Showing posts with label economy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label economy. Show all posts

Saturday, December 27, 2008

The Best Holiday Gifts

While reading my local paper this morning, I saw that while purchasing was slow at a local mall, the line at the massage chair was huge and all the tables at the food court were full causing people to sit on ledges and stairs to enjoy their food.

This simply underlines that people deep down inside are not just looking for stuff to console themselves but are enjoying the company of others and the gentle touch from a stranger. Community planners of past understood this and created central squares, plazas, and other gathering spots for its citizens. It is obvious to me that people go where people are, and it does not require spending huge sums of money to provide the motivation.

The dismal economic times are forcing us to choose methods of giving and entertaining ourselves that are not dependent on spending money we do not have, or collecting more stuff we do not really need.

My New Years wish is that we deepen this realization and refocus our time, energy, and resources toward creating neighborhoods and communities which encourage us to spend time together and allow the ancient benefits of strong community connections to make our lives rich and exciting.

Monday, December 15, 2008

Creating the Green Economy


The constant economic news makes it sound like everything is coming to a screeching halt when it comes to the engine of business. On the contrary, the coming green economy will turn out to be far larger than we ever expected.

On the face of it we are now seeing a scaling back of the kind of wasteful and over consumptive economy based on the availability of ever-growing supplies of cheap energy. Despite the recent plunge in oil prices, over the next years and decades to come we will see dramatic increases in these costs.

So the question before us is how do we create an economy which does not require Americans to purchase ever growing quantities of unnecessary and wasteful items. The answer is to support and enhance those industries which are designed to recycle materials and extend the life of the things we use. It will require and shift from a "throwaway" society to a "sustainable" society.

For example, we can increase the reuse of many items. Businesses and industries that repair and help us to reuse items. We need to reclaim the lost art of fixing things. Many items just require a bit of effort to make them usable once again.

We need to rebuild, refurbish, refinish and renovate our homes, offices, public buildings, machines, tools and furniture in ways that increase their lifespan, reduce their energy use and improve their efficiencies

Trade and bartering systems can be encouraged to allow us to resell items we have finished with, but are still valuable to others

We need to create a domestic recycling industry. We must not be dependent on countries such as China to buy our used paper, glass,aluminum and cardboard. We need to support the development of these industries right here in the United States.

As part of our move to grow as much of our own food locally, we must support the creation of local sources of organic compost while diverting all that material from our already over burdened landfills.

Taken together, these industries have the potential to create millions of home grown jobs while reducing our consumption of raw materials all at the same time.

Friday, December 5, 2008

The Green New Deal

by Richard Heinberg

(Entire Text) Our continued national dependence on fossil fuels is creating a crippling vulnerability to both long-term fuel scarcity and catastrophic climate change.

The current economic crisis requires substantial national policy shifts and enormous new government injections of capital into the economy. This provides an opportunity for a project whose scope would otherwise be inconceivable: a large-scale, coordinated energy transition away from fossil fuels and toward renewable energy.

This project must happen immediately; indeed, it may already be too late. We have already left behind the era of cheap and plentiful fossil fuels, with a permanent decline of global oil production likely underway within three years. Moreover, the latest research tells us we have less than eight years to bring carbon emissions under control if we hope to avoid catastrophic climate change. Lacking this larger frame of understanding and action, a mere shift away from foreign oil dependence will fail to meet the challenge at hand.

We need to reduce our overall energy consumption, and restructure our economy to run primarily on renewable energy—and the federal government must lead the way. This energy transition should have five components: a massive shift to renewable energy, and a retrofitting of the four key systems of electricity, transportation, food, and buildings.