banks and investors turned towards financialisation.
They realised that actually you can make huge amounts of profit by
lending. The more you lend to people, the more they have to pay you
back and you can get a return on your interest. That's an amazing way
of making profits. This is no secret, it's actually a well-known
reality and in fact mainstream economists often see debt and the
creation of credit as a good thing. They recognise that there's a
link between higher levels of growth and higher levels of credit and
debt in the economy.
Where
obviously it falls apart is that none of these economists anticipated
how these things would converge and lead to the collapse of the
banking system in 2008 and the ongoing recession that we're seeing
now. There's no sign of it abating. In fact, all the recent
statistics that have emerged in this last six months up to now, from
the World Bank, from the IMF, from various ratings agencies and major
banks, all of them are saying all our growth forecasts have to be
slashed, that we were over-optimistic again.
All
the growth in emerging markets that we were banking on to keep the
global economy chugging along, it's actually not going to happen in
the way that we originally thought it was going to happen. So once
again we've realised that these models that we're relying on are
unable to keep up with reality. I think that's because they've failed
to realise that this acceleration of debt and credit and the ability
to actually service that debt has been premised on this abundant
availability of cheap fossil fuels.
This
was challenged when we saw the peak in conventional oil production
and the plateau in conventional oil production from about 2005
onwards. When suddenly conventional oil production was not able to
keep up with demand so we had rocketing oil prices which fed into
everything else. A number of economists have pointed out that this
massive impact on the cost of living is really what has led to people
being unable to service their debt. People were suddenly not able to
afford their basic expenses, and unable to afford to pay back those
debts. The house of cards that we created over the past 30-40 years,
this bonanza of virtual growth just collapsed like a bubble.
I
think that's where we're at now, we've got this choice ahead of us.
Governments at the moment are still ostrich-like, thinking, lets just
go back to the same old ways of printing money, lots of quantitative
easing. Kickstart lending again to get capital flowing. People will
be able to borrow again, people will be able to buy things again.
It's all going to be fine. But it's not going to work. We are already
quite over-leveraged and if you look at the levels of debt, we
haven't actually solved that problem at all.
We
recognise that material accumulation has played a role in giving us
certain amazing technologies and the ability to do things, and
obviously there's scientific innovation. None of those things are in
themselves bad things, but they've also come at a cost. I think we're
at a point now where we can make that choice, to say maybe we can
harness the positives that we've developed with industrial
civilisation and develop something new, a post-growth,
post-industrial form of civilisation that doesn't reject science and
technology but recognises that ultimately you have to be living
within the limits of your environmental systems.
Rob:
Our theme for July at TransitionNetwork.org was The Power of Just
Doing Stuff and looking from different perspectives at this idea of
the power that sits, particularly in the context you set out earlier
in this interview, in terms of those really big global challenges
that we face. What do you think is the power that arises from people
just getting on and finding they want to be part of the solution?
Me:
I think fundamentally it changes the whole paradigm of how a society
should run and what is the driving force of a society, what is the
driving force of politics. At the moment our economy is caught up in
a political system which is very hierarchical, counter democratic,
where we've seen an erosion of democracy for a whole range of
reasons. It's linked up with the nature of capitalism, we've already
seen the scandal of Lynton Crosby and the link to fossil fuels in
Australia, the link to dodgy private companies trying to take over
the NHS, and tobacco companies. That's the story of politics at the
moment.
As
for the democratic system. It's great that we have one and in many
ways is better than other things out there, but it's a broken system.
I think the idea of people just getting up there and saying "now
wait a minute, shall I just wait for government to fail at the next
negotiating table for climate change, shall I wait or push government
to do this, push government to do that? Or can I do something that
will tangibly affect my life, the lives of my family and friends, the
lives of the whole community in which I'm living?" ... that
could eventually transform not just local politics, but in the long
run it could actually have a national impact.
I
think that's the potential of people just getting up and saying
enough is enough, I don't need to wait for someone else, for my
representatives to do something for me or for us, I can do it myself
and start moving towards that. It might not be everything that I
might hope to see, but if I don't do that now, then in a way I'm
allowing, conceding power to these other entities whereas if I just
take that step forward and take action now, I'm actually taking
control and taking ownership.
But
at the same time I would like to see people who are involved in
direct action and things like that actually taking the ideas of
Transition for example and saying "well I might not just want to
occupy a public space, I might want to occupy a public space and grow
some food. I might want to occupy a public space and start having
workshops around what this alternative society should look like and
actually start creating it here and now. How can we create a new
method of exchange? How can we change the nature of our local
economy? How can we help our council estates work towards a vision
where they're relying on clean energy which could benefit our local
community and contribute to dealing with some of the problems that
our young people are facing? Let's empower and enfranchise our young
people".
We
need to have more of that catalysing of cross-fertilisation of these
discussions across our different groups in order to have a more
systemic and more holistic conversation towards what is the vision we
would like to see, how can we collectively begin exploring different
pathways to doing that. I think if we did that, and we are doing
that, there are these seeds now being planted, but if we started
moving towards this more assertively in our different communities, I
think it would have a potentially really amazing impact on the
national story. It could change it.
Ultimately, that choice of
what the world is going to look like is really down to us, and the
future is quite open. If you're going to say we're all doomed and
there's no point in doing anything, you become part of the problem
and create a self-fulfilling prophecy, and are no longer basically of
any use to humanity because you've just said this is how it's going
to be and have now disempowered yourself.
But
if you remain open to the possibility of change, even if it's a slim
possibility, even if we recognise that it's a small probability, if
you remain open to that probability and fight for it then you become
part of the shift towards that. And then you remain open to the
reality that there is a possibility and we could create that.
People
are really hungry actually for answers, hungry for solutions, hungry
for alternatives, so really this is actually an unprecedented
opportunity. It's an unprecedented crisis but it's also an
opportunity to dream-weave and say "well actually everything is
going to go to pot over the next 20-30 years if we don't change, so
here's an opportunity to think outside the box."
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