Tuesday, September 19, 2017

What is the right way to save the world?



Myself when young did eagerly frequent
Doctor and Saint, and heard great Argument
About it and about: but evermore
Came out by the same Door as in I went.
      from The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam


Many people recognise that we have an ecological problem. Unfortunately for all of us, a lot of those people don’t do much to try to reduce their personal impact, instead limiting their actions to mouthing platitudes.

I have written extensively about this on this blog, and I have commented on the limitations of using economic incentives to encourage people away from engaging in carbon-emitting activities (I see this as a problem, because the most wealthy people, who have already emitted the most carbon, are those least affected by such economic costs). In other words, we need to work hard to ensure that a carbon tax is not a regressive tax. (I think the Australian Labor Party achieved this under Gillard, and that it’s a damn shame their law was repealed).

What I want to focus on here then, is the group of people who know that something needs to be done, and are prepared to make personal changes to help make it happen. I have the most respect for this group of people, because I think taking collective ownership of the problem is the only way to tackle it.

And it is a big problem. Dennis Meadows (one of the original members of the Club of Rome), in a recent interview, said that climate change is not the problem, it is the symptom, and that the problem is over-consumption (too many people, consuming too much). He said that if we can somehow “fix” climate change, but keep everything else the same, and continue growing then we’ll just encounter another symptom (eg. soil loss, ecological collapse, etc). I think this is a compelling argument.

But, as concerned citizens who want to do something active to help reduce our contribution to this problem, what should we do? Clearly over the next century or so, human life will be massively reorganised and entirely new ways of living will need to be invented. But how do we get there?

Should we stay in the city, where we remain largely reliant on industrial food/resource provisioning, where our ability to tap into natural energy flows is limited, where our ability to dispose of wastes is limited by local regulations, where houses and land are more expensive — requiring greater participation in the money economy? The benefits of doing this are that resources and knowledge can be more easily shared, and transport can be more active (less car travel). These are real and large benefits.

Alternatively, should we move to self-sufficient properties and create an independent lifestyle? In doing that we have more space and potentially more money (because land is cheaper in remote locations) so using fuel such as firewood is more feasible, and food production can be much less intensive. There is also less regulation, so more freedom to establish unconventional systems (eg. composting toilets), and opportunities to reestablish native bush. These are clear benefits, but the cost is expensive transport, and provisioning of services, both of which have environmental consequences.

Here are two big choices, but there are successively finer-grained choices all the way down.

Should we pursue a low impact, but low money lifestyle (the frugality approach), value conservation, but not invest particularly in renewable technologies?
Alternatively, should we pursue a high tech approach, investing heavily in renewables and/or batteries?
Should we invest in electric vehicles or try to minimise car use? Should we use taxis? Bicycles? Public transport on diesel buses?
Should we eat meat? Processed food? What about dairy? What about bought alcohol?
Should we buy computers? Phones? Paint? What’s worse — using petrol in an old car or electricity in a new one? Is it better to drive further to buy organic food or to buy non-organic food from the little old lady on the side of the road?

Given the greater efficiencies of collective infrastructure, is it better to focus on improving policy than personal investment (eg. is the embodied energy in rainwater tanks, batteries, cars better put towards shared infrastructure such as dams, grid-batteries or public transport?)

Clearly, when asking these questions, we need to look not only at the now, but how things might evolve as time passes. What effects will technology have? How will politics change? What about economic or demographic factors?

None of these questions have simple answers, and I believe that there is that there is no correct approach. There is no unified “green movement”, but I’m concerned that greenies are becoming divided into subgroups, each of which is firming its orthodoxy into, in some cases, dogma. This makes it harder for separate groups to work together, but it also makes it harder for individuals to explore new ideas and approaches to doing things.

We are likely to have more success, as a disparate group of people whose goal is to achieve something about ecological overshoot, if we are tolerant of different approaches and philosophies. We will work more cohesively as a group, but we will also be able to explore more ideas.

Western countries in 2117 will look very different to today. Many aspects of society will need to be reinvented to cope with ecological overshoot and resource scarcity (not to mention technological, geopolitical, economic and demographic change). We will need all the ideas we can get if we are to achieve this, and we can’t afford to dismiss any without consideration.

7 comments:

  1. Hi Angus,

    Exactly a multitude of paths have to be travelled before a sustainable path is stumbled across. I don't advocate that anyone attempt the life my wife and I live if they are unwilling to do so. Such a path would be an unnecessary cruelty.

    Please note that I have no ill will towards you.

    One uncomfortable aspect of community is learning how to live with people who's opinions differ from that of your own. When we moved to a rural area, I tread very carefully around other peoples opinions as there are people in this part of the world who bag off "greenies", but at the same time they are raising and butchering their own animals for the table, not to mention tending gardens that would put city folks to shame.

    If you truly want a diversity of different paths to a sustainable future, somewhere you have to find within yourself a way to accept that diversity and be able to communicate and live with that.

    Of course you may be thinking: why then did I shut our conversation down? Well, I feel that you stated your case, I replied that I respect your views but disagreed (three times, providing technical reasons each time).

    Dialogue is defined as: "take part in a conversation or discussion to resolve a problem." I was concerned that we were not achieving dialogue and had no desire to upset the tone of the comment section - which can alienate others.

    As I wrote, community isn't a cost free exercise and I have no beef with you.

    Cheers

    Chris

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  2. Hi Chris,

    Yes, the aspect of working/discussing with diverse people is one of the challenging aspects of community. I know of several community organisations that have prized the idea of community (in a very progressive sense) and been rent with factions, bitterness, and acrimony.

    I will try to form my thoughts into a coherent essay regarding our other discussion, and put it here as a blog post.

    Cheers, Angus

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  3. Is there a right way to save the world? As you say, the green movement tends to break into ever smaller factions every time it disagrees over some trivial issue. We are great at the art of debate in our society (I win, you lose, I'm right, you are wrong), but not so good at conversation, discussion and celebration. Let's celebrate every tiny move in the right direction instead of slamming it as 'too little, too late'. People are tired of environmentalists always telling them they immensely encouraging about whatever the government, the are wrong and being smug about being right. Instead we could be environmentalist groups and our neighbours are doing, whatever it is, as long it is heading in the right direction..

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  4. PS I have no idea what you and Chris were disagreeing about, so don't take what I said as any reflection on your own discussion. Whatever it is, you appear to be having a mature and civilised discourse around your disagreement. Respect!

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  5. Hi Jo,

    I agree -- sanctimonious greenies don't do their cause any favours.

    Cheers, Angus

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  6. One thing I'd want to see represented in all of this is some acknowledgement people's circumstances vary - and some people have very solid, hard limits on the amount of physical or mental work they can do. It makes it a lot harder than it already is to participate in such discourse, when you're broke, disabled, on the dole, and don't have access to the sorts of start-up capital or support networks a lot of "green" thinkers and writers assume everyone has. Even a green discourse which had some space for people who were renting, and thus *can't* easily do things like setting up compost heaps (have to be cleaned up for inspections!), installing solar panels (need the landlord's permission), getting a few chooks (again, landlord's permission, plus figuring out what to do with them when you wind up moving) - even that would be a massive improvement on the existing discourse which tends to assume everyone is an able-bodied, neurotypical professional person in their mid-twenties, with a mobile profession and access to plenty of start-up capital.

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  7. Hi Meg,

    While I agree with what you're saying, I don't think this article particuarly assumes that people have a lot of disposable income -- even though some of the examples clearly do, there are others that don't. Also, I think I have floated many ideas on this blog about doing stuff on the cheap.

    eg.
    http://guesstimatedapproximations.blogspot.com/2016/04/cheap-wicking-beds_41.html
    http://guesstimatedapproximations.blogspot.com/2016/02/status-and-consumerism.html
    http://guesstimatedapproximations.blogspot.com/2015/12/secondary-glazing.html
    http://guesstimatedapproximations.blogspot.com/2015/05/bikes-for-transport-electrified.html

    Cheers, Angus

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