Fleeing Vesuvius. Overcoming the Risks of Economic and Enviromental Collapse
This book has many ideas about what to do across many spheres.
Escape routes: Fleeing Vesuvius – which way should we go? summarizes the “what to do” conclusions of each author in the book.
Contents
Preface to the Irish edition – Eamon Ryan Minister for Communications, Energy and Natural Resources, Ireland |
Preface to the North American edition – Richard Heinberg |
Introduction – Richard Douthwaite The people who began using fossil fuels to increase their productivity 300 years ago set the world on its path to the present crisis. |
About the contributors |
Part 1: Energy availability |
David Korowicz – On the cusp of collapse: complexity, energy and the globalised economy If less energy is available in future, our economic system will not contract in a gentle, controllable manner. Instead it is likely to collapse. |
Chris Vernon – Future energy availability: the importance of ‘net energy’ Although there is a lot of oil still left in the ground, its supply will contract very rapidly indeed and the world may have run out of oil to burn for energy by 2050. |
Tom Konrad – Calculating EIRR, the Energy Internal Rate of Return If a standard assessment tool, the internal rate of return, is used to compare the net energy yield of various projects, it shows which to prioritise for the energy transition. |
Nate Hagens and Kenneth Mulder – Energy and water: the real blue-chips The world needs to abandon money as its measure if it is to invest its scarcest, most limiting resources in the best possible way. |
Part 2: Innovation in business, money and finance |
Richard Douthwaite – The supply of money in an energy-scarce world If less energy is available in future the existing stock of money can either lose its value gradually through inflation or suddenly because of the collapse of the banking system that created it. |
Graham Barnes – Liquidity Networks: a debt-free electronic currency system for communities No currency will work unless people accept it from each other so this novel form of money will be put into circulation by being given to those who are accepting and spending it most. |
Chris Cook – Equity partnerships: a better, fairer approach to developing land A new way of organising developments promises better buildings, more affordable rents and a stake in the outcome for everyone. |
James Pike – Using equity partnerships to rescue building projects hit by the downturn Community land partnerships provide an alternative way of becoming a property owner and gaining a voice in the management of the development in which one lives. |
Tim Helweg-Larsen – Trying to form an equity partnership to buy a Welsh farm Because there isn’t a market yet for shares in an equity partnership, it proved hard to convince would-be investors that someone would pay a fair price for their holding when they wanted to move on. |
Oscar Kjellberg – The Mondragon bank: an old model for a new type of finance A new type of institution is needed to handle non-debt finance. It should help promoters plan their projects and then find outside investor-partners in return for a share of each project’s income. |
Patrick Andrews – Re-thinking business structures: how to encourage sustainability through conscious design choices Business could be the most powerful force in the world in achieving higher levels of sustainability and resilience but its potential is blocked and shareholders’ interests are put before those of society and the planet. |
Dan Sullivan – Why Pittsburgh real estate never crashes: the progressive reform that stabilised an economy Site value taxation is the reason why Pittsburgh’s foreclosure rates are low despite the downturn, its home prices are climbing slightly and construction rates are increasing. |
Dmitry Orlov – Definancialisation, deglobalisation and relocalisation Attempts at recovery will fail. Anyone who recognises this should spend whatever money they have engaging with their neighbours and the land. |
Part 3: New ways of using the land |
Emer O’Siochru – Cutting transport costs and emissions though local integration Rather than bringing similar activities closer together to reap the benefits of scale and agglomeration, different activities should be situated beside each other to be more energy and carbon efficient. |
Bruce Darrell – The nutritional resilience approach to food security Very few soils have a perfect balance of minerals. If the option of filling one’s plate from all over the world disappears, human health will likely decline unless the missing minerals are applied to the soil while it is still possible to do so. |
Corinna Byrne – Refocusing the purpose of the land: from emissions source to carbon sink Ireland needs to implement new policies in order to get its land to absorb CO2 rather than release it. Biochar could reduce nitrous oxide and methane emissions and build up the fertility and carbon content of the soil. |
Part 4: Dealing with climate change |
Alex Evans – Future global climate institutions Any framework for dealing with the climate crisis should distribute the global carbon budget among the world’s nations according to a transparent, equitable formula. To achieve this, global climate institutions will have to change. |
Laurence Matthews – Cap and Share: Simple is Beautiful Cap & Share is a fair, effective, cheap, empowering and simple way to reduce emissions from the burning of fossil fuels. It could form the basis of a wider global climate framework but how realistic is it to call for its introduction? |
Julian Darley – Influencing high-level, strategic decision-making towards a sustainable, low-carbon economy Decision-making at a global level is governed by a number of non-economic factors which need to be taken into account if the new systems required to deal effectively with climate change are to be introduced. |
Part 5: Changing the way we live |
Brian Davey – Danger ahead: prioritising risk avoidance in political and economic decision-making Now that the financial and political parts of the present system have largely discredited themselves, a fluid situation exists that might allow more viable options to emerge. |
Davie Philip – Transition thinking: The Good Life 2.0 We need to make an evolutionary leap in the way we do things if we are to make a controlled, planned transition to a post-industrial, low-carbon society. The Transition Towns movement provides a potential model. |
Dmitry Orlov – Sailing craft for a post-collapse world Land transport will be costly, difficult and dangerous after the industrial system has broken down. Moving goods and people by water will be a better option even for quite short distances. |
Part 6: Changing the way we think |
Nate Hagens – The psychological roots of resource over-consumption Humans have an innate need for status and for novelty in their lives. Unfortunately, the modern world has adopted very energy- and resource-intensive ways of meeting those needs. |
Mark Rutledge and Brian Davey – Seven reasons for humanity’s inertia in the face of disaster and how they can be overcome Why have humans failed to curb their excessive resource consumption? Seven reasons are outlined here, some of which are systemic, others the result of the way humanity evolved. |
John Sharry – Cultivating hope and managing despair Modern psychological models of motivation and change suggest strategies that can be used to help individuals come to terms with the nature and extent of the changes facing them. |
Lucy McAndrew – Collapse or no collapse: we need to respect to survive Respect for ourselves, for others and for nature is fundamental to survival because it is what gives us a sense of our place in the world and, when we lose that, we float free of the network of relationships that sustains us. |
Anne Ryan – Enough: a worldview for positive futures There is a crucial need for a new, self-limiting worldview which recognises that “enough is plenty”. Adopting such a worldview would nourish a culture in which social justice could prevail. |
Part 7: Ideas for action |
Fleeing Vesuvius: the emergency plan Compiled by Caroline Whyte Contributors to this book suggest steps they think should be taken to escape disaster in four areas – in one’s family, in one’s community, in one’s country, and in the world. |
A three-step emergency plan for Ireland (appendix to Irish edition) Richard Douthwaite |
Should the United States try to avoid a financial meltdown? (appendix to North American edition) Richard Douthwaite and Tom Konrad |
Part 8: New Zealand section |
Preface to the New Zealand edition – Jonathan Boston School of Government, Victoria University of Wellington |
Laurence Boomert – How I survived the end of the world in Aotearoa History crystallises around what people believe; today there is a growing belief in community. |
Phil Stevens – How resilient are we? A New Zealand immigrant’s perspective Communities will need all the resilience they can muster if New Zealand is to sustain its rural sector and preserve its democracy. |
Jack Santa Barbara – Will New Zealand be the first developed country to evolve a steady-state economy? New Zealand has a unique opportunity to provide global leadership in the transition to a steady-state economy unfolding by design rather than disaster. |
James Bellamy – How to create change Crises are opportunities to change things at a deep level – to rethink our relationships with one another and the world. |
Niki Harré – A guide for sustainability advocates Getting people to shift their perspectives and practices involves being positive, working with their worldviews and utilising their tendency to imitate others. |
John McKay – Community Supported Agriculture Freeing farmers from the stress of competing in a market place enables them to plan for ecological integrity: healthy soil, nutrient-rich crops and a satisfying diet for consumers. |
Pete Russell – The Ooooby Local Economic Model Producing food out of our own back yards serves to rectify one of our greatest social threats – the control of our food supply by megacorporations. |
Margaret Jefferies – Lyttelton: A Case Study Major earthquakes are proving to be a catalyst for the Lyttelton community to create a sustainable future. |
Bryan Innes – Sustainable economy: keeping wealth (wellbeing) in our families and communities Community economy engenders a way of seeing human beings as naturally cooperative and life-affirming. |
Sharon Te Apiti Stevens – On Being in Time for Transition We are called to take time to see others as persons, not as systemic functions, even when we have been brought together with them by an organisation for organisational purposes. |
Joanna Santa Barbara – Design for Surviving Vesuvius – Atamai, a Permaculture Village A community develops a local steady-state economy in the face of climate change, fuel constraints, sea-level rise and mainstream financial collapse. |
Tuhi-Ao Bailey – How we can bring the world out of the mess in which it finds itself The path is via tikanga maori – finding and following the natural law that maintains balance between all things; via rongo – time to nurture crops and children without fear of war; and via leadership – the ability to help others grow. |
Emergency Action Plan for New Zealanders The prospect of an extended crisis signals our most urgent task: to learn to respect and nurture living beings – including one another – and the world that sustains our life. |