by Buff » Tue 30 Jan 2007, 12:00:35
Ludi - answers to your questions could be very long. Too long. But as examples what we are doing at our home is reducing our carbon footprint. We have cut electricity consumption by 30% by installing a more efficent heating/cooling system and switching out most of our light bulbs to florescent. We recycle glass, steel, plastic and aluminum. There are a lot of other examples and I think we have only begun.
At work I am a heating/air conditioning contractor. We get to eductate customers on how to reduce energy use, with and without our products and services. We directly do system maintenance - we found one beverage distributor with 8 10-ton rooftop systems that were not being maintained correctly. We did it correctly and they saved $20,000 in electricity in 2005 ( a very hot summer) as compared to 2004. We help our customers identify ways to cut energy use including insulating, duct improvements, and much more. Again I could go on but it gets too long.
At work we also recycle cardboard, paper, batteries, computers, steel, aluminum and copper. We invested in a new Sprinter service vehicle that gets 24 mpg deisel instead of another gasoline van that gets 12 mpg. This year we are changing our flourescent lights in the office from T12 to T8, which will cut electricity consumption, perhaps 10-20%. 2 years ago we added a new rubber roof with 2" of foam insulation saving on heating and cooling costs. This year we are adding 1.5" of foam along with new siding to our building. These are just examples of real things that can be done. Again, I feel we are just beginning and the opportunities to save energy are mind boggling.
As far as where people will work I believe there will be plenty of job opportunities as there are now. There has always been and will always be "churn" as technology changes, and with it the number and types of jobs people have. The old example of buggy whip manufacturers being put out of business by the change to automobiles. Isn't it amazing that with the loss of 10's of thousands of jobs (or even 100's of thousands) in the last 20 years due to corporate downsizing and "offshoring" that the unemployment rate in the US is in the low 5% range?
Or course there will be the statement that the official unemployment rate does not count "discouraged" workers, and it will be pointed out that losing a $30/hr manufacturing job and replacing it with a $10/hr service sector job has its own problems. The official unemployment rate also does not count the huge amount of workers in the underground economy. The change from losing jobs in some sectors while growing jobs in other sectors only reinforces that there is tremendous churn.
I think we have plenty of jobs that need to be done that are not wasteful (including mine). It is not possible but think of the large number of jobs we would have as teachers and workers engaged in rebuilding our infrastructure, as well as the myriad of other jobs that would be available if we were trasitioning - jobs in alternative energy, conservation and all the new technologies we are not even aware of yet.
I think the transition has started and will accelerate only as traditional energy costs increase. There is investment growing now in alternatives but are restricted by risk (of collapsing prices like we saw this month) in the energy arena. So the answer to your question is the transition has started but only is only in its infancy.
I think the difference between transition and collapse is with transition we have the opportunity to live comfortable lives and with collapse we would be relegated to pre-industrial living standards.