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Overshoot

Solutions & sustainability - Nov 19

Staff, Energy Bulletin

-Go forth and multiply a lot less
-The new wave of urban farming (and fresh food from small spaces!)
-Urban farms a fertile idea
-Summary Presentation for Plan B 4.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization
-The next Industrial Revolution will be people-powered
-Sustainability and Social Justice: Do the Math
-Greening Portland - Your City How To

archived November 19, 2009
	

Review: The Ecotechnic Future by John Michael Greer

Frank Kaminski, Seattle Peak Oil Awareness (SPOA)

John Michael Greer has officially established himself as an institution within the peak oil community. Truly one of the finest minds working on the predicament of modern-day industrial civilization, he is so well-read in so many fields that he regularly gains access to insights that utterly elude his contemporaries. For this he is treasured by a growing number of loyal readers—and, I suspect, hated by equally many fellow bloggers who wish that they could be half as good.

archived November 19, 2009
	

Amelia Earhart and the complexity problem

Kurt Cobb, Resource Insights

As I watched the recently released film about Amelia Earhart, I couldn't help thinking about parallels between her journey and ours as an industrial culture.

archived November 15, 2009
	

Immigration and our ecological predicament

Kurt Cobb, Resource Insights

Much of the migration we are seeing today is from countries which export resources to wealthy nations. In other words, we are seeing mass migrations from resource exporting countries where carrying capacity is being systematically undermined toward countries that are importing that carrying capacity.

archived November 8, 2009
	

Dr. Albert Bartlett's "Laws of Sustainability"

Gail Tverberg, The Oil Drum

At the Denver ASPO conference, I had the good fortune to meet Dr. Albert Bartlett. Afterward, Dr. Bartlett e-mailed me some material he had written over the years. The "Laws of Sustainability" were included in this material. They are part of Al Bartlett's contribution to the anthology The Future of Sustainability by Marco Keiner, published in 2006.

archived November 6, 2009
	

Path to a peace economy

David Korten, Yes! Magazine

I start with a basic truth. A persistent pattern of violence against people, community, and nature is inherent in the institutional structure of our existing economy. You don’t treat a cancer with Band-Aids, and we can’t resolve our current economic crisis with marginal regulatory adjustments. It is time to rethink and restructure.

archived October 28, 2009
	

Economic dominoes continue to fall

Guy R. McPherson, Nature Bats Last

Passing the world oil peak has had, and doubtless will continue to have, relatively little impact on the long-term price of gasoline. The economic implications of getting through the first half of the Oil Age have been much more significant, a trend that seems likely to continue until the collapse is complete.

archived October 27, 2009
	

Deep thought - Oct 19

Staff, Energy Bulletin

-The ecocidal moment
-“All will be done again as it was in far-off times”
-(Re)Imperializing Anthropology and Decolonizing Knowledge Production
-Do Increased Energy Costs Offer Opportunities for a New Agriculture?

archived October 19, 2009
	

The Oceans are Coming

Keith Farnish and Dmitry Orlov, ClubOrlov

September 2009 the latest global temperature rise projections released by the Hadley Centre, part of the British Meteorological Office indicated an average rise of 4 degrees Celsius (that’s a balmy 7.2°F) by 2055 given a business as usual scenario. Some places will be a bit more stable, but the places that particularly matter – the ice caps, the methane-rich permafrosts in northern Canada and Siberia, and the Amazon rainforest – will be melting, off-gassing, and burning, respectively.

archived October 19, 2009
	

Food & agriculture - Oct 15

Staff, Energy Bulletin

-Tulare couple grows a garden by the foot
-Rooftop farming
-Richard Wiswall on the business of organic farming
-On World Food Day: Crunching the Numbers
-Aquacalypse Now
-Culinary Ecotourists Turn Wilderness Foraging into Dinner

archived October 15, 2009
	

Deep thought - Oct 13

Staff, Energy Bulletin

-A Timely Reminder of the Real Limits to Growth
-Liberal Education, Stewardship, and the Cosmopolitan Temptation
-Decline of a tribe: and then there were five
-Last Call at Descartes’ Bar and Grill
-The Vindication of a Public Scholar

archived October 13, 2009
	

Resources and anthropocentrism

Guy R. McPherson, Nature Bats Last

Evolution demands short-term thinking focused on individual survival. Most attempts to overcome our evolutionarily hardwired absorption with self are selected against. The Overman is dead, killed by a high-fat diet and unwillingness to exercise. Reflexively, we follow him into the grave.

archived October 12, 2009
	

The purpose of it all

Kurt Cobb, Resource Insights

It is John McPhee, that fabulous writer about the geology of the United States, who has given me the insight as to what the "true" purpose of humankind is....to alter the landscape and the atmosphere to such a degree that we bring about wholly new conditions on Earth.

archived October 11, 2009
	

Our evanescent culture and the awesome duty of librarians

Richard Heinberg, Post Carbon Institute

How secure is our civilization’s accumulated knowledge? It is a question that, in a fundamental sense, transcends many life-and-death concerns (threats of sickness, natural disaster, or military invasion) that prompt us collectively to spend fortunes on insurance, health care, and weaponry.

archived October 7, 2009
	

Water and drought - Oct 1

Staff, Energy Bulletin

-World's river deltas sinking due to human activity, says new study led by CU-Boulder
-Gulf of Mexico 'dead zone' to grow dramatically due to federal biofuel mandate
-Dust Storm Blankets Sydney as Drought Bites
-Water worries threaten U.S. push for natural gas
-Alternative Energy Projects Stumble on a Need for Water
-Obama administration wades deeper into Delta mire

archived October 1, 2009