Haiti on the edge – Feb 1
-Haiti’s Energy Problems
-Living on the edge of disaster
-The west owes Haiti a bailout. And it would be a hand-back, not a handout
-Haiti’s Energy Problems
-Living on the edge of disaster
-The west owes Haiti a bailout. And it would be a hand-back, not a handout
-The Wayfinders: Why Ancient Wisdom Matters in the Modern World
-Who Will Build the Ark?
-Why Ecological Revolution?
-‘Population Justice’ — The Wrong Way to Go
Last night (Tuesday January 26th, 2010) I gave a talk at the Commonwealth Club in San Francisco to a sold-out audience. The crowd was excellent and I was thrilled to have the chance to deliver our message at this venue.
-Oil Is Too Important To Burn In Cars
-Beyond rhetoric
-three paths to a low-car city
-Saving Sub-Sahara Africa a Drip at a Time
-How Can Haiti Be Sustainable?
-Straw Homes That Would Have Foiled the Wolf
-Welcome to the Plutocracy
-The Neoliberal State
-Parecon & Participatory Society
What will we do post growth, post cheap energy, post resource abundance and post climate change? The Post Carbon Institute (PCI) convened its first meeting of Fellows this weekend in Berkeley to address these concerns. Many there and elsewhere have argued that these transformational changes are already becoming evident.
Much of the conversation about community on the peak oil blogosphere in the last few weeks has tacitly assumed that Americans had their communities taken from them by circumstances, if not by some sinister cabal. In fact, of course, most Americans actively walked away from their communities, and continue to do so. Maybe it’s time that we ask why.
-Investors add spice to rising food prices
-God, Keynes, and Clean Energy
-Peak Autos: America’s Love Affair with the Automobile May Be Coming to an End
-Pavan Sukhdev: you can have progress without GDP-led growth
-What Can We Learn from Gift Economies?
-UK Government Classifies Eco Activists as ‘Extremists’ Alongside Al Qaeda
-UK call for European CAP farming subsidies reform
-Moorlands and hills targeted to grow crops for biomass and biofuels
Just outside Asheville, North Carolina, bordered by the Craggy Mountains and located in the Swannanoa Valley on the banks of the Swannanoa River, Warren Wilson College students are busy moving the cows to their next pasture and cutting locally harvested lumber at the on-campus sawmill…
Frankly, when I first learned about peak oil, I was a bit freaked out. But after time, a little too much wine, a lot of research, and some productive action, I recovered, and went on to slowly change my attitude, expectations, and lifestyle to accommodate a radically different reality from the one I previously knew.
It’s time to connect the headlines between persistent unemployment in the United States and growing food insecurity. The next Obama stimulus package should focus on how local food can address both simultaneously.