by Aaron » Fri 02 Jul 2004, 10:33:31
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'N')ot much of a hardship to swap the SUV for a Ford Fiesta 1.1 AND travel less.
Agreed, massive savings could be realized through conservation, (& almost certainly will one way or another), in reducing American leisure expenditures in energy.
However... (lol)
The US was created from raw natural land, liberated, (couBSgh), from the native Americans. The real development got underway after the transition from coal to oil for primary transportation. Because we "grew up", so to speak, during a time of cheap & plentiful oil, our "layout" as a country reflects this. Almost nobody works near home... Cities are like the center of a wheel, with the suburbs at the outside edge. Almost every American city follows this example.
Regions which were originally laid out prior to oil powered transportation reflect that reality, making public transportation and commuting more reasonable, like in Europe for example). Where I live (Houston), public transportation, except for oil powered, is simply not possible.
So while improvements in efficiency and reductions in leisure activities will help, probably not enough. And let's say we do manage to sustain a peak plateau through efficiency & conservation? I wonder at what point the endless traffic jams (which are endemic now), will drain any gains from these measures, if we promote continued growth?
The problem with solving our energy problem short term, is that we unwittingly add to the misery by propping up our imagined infinite economic growth culture, virtually multiplying the effects of depletion. Bottom line is, I think, that any "partial" solution is fuel on the fire. What we need is a cheap, low impact terawatt solution, coupled with a fundamental change in the perpetual growth myth.
To me, this seems an impossibly daunting challenge... and the only realistic solution is a sharp decrease in growth itself... ala Hansen et al.
The problem is, of course, that not only is economics bankrupt, but it has always been nothing more than politics in disguise... economics is a form of brain damage.
Hazel Henderson