Page added on July 14, 2016

Ed. note: This is Chapter 10 of Richard Heinberg’s and David Fridley’s new book, Our Renewable Future, now available from Island Press. Post Carbon Institute’s companion website, ourrenewablefuture.org has also just been launched and contains additional content not in the book.
Sound national and international climate policies are crucial: without them, it will be impossible to organize a transition away from fossil fuels and toward renewable energy that is orderly enough to maintain industrial civilization, while speedy enough to avert catastrophic ecosystem collapse. However, world leaders have been working on hammering out effective climate policies for nearly a quarter of a century, and during that time greenhouse gas emissions have continued to increase. And the impacts of climate change are becoming ever more incontrovertible and perilous. Clearly, individuals, households, communities, and nongovernmental organizations cannot merely stand by and hope that political leaders somehow find the wherewithal at the last moment (if it is not already too late) to halt our descent into climate chaos. We must put all possible pressure on those leaders to take politically difficult decisions to severely limit carbon emissions.
That will require collective action on a scale that has yet to be seen. The massive transformations in energy systems, government, and the economy that we have described are exceedingly unlikely to occur absent struggle and social action. Powerful interests invested in the extractive economy will not give up their advantages willingly. As Frederick Douglass eloquently said, “Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and it never will.”
At the same time, we must also show that we as citizens are ready for climate policies by proactively reducing our reliance on fossil fuels and cutting our greenhouse gas emissions. In the process, we can road-test behaviors and technologies that are needed on a broader scale. Fortunately, many people, communities, and organizations have already started doing this, but more are needed.
Individuals and Households
Tackling the energy transition, climate change, and energy inequality will require collective action and policy. So the most important thing we can do as individuals is to support equitable solutions to climate change, and support local democracy and engagement in local decisions about energy.
Nevertheless, our personal actions and choices also reverberate through our communities and can back our words with the authority of personal experience. Start by doing what you can to reduce your use of energy in general, and especially of fossil fuels. That requires developing awareness and changing habits. How much energy do you use? Where and how? Find out by doing a personal and household energy audit. Don’t just look at your electricity consumption (though that’s essential); also examine your gasoline and natural gas usage. Then make a plan, using a footprint calculator.[1]
Most likely, it will be a long-term plan that will be implemented in stages. In some cases, it will require investment—perhaps in superinsulating your house; perhaps in exchanging your current automobile for a small electric car; or perhaps in installing an air-source heat pump, a solar water heater, a solar cooker, a front-loading washing machine, a clothesline, and insulated cookware.[2] If you rent your home, some of these purchases may be less feasible unless you can come to an agreement with your landlord to share costs and savings. If you live in an area where you have no choice but to drive virtually everywhere, you might consider moving to a more compact, mixed-use neighborhood that doesn’t require you to spend so much energy just to meet your daily needs—and move into a smaller home with lower heating, cooling, and maintenance needs while you’re at it.
Other parts of your plan will be devoted to changing habits: using public transit or bicycling more (if that infrastructure is available), reducing the frequency of shopping trips (and buying less overall), shortening showers, and turning off appliances when not in use. You might also consider what you eat: some food choices (such as beef) involve far more embodied water and energy than others (such as whole grains). Reducing carbon emissions means reducing both operational and embodied energy consumption—not just having more efficient machines, but fewer of them, and replacing them less frequently. It means eating lower on the food chain, wearing clothes longer before discarding them, and repairing goods that break wherever possible, rather than replacing them.
Support the expansion of renewable energy in your community by signing up to purchase clean energy through your utility. Not all utility companies offer this option, but many do.[3] Buy or lease solar panels for your home or business. Aggregate with your neighbors to find ways to get good deals on solar panels, or support community choice aggregation or “go solar” via shared/community solar programs where those are legal. Where those things aren’t allowed, get involved politically and make them legal!
Support relocalization efforts in your town by buying local wherever possible. That means making purchases at locally owned shops, and banking at locally owned banks and credit unions. But it also means looking for and preferentially buying locally grown food and locally made products. If you have pension funds or other investments, it is also possible to invest locally to support local economic development.[4]
Overall, get involved with local efforts to advance the transition to renewable energy. In over forty-five countries and over 2000 cities and towns around the world, Transition Initiatives inspire individuals, families, and neighborhoods to adopt strategies to reduce fossil fuel consumption, localize economies, and produce more renewable energy.[5]
Communities
Often the most important steps toward catalyzing the energy transition within communities takes the form of efforts to build public awareness about climate and energy. Such efforts can be driven by elected officials, but are more likely to gain traction if led or co-led by citizen groups.
There is also a growing movement to push cities, towns, and counties to make commitments to be 100 percent renewably powered (sometimes this concerns electricity only, sometimes the commitment is more broadly conceived). These are exciting new citizen-led efforts that you can join or start. For example, in Sonoma County, California, a group called the Center for Climate Protection[6] has helped create a local power provider, designed a pilot program for water and energy conservation, and persuaded leaders of all the cities in the region to sign on to stringent greenhouse gas reduction targets. Many other communities have aggregated this way in the states where it is legal. Even in states where it’s not, many cities and communities have at least committed to go 100 percent renewable (or provide some degree of rooftop solar) on public buildings.
Community Choice Aggregation (CCA), is a system adopted into law in the states of Massachusetts, New York, Ohio, California, New Jersey, Rhode Island, and Illinois that enables cities and counties to aggregate the buying power of individual customers within a defined jurisdiction so as to secure alternative energy supply contracts on a community-wide basis. Households that don’t wish to participate can opt out. As of 2014, CCAs serve nearly 5 percent of Americans in over 1300 communities.[7] Many CCAs purchase and sell a higher percentage of renewable energy than their conventional utility competitors; some also offer a “green power” option at a slightly higher rate, enabling customers to purchase 100 percent renewable energy. In California, local governments have been using CCAs as a tool to achieve higher greenhouse gas reductions and renewable electricity procurement targets than state requirements mandate or than competing independently owned utilities. But this has not always been true in other states, where cost reduction is the main goal. When renewable energy is cheaper, they procure more of it; but when it’s not, CCAs in other states often revert to conventional fuel procurement. CCAs also help achieve equity by promoting local control over energy sources.
As previously noted, in the United States, states, counties, and municipalities have considerable control over road, infrastructure, and zoning policies. It is therefore well within the power of local leaders to stop building roads (which facilitate the expansion of the most energy-intensive of our transport options) and to instead build more public transit, bicycle lanes, sidewalks, and footpaths. Zoning policies and building regulations within communities can either encourage or discourage cohousing developments and other manifestations of the sharing economy, as well as natural buildings and zero-energy buildings. Typically, municipal leaders need citizen encouragement in such efforts. Often regulations change as the result of pioneering efforts by individuals and small groups willing to organize their neighbors, meet (and argue) extensively with local officials, and patiently sit through many city council meetings to keep the political pressure on.
With “Go Local” programs thriving in hundreds of cities across the country, localism is growing into a community effort across America. Perhaps the most important thrust of relocalization efforts (and the easiest to organize) is the push for relocalized food systems. The United States Department of Agriculture currently lists 8144 farmers markets in its National Farmers Market Directory, up from 5000 in 2008.[8] Indeed, local food is one of the fastest-growing segments of American agriculture. Further steps communities can take to promote local economic resilience include analyses to determine the proportion of food, energy, goods, and services that come from local sources.
Efforts to relocalize economic activity usually start with citizen groups. In Santa Rosa, California, a citizen-organized Go Local campaign has resulted in a downtown storefront that is home to Share Exchange—perhaps best described as a localist mini-mall, hosting a “Made Local” marketplace, a “share space” co-working center, and a cooperative business incubator. Signs on Santa Rosa windows and lampposts advise residents to “Shop Local,” “Bank Local,” “Eat Local,” and “Compost Local.” Menus at an upscale restaurant at the center of town proclaim, “We feature organic food from local farmers.”
Ultimately, localization means changing economic development goals. This can be an involved, detailed, and contentious process. The Sustainable Economies Law Center in Oakland, California, is one resource; it offers legal guidance in building community resilience and grassroots economic empowerment, highlighting policy recommendations for sharable cities.[9]
Climate and Environmental Groups, and Their Funders
When considering the role of climate and environmental groups, perhaps it is useful to start by listing some important things already accomplished by climate and energy nongovernmental organizations:
These are important contributions, and much more along these lines is still needed. However, there are some other tasks that have so far received less emphasis from environmental organizations:
The philanthropic sector inevitably exerts a very large influence over the priorities of nonprofit organizations that it funds. Funders should increasingly support the following:
Funders could also help the nonprofit community view the energy transition as a systemic transformation, one that only begins with shutting down coal power plants.
Island Press is offering a 20% discount for friends of PCI. Use the discount code 4RENEW
17 Comments on "Heinberg: What We as a People Can Do"
onlooker on Thu, 14th Jul 2016 12:19 pm
Our ability to intervene in this climate debacle does not exist any longer.
sunweb on Thu, 14th Jul 2016 1:00 pm
business as usual again and again from this group:
“a transition away from fossil fuels and toward renewable energy that is orderly enough to maintain industrial civilization”
Population??????
dave thompson on Thu, 14th Jul 2016 3:22 pm
There is nothing “renewable” that will replace gasoline,diesel,jet fuel and bunker fuel for transportation needs. No where in this book/article is an alternative for transportation fuels at industrial levels named. Heinberg is no dummy, he knows better, when the fossil fuels go so goes all of industrial civilization.
Apneaman on Thu, 14th Jul 2016 8:45 pm
Nothing wrong with alt energy – have at her, but no amount of it can undo what’s been done and stop the ship from sinking. Why not be comfortable in an end times deck chair?
Low Sierra snow seen as piece of alarming climate picture
“A fifth year of disappointing snow in the Sierra is part of a much larger predicament of record-low snow across the Northern Hemisphere, a setback that scientists identified Wednesday as another reminder of the alarming pace of human-caused global warming.
A panel of climate experts organized by SEARCH, or the Study of Environmental Arctic Change, met in Washington, D.C., to draw attention to the historic melt-off of snow and ice during the first six months of 2016 — and the resulting problems.
“We lost the snow earlier than anytime on record, and it wasn’t just in one part of the snow-covered universe,” said Dave Robinson, New Jersey state climatologist at Rutgers University, noting that as much as 30 percent of the land in the Northern Hemisphere is typically white. “This is the lowest spring snow extent on record.”
The lack of snow, a result of record-high temperatures across the planet, not only intensifies water shortages and the threat of wildfires in California and other parts of the country, but also amplifies global warming. Because snow helps reflect the sun’s hot rays, less of it means the Earth only heats up more, the scientists said.
Sea ice, which is also vanishing, is similarly losing its potency as a repellent. More of the sun’s warmth is being absorbed by the increasingly unfrozen ocean.”
http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/Low-Sierra-snow-seen-as-piece-of-alarming-climate-8377007.php#photo-10404001
Apneaman on Thu, 14th Jul 2016 8:50 pm
Duck & Cover
Another Global Warming Enhanced Heatwave is on the Way — 111 Degree (F) Temperatures Predicted For Central US
“It was in the 80s along Alaska’s Arctic Ocean shores yesterday. Record hot temperatures for a far northern region facilitated by factors related to human caused climate change such as warming ocean surfaces, sea ice melt, and an increasingly wavy Jet Stream.”
“This extreme heat comes in the context of record hot global temperatures. During 2016, global surface temperatures are likely to range near 1.2 degrees Celsius above the late 19th Century average. These record temperatures have been spurred by greenhouse gasses spiking to levels not seen in millions of years. CO2 concentrations this year hit near 408 parts per million at the Mauna Loa Observatory — a level high enough to significantly further increase global temperatures, melt large glaciers, substantially raise sea levels, and prevent another ice age for thousands or tens of thousands of years. And continued burning of fossil fuels by human beings will likely push that number near or above 410 parts per million by May of 2017.”
https://robertscribbler.com/2016/07/14/another-global-warming-enhanced-heatwave-is-on-the-way-111-degree-f-temperatures-predicted-for-central-us/
Apneaman on Thu, 14th Jul 2016 9:08 pm
Hey, let’s stop the 6th mass extinction by having a massive solar and wind build out. AWESOME! All we need to do is strip mine the fuck out of every last piece of wilderness and build thousands of toxic alt energy manufacturing plants (preferably on brown peoples land). Tanks Heinburg and friends of PCI! I be sleeping like a baby now – cause I’m saved right?
Biodiversity is below safe levels across more than half of world’s land – study
Habitat destruction has reduced the variety of plants and animals to the point that ecological systems could become unable to function properly, with risks for agriculture and human health, say scientists
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2016/jul/14/biodiversity-below-safe-levels-across-over-half-of-worlds-land-study
The dystopian lake filled by the world’s tech lust
http://www.bbc.com/future/story/20150402-the-worst-place-on-earth
Apneaman on Thu, 14th Jul 2016 10:36 pm
‘The extraordinary years have become the normal years’: Scientists survey radical Arctic melt
“We’ve lost about twice the size of the state of Alaska in terms of area,” said Meier, referring to the long-term trend in Arctic sea ice over the past several decades. “It’s also thinning as well, we’ve lost about 50 percent of the thickness. And this is happening more rapidly than even the most aggressive climate models.”
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/energy-environment/wp/2016/07/13/the-extraordinary-years-have-become-the-normal-years-scientists-survey-radical-melt-in-the-arctic/#comments
sunweb on Fri, 15th Jul 2016 7:33 am
Apneaman – “Hey, let’s stop the 6th mass extinction by having a massive solar and wind build out. AWESOME! All we need to do is strip mine the fuck out of every last piece of wilderness and build thousands of toxic alt energy manufacturing plants (preferably on brown peoples land). Tanks Heinburg and friends of PCI! I be sleeping like a baby now – cause I’m saved right?”
Your sarcasm won’t sell books or hopium or technofantasies.
ghung on Fri, 15th Jul 2016 8:17 am
“Heinberg: What We as a People Can Do”???
There is no “we”. Not when it comes to agreeing on some response to our collective behaviors.
Kenz300 on Fri, 15th Jul 2016 11:17 am
If the world has any hope of dealing with Climate Change we need to speed up our transition to safer, cleaner and cheaper alternative energy sources like wind and solar………
Electric cars, trucks, bicycles and mass transit are the future…..fossil fuel ICE cars are the past…………..
Koch Brothers Continue to Fund Climate Change Denial Machine, Spend $21M to Defend Exxon
http://ecowatch.com/2016/06/22/koch-defends-exxon/
Big Coal Funded This Prominent Climate Change Denier, Docs Reveal
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/roy-spencer-peabody-energy_us_57601e12e4b053d43306535e
Pope Francis’s edict on climate change will anger deniers and US churches | World news | The Guardian
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/dec/27/pope-francis-edict-climate-change-us-rightwing
Head Of The Episcopal Church Says It’s ‘Sinful’ To Ignore Climate Change
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/03/26/katherine-jefferts-schori-climate-change_n_6949532.html?utm_hp_ref=green&ir=Green
Apneaman on Fri, 15th Jul 2016 12:40 pm
Kenz, there is no hope for the humans, so it’s time to drop the phony liberal hopium.
So for over a decade, I have been seeing polls from the richest, high consuming and polluting countries that show between 40-60% of the citizens believe AGW to be a serious threat. Most of these people tend to be better educated and thus higher earners than average. If these people actually talked the talk and reduced their consumption/footprint, by say 30 – 50% (still a high standard of living including a vheical) would we have not seen a reduction in the numbers, CO2, pollution and economic numbers? That’s a lot of middle class and higher folks with decent incomes. We see the opposite – all the numbers keep going up. I’m not saying they are solely responsible and obviously if the humans wanted to do anything to prevent their doom it would need to be from the top down with regulation and legislation, but if half the people voluntarily cut their consumption by 1/3 to 1/2 it would be impossible for it not show up in the aggregate numbers. It hasn’t because the vast majority of stupid liberals have just switched to feel good green consumerism. Especially the university educated high earners. There will be no voluntary slowing or stopping other than from an insignificant minority and many of those are not even liberals btw. It’s all been talk by over privileged westerners who won’t give up anything because they can’t because they are not driving the bus – their limbic system is. One great irony is that the majority of the people in the sciences who have been figuring out how human behavior works are left leaning, yet still fall prey to their inherent cognitive biases thus proving their own findings that the humans are not in control while still going on and on with the hopey climate and social bullshit. All the research shows that the never ending hopey bullshit is inherent too, yet few get past it. No free will and not in control. Kenz, you and everyone else are just fooling yourselves if you think any logical or moral argument will get the humans to stop – it won’t, nor will any consequences. Our biological programming forbids it. I do get the anger at the fossil fuel big boys, because they are lying, cheating fucking cunts of the highest order (off with their heads?), but what other type of people would you expect to be drawn to the most profitable industry in the last 150 years – warm N fuzzy?
Bad News: We’re Actually Using More Fossil Fuels Than Ever
Renewable forms of energy are growing far faster than anyone expected. But so is the use of oil, coal, and natural gas.
https://www.thenation.com/article/bad-news-were-actually-using-more-fossil-fuels-than-ever/
Survival Acres on Fri, 15th Jul 2016 10:08 pm
Wow. None of these suggestions will amount to a hill of beans. No mention of radically different lifestyles, just more of the same greenwash b.s.
The “go local” is the only realistic offering here, the rest, not so much. The whole “renewable” spiel is bogus, it’s all fossil fuel driven.
And as others noted, population? How can this guy have missed this?
There are some voices that like to be heard, and there are other voices that should be heard because they have a better understanding. I won’t be buying the book.
Boat on Fri, 15th Jul 2016 11:08 pm
ape,
You love to point out how poor people are screwed by the 1 percent. How the systems are so unfair. Then you gripe about the use of oil, coal, and natural gas. Isn’t that contradictory? Let the poor man die from climate change in ac watching a 60″ eating icecream.
Apneaman on Sat, 16th Jul 2016 1:08 am
Boat, no. Firstly because to gripe means to complain about something trivial and fossil fuels are not trivial in any sense of the word nor are the consequences of burning them. Do you think the consequences are trivial? Secondly, the 1% did not invent fossil fuels nor the techniques to extract them or the machines humans use them in. The sun and earth created them and the 1% are the 1% cause they are good at exploiting others or say the 0.1%. You give far too much credit to these people and almost none to the millions, named and unnamed, whose collective brainpower and hard work lead to the modern world and the hundreds of millions who make it work everyday (if you ever experience a garbage strike you will understand) Shoot every 0.1% in the fucking head and the world will still turn and the oil will still flow. The working man IS getting screwed and I’ve demonstrated this to you on countless occasions. Wealth and power have been concentrating for going on 40 years – more for them, less for the working people.
That aside, you miss me entirely. I have never advocated stopping or slowing since I have always stated that the humans will never stop, could never stop due to their biological imperative and abstract “no limits” brain. At their very best they might have slowed down and bought a few more decades or maybe a century. My overarching theme has always been that the humans are not in charge, have no real free will because they are following their programming. Methinks you’re still caught in your cultural programming trap where there are only two worldviews and you can tell who’s who if they say certain words. Y’all only make up %5 of the world’s population yet many of you often seem to try and shoehorn everyone into one of your left or right categories. It’s like looking through the wrong end of the binoculars – very limiting and impossible to get any idea of the bigger picture.
“Biological imperatives are the needs of living organisms required to perpetuate their existence: to survive. Include the following hierarchy of logical imperatives for a living organism: survival, territorialism, competition, reproduction, quality of life-seeking, and group forming. Living organisms that do not attempt to follow or do not succeed in satisfying these imperatives are described as maladaptive; those that do are adaptive.”
Kenz300 on Sat, 16th Jul 2016 5:54 am
Climate Change is real….. we will all be impacted by it……
Exxon’s Climate Change Cover-Up Is ‘Unparalleled Evil,’ Says Activist
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/exxon-evil-bill-mckibben_561e7362e4b028dd7ea5f45f?utm_hp_ref=green&ir=Green§ion=green
Watch The Climate Change Ad Fox News Didn’t Want Its Viewers To See
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/climate-change-ad-fox-news_us_57892a37e4b03fc3ee50c207?section=
Davy on Sat, 16th Jul 2016 7:15 am
“There are some voices that like to be heard, and there are other voices that should be heard because they have a better understanding.”
This is the story of modern man. He listens to what he wants to hear with selective hearing. The real understanding is rejected because it is not status quo and without a status quo future.
Kenz300 on Sat, 16th Jul 2016 8:10 am
Too many people……….create too much pollution and demand too many resources….
China made great progress in moving its people out of poverty…….one reason was slowing population growth…..
If you can not provide for yourself you can not provide for a child.
CLIMATE CHANGE, declining fish stocks, droughts, floods, air water and land pollution, poverty, water and food shortages all stem from the worlds worst environmental problem……. OVER POPULATION.
Yet the world adds 80 million more mouths to feed, clothe, house and provide energy and water for every year… this is unsustainable… and is a big part of the Climate Change problem
Birth Control Permanent Methods: Learn About Effectiveness
http://www.emedicinehealth.com/birth_control_permanent_methods/article_em.htm