Wednesday, November 19, 2008

Dear President Elect Obama

Congratulations on your recent election. I do hope you and your staff have all fastened their seat belts, and are all ready for the ride of your lives ... smile.

Thank you so much for providing this opportunity to gather input from the American people. It continues to strengthen my confidence that this administration, will indeed, be able to muster the creativity required to steer us through the next decade.

My most important suggestion for the energy and environment policy team is to watch the video "The End of Suburbia."

It is both facinating and well done. It introduces the concept of "Peak Oil" and "Climate Change" in a very clear manner, and provides an overarching context within which to evaluate our energy and environmental policies. It is what people call a "must see." Shifting to renewables is critical and will end up being very profitable for those industries who actively participate. But, we need to understand that in an ever growing global population, the United States will need to figure out how to keep our quality of life while using less energy. A very doable task considering the numerous successful existing examples we can use as models.

If I can in any way be of further service in policy issues of sustainable development, urban planning, or creating the "America 2020 Vision," please contact me.

In Service,

Zev Paiss
Boulder, Colorado
303-413-8066

Tuesday, November 18, 2008

What is an Ecocity?


by Richard Register (orginal post)

An ecocity is a city or town that is compact - "high density" - and complete with a good balance of housing, jobs, commerce, culture and other of society's and economy's essentials. This is sometimes called - "high diversity." The objective of ecocity design is largely to place people, natural resources and human-created resources, products, services and knowledge in close proximity. This general arrangement, also informed by local climate, soils, resources and historic conditions, by sun angles, wind or other renewable energy resources is connected by rail and bicycle, both externally and internally. Watercourses are celebrated and nature is restored adjacent and to some degree inside of such built communities. Very fundamentally, the ecocity is simply small enough in its appetite for land and resources that it makes possible the expansion of farming and restoration of nature. It makes possible the very high ratios of cultural and natural return for investment in material and energy use. This amounts to the most effective means available to humanity for solving climate change and biodiversity loss problems and attaining a new kind of prosperity that can endure forever into the future.

Monday, November 17, 2008

The Transition Town Movement

From
November 17, 2008

Transition: gearing up for the great power-down

Climate change is upon us and the oil is running out. Is mankind's darkest hour really approaching? If so, a growing army of local heroes is determined to turn it into our finest

In Sandpoint, Idaho - birthplace of Sarah Palin, who really wouldn't approve - residents have prepared the community garden for its first winter and plans are under way for a local biomass-fired power plant.

In Bell, a district of Geelong, Victoria, Australia, they are making wood-fired pizza ovens in each other's gardens and have negotiated bulk-buy discounts on solar power equipment for local residents. They have also planted more than 150 trees in a push to become the “fruit and nut tree area of Geelong”.

Viewed in isolation, these well-intentioned community efforts are laudable, yet insignificant. But Sandpoint and Bell are two examples of something much bigger - the Transition Initiative, a movement barely two years old that claims to have the answer to sustainable living in a world without oil.

In some 700 towns, villages and cities worldwide, Transition is under way, and more communities are signing up every day. Most of the groups are “mulling” - Transition-speak for gearing themselves up - but 114 have launched publically, or “unleashed”.

Of those, 83 are in the UK, as are a further 486 “mullers”. One, Lewes in East Sussex, has just launched its own currency, the Lewes pound, in an effort to encourage townsfolk to reject Tesco and spend their money at purely local shops.

All the 8,500 £1 notes - bearing a handsome picture of Lewes castle on the back - were snapped up in 24 hours. The project was only slightly undermined when notes were put up for sale on eBay by currency speculators.

At the unleashing in Brixton, South London, last month, the Transition Initiative drew about 300 people to Lambeth Town Hall. Fuelled by organic vegan stew (made from Brixton-grown ingredients), reflective jackets tucked safely into their bicycle helmets, they settled down to listen. “This is a historic moment,” said the co-ordinator, Ben Brangwyn, from the stage: “Perhaps in a few years people will ask each other ‘were you there?'” A few seats down from me, a woman gently ululated her accord.

Even Ambridge, as listeners to The Archers will know, has toyed with Transition. Now, say its supporters, is the time to start thinking about it yourself, because it could make your future much more comfortable.

“In all respects - every waking hour - this has completely taken over my life,” says Rob Hopkins, the Englishman who started all this and whose central text, The Transition Handbook (printed in Cornwall on recycled paper, some 15,000 copies sold since May) is converting so many, so quickly.

Hopkins was a lecturer at a college in Kinsale, Co Cork, when he first saw The End of Suburbia, a documentary about the notion of “peak oil”. Put simply, the idea is that, while the world's supply of oil is finite, our demand for it is growing all the time, and at some as-yet-undetermined point - which some people believe has already been reached - demand will overtake supply. There won't be enough oil to go round, so we will either have to pay a lot more for what remains, or learn to get along without it. As Hopkins says in his handbook: “Climate change says we should change, whereas peak oil says we will be forced to change.”

Since it was first drilled by Edwin Deakin 159 years ago in Pennsylvania, oil has revolutionised our lives. Your toothbrush is made of oil, your car and easyJet flights run on it, and it is thanks to oil that cheap food from Britain and the rest of the world is delivered from farm and factory to your nearest supermarket.

Without oil, Hopkins realised, Kinsale would have to become a very different place. So, helped by his students, he worked out something called an Energy Descent Plan: a series of measures that the town could implement to anticipate declining oil supplies. Then the town council had a eureka moment and adopted them as policy.

The key to whether your town survives or thrives after peak oil, Hopkins maintains, is what Transitioners term “resilience”, defined as “its ability to function indefinitely and to live within its limits, and able to thrive for having done so”.

To become resilient, a village, town or city needs to be able to depend on its own resources to as great an extent as possible: the more food, power, and other necessities you can produce in your area, the less you rely on imports.

Hopkins defines the essence of Transition as the idea that “the future with less oil could be preferable to the present - but only if sufficient creativity and imagination are applied early enough in the design of this transition”.

He is determinedly upbeat in the face of Armageddon, and scathing about those who are not. “The environmental movement has been enormously naive for 40 years in assuming that the way you make people change is to give them depressing, distressing information,” he says. “Take that approach and all it does is to breed apathy, or it feeds a sense of powerlessness. At this time in history the last thing you need is people feeling powerless.”

Hopkins moved to Devon and, in September 2006, started Transition Town Totnes - the world's first Transition Initiative. Since then, the Totnes Transition trainers, Naresh Giangrande and Sophy Banks, have given their three-day course to more than 400 people - sometimes in Totnes but more often in the towns where their willing pupils live. This month Giangrande is off on a four-month US tour to train still more people. “We couldn't possibly train everyone who wants to be trained,” he says, “so we are starting to train other trainers.”

For all its global reach, the Transition movement has only modest enough premises: a rickety set of rooms above an optician's shop. Despite its reputation, Totnes is not populated entirely by middle-class hippies. Yes, there are plenty of crystal outlets (credit crunch deal: half-price amethysts) and a notable smattering of ponchos, dreadlocks, VW camper vans and the rest. This being Devon, there are also plenty of elderly inhabitants in beige, tearooms laden with moist cake and, when night falls, teenagers boom up and down the high street in sportswear and souped-up hatchbacks. Lou Brown of Transition Town Totnes reckons that there are about 200 people there “really quite involved”, while the group's events attract many more. “There's bound to be some people here who've never heard of us, though,” he says. “Environmental groups rarely get to everybody.”

Certainly the town is full of traffic. Hopkins, 38, mentions a recent pilgrim who turned up, unannounced, from Germany: “He said that he'd come all the way to Totnes expecting to find an eco-Shangri-La and was horrified that we still had cars.”

Yet if reliance on the internal combustion engine persists in Totnes for now, Transition is slowly changing things. Early successes include a garden-share scheme - those with gardens but who don't tend them are partnered with people who are garden-less but want to grow food, and both parties share the proceeds. The Totnes Food Guide is a comprehensive directory of food producers within five miles of the town: buy groceries from them and you are using minimal oil. A scheme with an epic sobriquet, The Great Re-Skilling will teach you how to make your own paint, knit with recycled materials, master clay plastering and build straw bales. And a drive to plant walnut trees - which apparently yield 7 to 11 tonnes of carbohydrate per hectare - around the town has gone well, even though the first saplings were vandalised (“the mistake was to plant them near where teenagers hang around and get drunk,” says Hopkins).

Transition's widest-known wheeze, local currency, came about when Hopkins saw an old Totnes pound framed on somebody's wall: “I thought, what would happen if we printed 300 of these? The idea is that if you shop in mainstream shops with mainstream money, when those shops close at the end of each day 80 per cent of your money - according to the New Economic Foundation - leaves your town. If you shop at local businesses, that proportion is reversed: 80 per cent stays in the local economy and only 20 per cent goes. A currency that cannot physically leave is a powerful tool to make that happen.”

Ten thousand Totnes pounds are in circulation and some 70 businesses, from Roly's Fudge Pantry to Stoned Jewellers, display the sticker signifying that they accept it. Lewes emulated it, and there are plans under way for the “Brixton brick”.

These initial schemes to raise the resilience of Totnes are comparatively easy to achieve. Others, such as car-sharing schemes, will take longer: “If you want to set up a locally owned and managed energy company which hooks up to wind turbines on the edge of town, well, by the time you get funding, planning permission and set up the company, that's seven years, probably,” says Hopkins.

The Transition Initiative sometimes appears like a well-intentioned, 21st-century version of The Good Life. As yet there is more talk than action - most of the groups in various countries that I contacted were still firmly at the planning stage. Slowly, though, people with more power are taking note. South Somerset District Council has come out in support of the movement, declaring its intention to become the world's first “Transition district”. This month a government climate-change fund in Scotland granted £184, 000 to a Transition group in Moray - and, surprisingly, The Transition Handbook popped up in joint fifth place, along with Barack Obama's autobiography, the new Robert Harris and John Prescott's My Story: Pulling No Punches, in a Waterstone's survey of MPs' summer holiday reads.

The concept of peak oil, like that of climate change, was widely pooh-poohed at first but is slowly gaining credence. Last week the International Energy Agency (IEA) estimated that to compensate for the depletion of existing oilfields and meet a projected rise in world demand from 85 million barrels a day in 2008 to 106 million in 2030, the world will have to find new production equal to the output of ten Saudi Arabias. Nobuo Tanaka, executive director of the IEA, said: “Current trends in energy supply and consumption are patently unsustainable environmentally, economically and socially. They can and must be altered.” Which reads like a line from The Transition Handbook.

Between 1939 and 1944, food imports to Britain halved - and the nation responded, nearly doubling domestic food production. Peak oil does not concentrate the popular imagination in quite the same way as Hitler did, but at least the Transitioners will be prepared when, as they predict, an energy crisis occurs.

In Hervey Bay, Queensland, Australia, people started readying themselves in June. Their two-year low-carbon diet is under way, they have met state Anna Bligh, the state premier, and are consulting on a Queensland Government report entitled Towards Oil Resilience. Bush tucker trees are to be planted around the city.

Maggie Johns, a Hervey Bay Transitioner, signed off her e-mail to me thus: “Before, it all seemed so futile. What was the good in changing a few light bulbs? There are ice-shelves breaking off, for goodness sake! But when you know that more and more towns are coming online with Transition, and each has an army of dedicated volunteers, it seems much more do-able.”

Thursday, November 6, 2008

10 Steps to Sustainability


With all this talk about the importance of increasing our individual and societal sustainability the question always comes up - What Can We Do? Here is a short list of 10 items we can all do to help.

1. Plant a Garden – Being able to grow some of your own food is not only a way to suppliment our diet but working with the soil can also be very grounding.

2. Learn to Cook – Eating out is one place where households can reduce their spending. By learning how to cook we not only reduce the cost of food but gain the enjoyment of making fresh healthy meals with our own hands.

3. Make Things – Participating in this consumerist society is not only expensive but reduces our opportunity to give of ourselves. Birthday, holiday, house warming gifts made by hand are greatly appreciated and can often cost little or no money.

4. Ride, Walk, and Bus Wherever You Can - Using single person cars to get around is the least efficient way to get around.

5. Eat Less Meat – Our food system is one of the most energy and water intensive on the planet. By making changes in this area we can have a significant reduction in the overall energy we use.

6. Meet Your Neighbors – Old fashion community. Humans not only know how to do this but it has been the way we have lived for 95% of human history. We have lived in extended families, and tribes for thousands of years, villages and small towns for many hundreds and only the last 100 or so years have we experimented with the idea of rugged individualist.

7. Wear a Sweater – Household energy use comprises over 20% of our nations overall energy use. What ever we can do to reduce the amount of energy we use in our homes, can have a substantial effect on our national dependence on foreign sources of energy. Steps we can take are numerous from turning down our heat a few degrees and putting on a sweater to adding insulation, replacing light bulbs and adding renewable energy systems to our homes.

8. Reduce, Reuse, Recycle – In our “throw-away” culture we have become accustomed to tossing almost everything into the trash. By reducing how much trash we generate, we can have a substantial positive effect.

9. Live Local – As the famous saying goes ... Think Globally, Act Locally. By increasing the amount of our needs that are satisfied locally we can build resistance to the ever growing shocks from global changes.

10. Be Casual - The assumption that we "need" fancy homes, clothes, cars, and lifestyles leads us to increasing consumption. Shifting to a more casual lifestyle will allow us to consume less and enjoy life more.

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Take the No-Waste Challenge


For most people the proposition of a "waste-free" week sounds pretty impossible. No waste, how do I do that? You'd actually be shocked at how a few little steps can drastically reduce your waste. Why not take the challenge and see how much you can reduce your waste.

Here's how you can have a waste free week:

• Cut the convenience foods. While convenience foods might be, well, convenient, they also come with a ton of packaging. Those prepackaged mash potatoes come in a plastic carton. That box of Chinese takeout comes with loads of Styrofoam trash, plastic forks, and paper napkins. Takeout boxes and convenience foods can fill up your trash can super fast. Instead, take your canvas bag to the farmers' market or grocery store and fill it will tons of wholesome foods like fruits, vegetables, fresh bread, and grains.

• Compost all your used food matter like veggie, fruits, eggshells and some meats. This week, skip on the foods that you can't compost. You can drastically reduce your waste by turning your waste into nourishing soil.

• Curb the consumption. Only buy what you need and don't buy excess. What you do buy should be as locally and sustainably produced as possible.

Good luck and let us know how it goes in the comments.

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Sustainable alternative to disposable water bottles



After learning that 26 billion water bottles or 85% of discarded plastic water bottles in America are not recycled, I was excited to learn about the Wellness H2O Water Bottle made by Wellness Enterprises. The novel idea: an efficient, walnut-sized filter inside of a portable, 22-ounce recyclable water bottle. The water filter has a one-year life (150 gallons) before needing a replacement, and the bottle can be reused for years.

This is an environmental and health solution I can get behind. I am not contributing to landfills where plastic bottles take between 400 to 1,000 years to biodegrade. I am saving money with a $50 purchase and not repeatedly buying bottled water at the store. (The average American buys 1,100 disposable water bottles per year). And I can safely drink fresh-tasting water from any source (municipal tap water, streams, etc.) with heavy metals and other contaminants having been removed.

The last plus is the quality of the water itself. The filter contains two rare volcanic mineral from Japan. One has been revered in Japan for centuries for its natural resistance to bacteria and fungus. The other stone is certified by the Japanese Ministry of Health for its medicinal qualities to accelerate healing of damaged skin and reduce inflammation. According to David Fowler, President & CEO of Wellness Enterprises, when we drink water that has passed through the filter's medium the water gets enhanced with nutrients that make the water more alkaline. The more alkaline the water we drink, the better nutrients can penetrate and be absorbed by our blood cells. An alkaline internal terrain in the body has been linked to enhanced immunity, increased energy production, and brain function. More at: endbottledwater.com.

One Cup at a Time


Living a more sustainable life includes both large and small changes we can do. Americans purchase 30,000,000 (30 million) cups of coffee every day! And for most places that includes a paper cup, a plastic lid, and a cardboard holder to protect us from the heat. If, instead we were to bring our own cups to our local coffeeshops, we could eliminate 1,875,000 pounds of garbage every day!

Make a difference and bring your own cup to the coffeeshop!