by bart » Thu 17 Mar 2005, 22:36:53
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('PhilBiker', 'T')he people at the NRDC are not advocating a powerdown. They want to be able to both keep our current lifestyle and not drill in places like ANWR. ....they want us to build hybrids and build out alternative energy sources so we can go on consuming as much as we want,
Why you surprised? There is nothing sneaky or hypocritical about the NRDC's position. This is the political reality of the moment. PO just isn't on the public radar.
NO political movement in the industrialized West has come out in favor of the Peak Oil thesis, let alone come up with a strategy to deal with it. (I take that back; the New Zealand Greens are kicking up a storm Down Under.)
The people worldwide who understand the paradigm-shattering proposal of Powerdown would fit in a football stadium. So it is no surprise that the NRDC, a relatively mainstream environmental organization, takes the wimpy (to us POers) strategy of hybrids and "American ingenuity".
But we've got to keep this in perspective. Things will be changing. Remember when you found out about Peak Oil? Hadn't you been clueless like the NRDC? Didn't it take a while for the reality of PO to sink in?
I spoke the makers of "Oil on Ice," a documentary on drilling in ANWR, expressing disappointment that they had trotted out the same hybrid-"American ingenuity" solution. "Yep," they said, "you're right. But we started that film years ago. We're making a new film now that is explicit about Peak Oil."
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('EnviroEngr', 'A') close examination of all the (USA based) enviro groups leads me and several others I know to the conclusion that they are functioning as if they were pieces being moved around on the public relations board by the Establishment -- red herrings, as it were; or greenwashing fronts.
I dunno about this EE. The env groups and Bush are at daggers drawn. Business and the rightist Republicans have targeted environmental groups. No, there's no conspiracy between those two camps.
The big environmental groups are mostly centrist Democrat; if that's what you mean by the Establishment, I'd agree with you. However, there are other less visible groups which are one the same wavelength as most PO people. Permaculture groups, for example, or some people within the Green Parties.
The surprise to me is that so many groups are open to the concept of Peak Oil, especially among the more knowledgeable activists. Bush has shaken everybody up and people are less sure of themselves, more open to new views.
The problem is more one of inertia than of concerted resistance to the idea of PO.