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Page added on June 15, 2012

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You and Your Slaves

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“A low-energy policy allows for a wide choice of lifestyles and cultures. If, on the other hand, a society opts for high energy consumption, its social relations must be dictated by technocracy and will be equally degrading whether labeled capitalist or socialist.” — Ivan Illich

In 2009 a British family living in a four-bedroom house became the subject of a subversive energy experiment about modern slavery.

While the foursome flicked on gadgets one Sunday with the abandon of Roman patricians, an army of volunteers (The Human Power Station) furiously pedalled 100 bicycles next door to generate the needed energy.

The unsuspecting family, of course, had no idea they had been unplugged from a power grid fueled largely by fossil fuels.

At the end of the day the slave masters literally dropped their jaws when a BBC television crew introduced them to the exhausted slaves that boiled their tea. (Get this: it took 24 pedallers to heat the oven and 11 cyclists to make two slices of toast.)

At the end of the experiment many of the cyclists collapsed. Several couldn’t walk for days. The pedallers actually consumed more energy in food than they generated by pedalling.

The experiment crudely illustrated the global state of North American energy consumption (just imagine an empty yet well-lit house powered by 100 hungry cyclists). It also convinced one of the experiment’s designers, Tom Siddall of Electric Pedals, that “volunteer slavery” (hordes of sweating cyclists) or old fashioned shackled labour will power the future. “I have no doubt that slavery will return as the world’s energy resources get increasingly scarce.”

Oil removes the toil

Now most people don’t regard oil, say, as an energy slave or a liquid replacement for human muscle, but they probably should. Thanks to petroleum, every North American now behaves, thinks and often looks like an obese and overbearing 19th century slave owner.

Oil slaves, of course, are more portable and versatile than human muscle and now order our world. They grow and deliver food; transport friends and goods; and energize fields and cities. Every laptop computer arrives impregnated with 240 kilograms of oil. Like any good slave, oil removes the toil.

How many slaves for you?

How many energy slaves does a typical Canadian have at his or her disposal? Dave Hughes, perhaps Canada’s premier energy analyst and the nation’s former coal specialist at Natural Resources Canada, has done the math and we are not an emancipated people.

Hughes calculates that one barrel of crude (non-renewable sunshine captured in plants over the past 500 million years or so) contains approximately six gigajoules (six billion joules) or about 1,700 kilowatts of energy.

Now a healthy individual can pump out enough juice to light a 100-watt bulb or (360,000 joules) an hour. With weekends and holidays off and a sensible eight-hour day, Hughes figures that it might takes one person 8.6 years on a bicycle (or treadmill) to produce the energy now stored in one barrel of oil.

(Of course we could work those slaves 12 hours a day, seven days a week with no holidays, argues Hughes. In that case a barrel is equivalent to 3.8 years of human labor. But this columnist favours a more humane treatment.)

Given that the average Canadian now consumes 24.7 barrels of oil a year with scarcely a blink of the eye, every citizen employs about 204 virtual slaves. That’s a spectacular amount of power for any mortal to wield and much more than any Roman or Egyptian household ever commanded. Or five times more than average 19th century U.S. plantation owners.

Oil slaves fueled human population

What worries Hughes and many other energy analysts is that cheap energy slaves have created a formidable global dilemma. Before the Fossil Fuel Age (it started with coal burning around 1700), humans numbered less than one billion for their entire evolutionary existence on this planet.

After coal and then the discovery of oil in the 1850s, Homo sapiens exploded to an astounding population of 7 billion in just 170 years. And non-renewable energy slaves paved the way. Oil, in other words, was a powerful Viagra for the species (with unwieldy erections and other side-effects).

Oil also broke all previous energy thresholds. While human population grew 5.4 times since 1850, per capita energy consumption exploded at a rate of 8.5 times. In fact total energy consumption jumped 45 times.

These extraordinary changes gave peasants vicarious lifestyles once only enjoyed by minor kings and queens. In 1850, the average Tom, Dick or Harry claimed but 2.2 fossil fuels slaves thanks primarily to machines powered by coal, says Hughes. But by 2009, each member of the average human family crowded their household with 93.8 slaves thanks to the combined work of oil, gas and coal. (Add wood, hydro and nuclear energy and another 17.6 diligent slaves must fit in the door.)

Unsustainable

Given the realities of peak oil (the end of cheap slaves and the advent of extremely brutal substitutes) and the fact that China and India now want more petroleum slaves too, that level of consumption or slavery can’t be sustained. In fact Hughes warns that the world of the petroleum slave owner can only get smaller. He calls it “the Energy Sustainability Dilemma.”

This indelicate dilemma will be ugliest for those who employ the most slaves. Right now the average Canadian lives as extravagantly as the feverish English master of a large Caribbean sugar plantation. In fact Canadians typically boss around five times more slaves than the global average.

“Your average Canadian consumes five times the world average per capital consumption, seven times the per capita consumption in China and 29 times the per capita consumption in India,” calculates Hughes.

(For the record the new and leaner slave masters of Shanghai or Tianjin burn but 2.4 barrels of oil a year which puts 20 coolies at their beck and call.)

“Maybe we have been even less cognizant of the services provided by fossil fuels than people did from their slaves,” reflects Hughes. “Slavery, after all was in your face. Now it’s all about filling up the tank.”

In his thoughtful 1973 essay, “Energy and Equity,” the radical Catholic theologian Ivan Illich questioned whether “the well-being of a society can be measured by the number of years its members have gone to school and by the number of energy slaves they have thereby learned to command.”

While most people worried about the scarcity of fodder for these slaves, Illich asked whether free men really needed so many slaves in the first place.

The iconoclast concluded that each and every human being was entitled to a certain amount of energy, but beyond a certain threshold, people lost both their freedom and humanity as slave owners typically do.

Even if nonpolluting slaves were feasible and abundant, Illich reckoned “that the use of energy on a massive scale acts on society like a drug that is physically harmless but psychically enslaving.”

He then dropped a Promethean question that most economists, philosophers, environmentalists and energy analysts avoid: can a society be progressively hooked on a larger numbers of energy slaves and remain autonomous?

It remains civilization’s central question.

thr Tyee



10 Comments on "You and Your Slaves"

  1. SolarDave on Fri, 15th Jun 2012 1:38 pm 

    Tom Siddall is a personal friend of mine. We worked together on the Big Chill Cycle tree. (google it)

    One of Tom’s first pedal projects was to pedal a single cup of tea. The effort required to heat the water was stunning. I now make my coffee using room temperature water and a French press.

    When energy becomes more expensive – and it will – our lifestyles will change. Count on it.

    Posted while pedaling, powered by me!

    http://www.los-gatos.ca.us/davidbu/pedgen.html

  2. SolarDave on Fri, 15th Jun 2012 1:47 pm 

    And it’s TIM Siddal – not Tom Siddall 🙂

  3. BillT on Fri, 15th Jun 2012 3:16 pm 

    Many thought slavery ended with the Civil War…lol. Boy are they going to be surprised in the not too distant future when they have to work hard to just live from day to day.

  4. DC on Fri, 15th Jun 2012 4:13 pm 

    Canadians are an incredibly wasteful people when it comes to all resources, land energy, water you name it, even worse than the amerikans on a per-capita basis. When confronted with this fact, that vast majority will rationlize this by saying, its because it so ‘cold’ or the country is so dipersed. Both true in a trivial sense, but if you look around Canada, its very clear our wastefulness does not come from the temperature, or the large size of the country, but from a deliberate policy to waste both land and energy as carelessly as possible. Canadas northern cities are basically carbon copies of say, amerikan ones like Miami, or Dallas, or w/e, only with slighly thicker glass and tiny bit more insulation, but thats it. And just as car-dependent. When the crunch comes, they will be completly cut adrift, and have zero conception of how to live a low-energy life. Instead, I suspect we will abandon our poorly built towns and cities and try to head south hopeing someone somewhere will allow them to keep liveing they way they ‘always’ have.

  5. MarkR on Fri, 15th Jun 2012 6:10 pm 

    He mentions nowhere in this article that I have the option to put solar panels on my roof and simply replace those “fossil fuel slaves” with “solar slaves” thanks to this thing called technology. It is idiotic to think that even when we do run out of fossil fuels that we will have to use only manual labor to replace energy use. There are numerous other options(solar, hydro, wind, geothermal, nuclear, and biofuels to use where we cannot replace oil)and as technology advances these will only get better. Solar is getting cheaper and better each year, and there is the possibility of thorium and nuclear fusion added to the mix.

  6. Arthur on Fri, 15th Jun 2012 7:22 pm 

    The concept of energy slave is extremely illustrative and a major factor in understanding many aspects of history. Take the abolishment of slavery in the US. Is generally sold as a moral victory of the north over the south, but in reality in the developing industrial society of the north fossil fuels had outperformed Uncle Tom.

  7. VP on Fri, 15th Jun 2012 7:43 pm 

    Technologies that replace fossil fuels still have to be manufactured. Can one imagine mining and transporting the resources for, and manufacturing, a 400 foot high steel windmill using wind power? Solar panels are now produced using great quantities of fossil fuels. We are decades from being able to use nuclear fusion, if ever. The best path is to reduce our carbon footprint in hopes that there will indeed be enough fossil fuels left for our descendants to create those wonderful future technogies that we assume, on faith, will be found. Otherwise I fear our descendants will rightly curse us for our selfishness and short-sightedness.

  8. anonymous on Fri, 15th Jun 2012 9:07 pm 

    Very good article. But instead of using 1 * 100 watt light bulb and pedalling for 1 hour, we can run 13 watt flourescent bulb for nearly 8 hours. Already 1 African is selling bike that can generate electricity and uses LED bulbs in the evening in that village which does not have electricity.

    But the best way to reduce wastage is just to bike to train / bus station / office if its within 2-3 miles. A bike weighs only 20kg (50 lbs) and our own weight is 70kg (170 lbs), where as a car weighs 1,400 kg (3000 lbs).

  9. Arthur on Fri, 15th Jun 2012 11:54 pm 

    “The best path is to reduce our carbon footprint in hopes that there will indeed be enough fossil fuels left for our descendants to create those wonderful future technogies that we assume, on faith, will be found.”

    Samsung will be able to produce PV solar cells for 30 cent/Watt; that’s nothing.

    http://deepresource.wordpress.com/2012/06/15/samsung-entering-thin-film-pv-market/

  10. www.chloebags-uk.co.uk Chloe Bags on Tue, 19th Jun 2012 8:16 am 

    from my opinion, the duo is worth a try and you and you can help other’s while helping yourself.

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