by Dingbat » Sat 13 Aug 2005, 00:18:10
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('FatherOfTwo', 'I')t makes you wonder how Canada will fair. We have ample resources and (currently) a low population. (Too bad Nafta is hanging over us like a noose) We have more public transit and are more socially caring for one another than the US. On the other hand, our energy use is as high as the US, and winters are a bitch here without adequate energy.
I'm a moderate from Quebec -- I tend to agree with you, Canada (& Quebec) would probably faire better than most places _if_ you make abstraction of the neighborhood.
Canada as a whole is pretty much self-sufficient - there's enough arable land to support 30 million people even if land productivity drops precipitously.
Quebec produces 97% of its electricity via renewables (hydro-power), the rest of Canada isn't as lucky. I think it's about 66% of electricial power that is made with renewables [mainly hydro] and Nuclear [non-renewable but Canada has lots of it]. The 33% shortfall _might_ be compensated by a crash program to encourage efficiency. Transportation is going to be tough - the Transcanadian Railways will have to be rejuvenated to say the least.
Most of the canadian urban centers have very extensive public transportation - heck, I live in a suburb of montreal and I can take a bus (5 houses from me) to go work down town. In that aspect, Canada is very European. We didn't let out urban centers decline like most american cities (ie: I've read Kunstler's Long Emergency).
Population is more or less stable with a tendency to decline. With less global transportation, immigration will probably drop [and Canada is likely to close its borders anyhow in a catastrophic situation].
I think the big wildcard is our friendly southerly neighbours.
If the decline is very rapid - things can go pretty much in any direction.
- Invasion: as america graps for every resource it can find to try to delay the inevitable, they come over here and basically take over.
- Chaos: rapid decline could lead to internal strife and civil war as everybody tries to blame anybody else than themselves for the predicament.
- ??? I'm not a futurist.
Economically - things will be hard - however by that time, I think the whole global economy will have collapsed anyhow in favor of more regional economies. But the transition will be awfull. The whole financial system as we know it will collapse. What will replace it? Hopefully something that makes more sense then this stupid idea of infinite growth.
The main thing that works against us is the neighborhood & the climate, although weirdly enough, global warming seems to be giving us a little hand here - still, not much of a silver lining.
[Yes I love you guys anyhow]:oops:

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- Yves / Dingbat