by muon » Sat 06 Oct 2007, 13:08:00
[quote=btu2012]-a program to reduce pointless consumption; this in particular means the deconstruction of the present consumer economy and its replacement with a more frugal and rational economic system, a system which intrinsically takes into account the natural limits of its inputs as well as ecological costs[/quote]
I was reading a little bit about trade, and
this story mentions something I had noticed. In many countries we are sending abroad the same type of products we're importing. The article gives bottled water for an example:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '"')As the world creeps closer to irreversible global warming and goes deeper into ecological debt, why on earth, say, would the UK export 20 tonnes of mineral water to Australia and then re-import 21 tonnes," said NEF director Andrew Simms.
"And why would that wasteful trade be more the rule than the exception," he added.
This might make sense from an economic standpoint, and from a consumer choice standpoint, but it seems to me that a country or region might be better off using it's resources for itself first, then exporting excess and importing what it doesn't have - isn't that what trade used to be for thousands of years? In some ways I think that would make regions better suited for survival purposes than they are now. If a region is concentrating on farming one particular export crop then if suddenly there's a transportation issue they are stuck with an excess of that crop which is not good for them financially or the region from a survival standpoint, when they could be better off with a greater diversity of crops that could easier be channeled to the local region in the event of a transport problem. I realise some regions are naturally rich in a particular resource but other areas you have to use artificial means to impose this imbalance on the area. I think paying better attention to this on the local level would mean help in mitigation for global warming and peak oil, and be good in emergency situations, also wouldn't it be better if a region that was naturally diverse in local crops to take advantage of those crops if it can rather than supplanting them with 'foreign' crops (or animals), especially where this can create havoc on entire ecosystems. While change is natural, I don't think we've been fully prepared for the changes we have brought on ourselves.
Then I read about developing countries focusing on producing export items to go to richer countries, while they have to import food for themselves and they're unable to do this due to the market making that food more expensive. Some can't afford the crops they grow in their own countries as it's worth more on the global market than in their own countries. That makes them more reliant on oil to import food, especially in droughts and famines which then do even more harm on an individual and regional level with the damage to what infrastructure they have, and damage to health and other more individual areas which can spread in outbreaks of disease.
I wonder if there would be a way to reorganise these things to make it better for everyone from a survival point of view rather than a monetary point of view as it seems we use now?