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Page added on February 16, 2012

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Heinberg’s serious message has silver lining

Heinberg’s serious message has silver lining thumbnail

World-renowned “Peak Oil” expert Richard Heinberg packed the 100 Mile House Community Hall on Feb. 8 to deliver his seriously troubling message that economic growth is effectively over.

The audience of 220 all stayed to hear there is a silver lining if we can curb our spending on credit and apply principles of sustainability to our resources. People came to the event to hear what we can do, locally and globally, to begin to live within our means and preserve resources for the future.

Preceding the evening event, an afternoon workshop was held in the Valley Room so Heinberg could interface with members of the sponsoring groups, and most specifically, have an exchange with five Peter Skene Ogden Secondary School students who represent leading-edge thinking about the future.

At one point, listening to the students speak, a visibly impressed Heinberg said, “Where is the video camera? This should be on YouTube!”

At the evening event, three walls of the community hall were decorated with a display, designed and installed by Gus Horn and Rita Giesbrecht, of outstanding artwork and photography by James Smith and Shane Adams. In the front of the room, tires and oil barrel displays told of our responsibility to use, reuse and recycle.

Canim Lake Band Chief Mike Archie welcomed Heinberg to traditional Shuswap Territory with reverent song and drum. Mayor Mitch Campsall spoke briefly, and then Patricia Spencer and Linda Savjord introduced Heinberg.

“With the Industrial Revolution, rapid economic growth became normal,” Heinberg told the audience. “It was mostly the result of cheap energy.

“Economists assumed growth could go on forever. Nobody stopped to think all this industrial growth was happening on a small planet with only so much oil and soil, only so many forests and fish. So we all got hooked on growth.

“Governments, businesses and households went into debt on easy credit. The financial system created ever more complex securities and derivative schemes to soak up all that debt, and to make imaginary profits on imaginary assets.

However, Heinberg noted money and debt depend on natural resources.

“Piling up debt year after year meant piling up claims on resources that were shrinking as we depleted them. It was a pyramid scheme. The mother of all bubbles, and in 2008, it burst.”

Governments and central banks tried to re-inflate the bubble with bailouts and stimulus packages funded by public debt, Heinberg said.

“But there are practical limits to debt and energy sources, and we are hitting them. There are real limits to the planet’s ability to absorb our wastes and industrial accidents.”

There is no recovery, he said, adding the stimulation of the economy has all been done with more debt.

“We live on a finite planet. We can live without economic growth, but we’ll have to aim for improvements in life that don’t require increasing our consumption of fossil fuels and other depleting resources, or piling on more debt.

“The longer we put this off the harder it will be,” Heinberg told the group. “So let’s move on.”

The South Cariboo Sustainability Society and the South Cariboo Agri-Culture Enterprise Centre sponsored Heinberg’s presence in 100 Mile House.

100 Mile House



3 Comments on "Heinberg’s serious message has silver lining"

  1. DC on Thu, 16th Feb 2012 6:05 pm 

    Cant belelive he went to 100 mile house. If you never been there, its well…in the middle of nowhere. Typical small town you stop for fossil-fuel on your way somewhere better, ie south. He was within a stones throw of many hugely un-sustainable cities that simply have no economic base, besides recycling money and consumeing, and are utterly incapable of feeding a fraction of there residents. Prince George, Kamloops, Kelowna(worst of all) just a few in the area he was in. Wonder how his message would have been received in those ponzi-scheme cities? Knowing them like I do, he would probably be listened to politely but told, Yea that nice and all, but that what your saying doesnt really apply to us. Were different.

    Yes I know my people well…

  2. Kenz300 on Thu, 16th Feb 2012 9:53 pm 

    “We live on a finite planet”.

    Can we balance people, jobs and resources?

  3. BillT on Fri, 17th Feb 2012 3:31 am 

    City dwellers would have laughed at him. They don’t want to know how much their lifestyle depends on cheap oil and lots of it. Those who live in the country do know, or at least are beginning to realize that they need to move away from a fossil fueled lifestyles to self reliant communities.

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