by kpeavey » Sun 21 Dec 2008, 15:54:47
I found it easy to envision a guy on a horse drawn wagon delivering firewood while talking on a cell phone. There are particular aspects of technology which are especially useful and save tremendous amounts of labor and energy that we will hold onto them to the last as we move back to the stone age.
Since petroleum is so deeply embedded in every aspect of civilization and so pervasive around the world, the economic impact of a decline in energy makes it all the more difficult to adapt. How does a metropolis with a shrinking tax base pay for an electric bus line? What county would invest their coffers into their own electric generator plant when the fuel for it is rising in price and becoming less available, at the same time telling its citizens they can hardly get enough power to make toast?
As we continue into this collapse, events and situations are leading me to think the crash will accelerate. We are in the shallow slope right now, the hockey stick is not far away.
Don't let my doom scare you off. It is important that we explore the possibilities. It is from these explorations that we can find some solutions, even if they are only temporary. They may lead to better ways later down the road.
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I live in town, pop 15k, about a mile from City Hall. I have 1/4 acre, one neighbor has half what I have, one has double the space. We have a common corner. I always thought it would be possible for small groups of neighbors to get together, pool their resources, brains and manpower for the benefit of them all.
I mow the yard, both of my neighbors mow their yards, we all have lawnmowers, we rarely are all out there mowing at the same time. Could we not get together and share a lawn mower?
How about a Solar PV array set up and shared by all the neighbors involved? Broadening the users has the effect of smoothing out demand patterns which would increase the efficient use of the system. You could even schedule when to wash clothes. A shared washing machine also enters the picture.
Get more neighbors involved, get a truck, share the truck. If going back to bicycles is the way of the future, a truck would still be handy now and then. Why have 20 trucks for 20 families and use each one only 5% of the time, when for 5% of the price per family, the truck has optimum use.
Sharing is a great idea on paper, but look to Tragedy of the Commons for reality. Still, with every one understanding the terms of agreement and cooperation, this sharing plan can work. It won't work every time, but it would work enough of the time that people will come together ot of necessity. I'm sure this is going on all the time right now.
If you want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face--for ever."
-George Orwell, 1984
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twenty centuries of stony sleep were vexed to nightmare by a rocking cradle, and what rough beast, its hour come round at last, slouches towards Bethlehem to be born?
-George Yeats