Continuing this post, I'm reminded that David McLeod did a Ning IPS thread on this topic: Integral Energy. His initial post follows:
Obviously the title of this discussion is a playful plagiarism of the book on Integral Ecology
by Esbjorn-Hargens and Zimmerman. I do believe that the subject of
gross physical energy has been woefully under-discussed in the integral
community.
A great place to begin is a recent essay by Richard Heinberg that has been received to high acclaim over on the Resilience.org
website, which is operated by the Post Carbon Institute, for which
Heinberg is a senior analyst. Heinberg has been writing about energy for
12 years, and is the author of books such as Cloning the Buddha:
The Moral Impact of Biotechnology; The Party's Over: Oil, War, and the
Fate of Industrial Societies; Powerdown: Options and Actions for a
Post-Carbon World; Peak Everything: Waking Up to the Century of
Declines; Blackout: Coal, Climate and the Last Energy Crisis; The End of
Growth: Adapting to our New Economic Reality.
In his latest essay, Our Renewable Future,
Heinberg demonstrates that he is what I would call an energy realist.
He does not demonize the fossil fuel industry, but he clearly lays out
the formidable challenges we face as the climate crisis worsens and as
easy access to these fuels continues to recede. Nor does he communicate
as would a lobbyist for the renewable energy industry, hyping the
benefits and downplaying the problems in this field.
Instead, Heinberg approaches the problems from multiple perspectives
and honestly conveys his own biases, and encourages us to broaden our
thinking:
I consider myself a renewable energy advocate: after all, I work
for an organization called Post Carbon Institute. I have no interest in
discouraging the energy transition—quite the contrary. But I’ve
concluded that many of us, like Koningstein and Fork, have been asking
the wrong questions of renewables. We’ve been demanding that they
continue to power a growth-based consumer economy that is inherently
unsustainable for a variety of reasons (the most obvious one being that
we live on a small planet with finite resources). The fact that
renewables can’t do that shouldn't actually be surprising.
What are the right questions? The first, already noted, is: What
kind of society can up-to-date renewable energy sources power? The
second, which is just as important: How do we go about becoming that
sort of society?
As we’ll see, once we begin to frame the picture this way, it turns out to be anything but bleak.
I believe this to be an extremely important essay, and the embedded
links provide even more depth, providing a great resource for essential
21st century energy literacy.
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