Wow! has it been that long since I posted anything?? There have been a few hardy souls checking in to no avail and I apologize.
Back after two months in Thailand. It was a wonderful experience all in all and we have designed and started installation of a sustainable community and retreat center of Tantric Yogis. This is all in the province of Loei in the northeast of Thailand on the Laos border. The topography is mountainous with a cool winter and bearable summer.
Thailand like many third world countries has suffered the indignity of being looted of its natural resources and the Loei region has been severely deforested. The intial deforestation was to make room for ginger plantations, and when ginger was planted out by every other tropical third world country, it changed to flowers. Right now the newest get rich scheme is to plant rubber trees. In the meantime the soil is cascading down denuded slopes every monsoon season. I hope there is a market for rocks in Thailands future.
The ironic thing about it is that a national law was passed ending all forestry extraction which has lead to the importaion of tropical hardwoods from Laos, Cambodia, and Malaysia. No one really learned anything, except that it is better to loot your neighbor than to be looted.
How does one ethically build in this type of situation? My solution was bamboo, a member of the grass family, and cinva ram pressed soil cement brick. Bamboo grows like a rocket in Thailand so finding materials wasn't a problem. I knew that Oscar Hidalgo and Simon Velez have created bamboo truss systems to support roofs but my client wanted 50 foot clear spans. The best I could find was Velez's spans of 37 feet.
Working with Lateritic soils, which are typical of monsoonal tropics presented another problem when it came to building the brick, in that it took more cementthan other soils. Since cement is one of the most energy intensive products used in construction I always seek to limit its use. It is also responsible for 10% of CO2 emmissions world wide.
One becomes enmeshed in whether to use steel in foundations or just stone and so it goes trying to justify materials in terms of embedded energy, social justice, and environmental correctness. At least the decision to build for the long term or generationally is a no brainer. Now we just have to convince ourselves and others to stick around for at least one generation.
Meantime I hear that King Bhumibol Adulyadej (Rama IX) has written a tract called "The Kings New Theory" and that it is very similar to permaculture. I managed to find a "Cliff Notes" version of his paper and indeed he is writing of the need to care for the land and its people - the first two of three permaculture ethics.
It is amazing to me the reverence everyone holds for the King. His picture is everywhere and it is voluntary. He has great moral and political sway with the populus even though he rules in a constitutional monarchy. He has personally walked to many villages on the border of Thailand and Laos, as well as Myanmar promoting forestry and mixed cropping to replace opium poppy - and he has been successful.
Meanwhile buildings are going up, trees and gardens are being planted and I get the bonus of working with my 31 year old son in a foreign land. Perhaps now he will better understand where I was for much of his young life.
There is an incredible Buddhistness in Thailand that reduces stress, makes one smile, and helps one to gain perspective. I got in the habit of going to the local Wat on Buddha days, the four phases of the moon, and was struck with how welcoming the monks and the laity were. We would provide a dish and flowers, sometimes money and after a brief recitation of Buddha's teachings we would share a meal with the monks. I was struck by the age difference between the monks and the parishioners. The monks were young and the laymen for the most part old. It is the same trend of religions around the world no matter how benign.
Since my religion, if any, is Animism, I am disappointed to notice that the ranks of the Animists are also mostly middle aged and up. Seems that bright shiney things win the day in todays culture. I did notice that both Buddhist and Animists engage in the sacrelidge of laughter and goofiness.
I feel myself drifting right now so to save myself from later embarrassment I will continue this Thai stream of consciousness when I am more focussed.
Tuesday, April 15, 2008
Peak Oil Solutions: Biofuels and GMO's
One Step Solution to a Two Step Ditch
With the spectre of peak oil, global climate change, loss of biodiversity, political tensions surrounding access to natural resources, world-wide epidemics and poverty we as a nation and a species are forced to look at our behavior and how it impacts our world.
Many of the solutions being presented by our political leaders are compounding the problems. The whole rush to the biofuels "solution" proposed by both Al Gore and George H. Bush are good political examples of how to turn a problem into a disaster. The proposed use of our most fertile cropland to provide fuel from the most energy-intensive plants (corn, sorghum, soy, and sugar cane) creates a food deficit, further destroys remnant native ecosystems, while at the same time accelerates the use of fossil fuels to create biofuels. Fertilizer, after all, is a byproduct of gas and oil. Behind these quasi-solutions to peak oil lies the greed for more profits at the expense of the natural world. In virtually every instance the only road to sustainability is the one paved with the bricks of individual life style change. We are past the age of the technological fix and are faced with the need of social fixes.
Most of the changes that we must make are not really that onerous but are simply inconvenient. Taking the time to discover what food is grown locally and purchasing that rather than our current eating habits that represent 1500 miles of transportation per bite; we could be supporting the local farmers in our community by eating close to home and at the same time decrease fuel use and CO2 emissions.
Learning to garden, to grow at least few things to reduce the need to rip out some distant mountain side or a valley for a monoculture of a commercial cropland has some significant beneficial effect, locally and globally. Developing our homes toward energy-efficiency and resource conservation by harvesting rainwater, planting edible plants, and using the sun for space and water heating are simple to accomplish and in the current political climate may provide you with tax benefits. Carpooling, using a bus, switching to a bike all allow us to meet our neighbors, get in shape and reduces not only our financial overhead, but our ecological footprint.
The latest technological fix is of course going to be trialed in Africa - if no one noticed the starvation of millions during the "green revolution", perhaps they won't notice the introduction of genetically modified seed (gmo) being promoted by Bill Gates and the Rockefeller Brothers. They have managed to get Kofi Annan to shill for them and Monsanto is footing the bill for Kenyan agricultural extention agents. All of this in the name of saving Africans from starvation. Heard of any of this in anyones presidential platform?
How does one fight such financial behemoths as Bill Gates, Rockefeller Brothers, Monsanto, and Archer Daniels Midland, especially if you are African? This is the slimey underbelly of a capitalist system gone mad and it is totally hidden from view. It makes it very difficult to get too concerned with whether Obama is more elitist than Hillary or McCaine.
Who will save the traditional seeds of Africa, where is Nikolai Vavilov when we need him? How did it happen that African scientists and farmers have no say in their future? The same way it happened that we elected George Bush for two terms. It seems to me that we have perhaps passed many of the dreaded tipping points and it is time to plant a garden (open pollinated seeds of course), and get to know our neighbors. It is after all spring!
With the spectre of peak oil, global climate change, loss of biodiversity, political tensions surrounding access to natural resources, world-wide epidemics and poverty we as a nation and a species are forced to look at our behavior and how it impacts our world.
Many of the solutions being presented by our political leaders are compounding the problems. The whole rush to the biofuels "solution" proposed by both Al Gore and George H. Bush are good political examples of how to turn a problem into a disaster. The proposed use of our most fertile cropland to provide fuel from the most energy-intensive plants (corn, sorghum, soy, and sugar cane) creates a food deficit, further destroys remnant native ecosystems, while at the same time accelerates the use of fossil fuels to create biofuels. Fertilizer, after all, is a byproduct of gas and oil. Behind these quasi-solutions to peak oil lies the greed for more profits at the expense of the natural world. In virtually every instance the only road to sustainability is the one paved with the bricks of individual life style change. We are past the age of the technological fix and are faced with the need of social fixes.
Most of the changes that we must make are not really that onerous but are simply inconvenient. Taking the time to discover what food is grown locally and purchasing that rather than our current eating habits that represent 1500 miles of transportation per bite; we could be supporting the local farmers in our community by eating close to home and at the same time decrease fuel use and CO2 emissions.
Learning to garden, to grow at least few things to reduce the need to rip out some distant mountain side or a valley for a monoculture of a commercial cropland has some significant beneficial effect, locally and globally. Developing our homes toward energy-efficiency and resource conservation by harvesting rainwater, planting edible plants, and using the sun for space and water heating are simple to accomplish and in the current political climate may provide you with tax benefits. Carpooling, using a bus, switching to a bike all allow us to meet our neighbors, get in shape and reduces not only our financial overhead, but our ecological footprint.
The latest technological fix is of course going to be trialed in Africa - if no one noticed the starvation of millions during the "green revolution", perhaps they won't notice the introduction of genetically modified seed (gmo) being promoted by Bill Gates and the Rockefeller Brothers. They have managed to get Kofi Annan to shill for them and Monsanto is footing the bill for Kenyan agricultural extention agents. All of this in the name of saving Africans from starvation. Heard of any of this in anyones presidential platform?
How does one fight such financial behemoths as Bill Gates, Rockefeller Brothers, Monsanto, and Archer Daniels Midland, especially if you are African? This is the slimey underbelly of a capitalist system gone mad and it is totally hidden from view. It makes it very difficult to get too concerned with whether Obama is more elitist than Hillary or McCaine.
Who will save the traditional seeds of Africa, where is Nikolai Vavilov when we need him? How did it happen that African scientists and farmers have no say in their future? The same way it happened that we elected George Bush for two terms. It seems to me that we have perhaps passed many of the dreaded tipping points and it is time to plant a garden (open pollinated seeds of course), and get to know our neighbors. It is after all spring!
Tuesday, May 29, 2007
Permaculture Convergence
Eight years ago I was here in Pirenopolis to teach an Ecovilla design course to architects, city planners, regional planners, and permaculture graduates, today I am arriving for the pc convergence and it is unbelievable the amount of change and work that has transpired in those eight years.
This is the site of Instituto Permacultura Ecovilas do Cerrado which has evolved into the most active permaculture training center for land based learning on the planet. Andre Soares and his wife Lucy are the driving inspiration and labor behind this incredible place.
We will be meeting in the Bill Mollison Amphitheater which is pictured above. The structure is made of bricks that were manufacuted here at IPEC with IPEC soil. The Amphitheater can handle several hundred participants and they have built many small rooms to accommodate their students and for the next four days, us.
This is the site of Instituto Permacultura Ecovilas do Cerrado which has evolved into the most active permaculture training center for land based learning on the planet. Andre Soares and his wife Lucy are the driving inspiration and labor behind this incredible place.
We will be meeting in the Bill Mollison Amphitheater which is pictured above. The structure is made of bricks that were manufacuted here at IPEC with IPEC soil. The Amphitheater can handle several hundred participants and they have built many small rooms to accommodate their students and for the next four days, us.
Monday, May 21, 2007
Sustainable Corporations?
With the exception of Carlos Louge (an Argentinean Economist), Donna Morton (a Canadian Economist), Paul Stammets (an US Mycologist), Roberto Perez (a Cuban permaculturalist), Robin Francis (an Australian Permacuture Teacher), and Declan Kennedy (an Irish Permaculturist), all of the other presenters were representative of an emerging new corporate model “the sustainable corporation”.
I think that the non corporate presenters had much more to offer in the way of solutions and ethics. I think that all of us keep hoping that the corporate world has something to teach or offer us that will make us more effective and able to affect change on a much larger scale. After this conference I think that quite the opposite is true and that we should lay the myth of big is better or more effective to rest. Perhaps its time to dust off Shumacher's “Small is Beautiful” and have another look.
There is much more that I would like to write about but I feel that I need more time for my thoughts to gestate and that they could use a good marinating in talk with my peers during the convergence. I am still convinced that Permaculture is the best show in town!
I think that the non corporate presenters had much more to offer in the way of solutions and ethics. I think that all of us keep hoping that the corporate world has something to teach or offer us that will make us more effective and able to affect change on a much larger scale. After this conference I think that quite the opposite is true and that we should lay the myth of big is better or more effective to rest. Perhaps its time to dust off Shumacher's “Small is Beautiful” and have another look.
There is much more that I would like to write about but I feel that I need more time for my thoughts to gestate and that they could use a good marinating in talk with my peers during the convergence. I am still convinced that Permaculture is the best show in town!
Limits to Sustainability - some musings
The theme of the conference was invisible structures, particularly finance and sustainable corporations. We heard presentations from some of the top foundations and corporations in Brazil. Two very large banks presented their sustainability programs. Other groups spoke of their Corporate Social Responsibility Programs.
For the most part I was under-impressed but I did come away with some provocative and new thoughts.
If one applies pattern to invisible structures then one has to figure out what are human patterns and how do they work. What seems glaringly obvious is that there is an order of scale problem. Rivers and trees have a limit to the orders of branching, but human constructs seem to be able to ignore limits. This is true of economics which allows one percent of mankind to control 40% of the total resource base of the planet, and of agriculture which allows a corporation to farm tens of thousands of hectares. Both of these examples are examples of exploitive systems. You cannot operate on such large scales without being extremely exploitative both of the environment and of humans. If this is true then to talk in terms of the sustainability of City Bank is an oxymoron.
Sustainability was the key word of every corporate presenter but not once did any of them give a definition of sustainability or their understanding of it. Tony Anderson who is an old permaculture teacher and designer from Denmark was of the opinion that to be sustainable one had to be constrained to ones bioregion – or that was the appropriate order of scale. Once you start importing and exporting product and money in and out of the bioregion the bioregion inevitable suffers. I’m sure we will spend some time hashing this out during the convergence.
For the most part I was under-impressed but I did come away with some provocative and new thoughts.
If one applies pattern to invisible structures then one has to figure out what are human patterns and how do they work. What seems glaringly obvious is that there is an order of scale problem. Rivers and trees have a limit to the orders of branching, but human constructs seem to be able to ignore limits. This is true of economics which allows one percent of mankind to control 40% of the total resource base of the planet, and of agriculture which allows a corporation to farm tens of thousands of hectares. Both of these examples are examples of exploitive systems. You cannot operate on such large scales without being extremely exploitative both of the environment and of humans. If this is true then to talk in terms of the sustainability of City Bank is an oxymoron.
Sustainability was the key word of every corporate presenter but not once did any of them give a definition of sustainability or their understanding of it. Tony Anderson who is an old permaculture teacher and designer from Denmark was of the opinion that to be sustainable one had to be constrained to ones bioregion – or that was the appropriate order of scale. Once you start importing and exporting product and money in and out of the bioregion the bioregion inevitable suffers. I’m sure we will spend some time hashing this out during the convergence.
Thursday, May 17, 2007
Sao Paolo, IPC8 - gathering of the alternative nation
I am a little overwhelmed right now with the delight of seeing and talking with all of my old pc buddies. Robin Francis, Rosemary Morrow (Australia), Tony Anderson (Denmark), Juao Rochet (Bage, Brazil), Africa, Asia, names I have forgotten all here sitting around the table talking about our projects, our dreams, and new strategies. Right now we are all walking to the conference center to view a large bamboo structure that is being constructed in honor of the conference.
Last night the African contingent got in and I showed around. They are delightful and so spontaneously in love with life. I could take some lessons. I am off to the first day of conference - more later.
Last night the African contingent got in and I showed around. They are delightful and so spontaneously in love with life. I could take some lessons. I am off to the first day of conference - more later.
Gaia Ecovilla and Argentina Permaculture Institute
Another overnight bus ride to Buenos Aires and a 110 km cab ride takes us past Navarro to the permaculture site of Gaia Ecovilla and the Argentina Permaculture Institute. If you go to their web site - you will find that this is a place that is truly walking the talk. Most of our short time there was spent with founder Gustavo Ramirez who lead a tour of over twenty architects and other design professionals around the site.
Totally off the grid thanks, primarily, to three wind generators with some help from a six panel array of solar cells. Their food forest is well designed and developing into a multi use ecology for the future. The most visually captivating elements in their community are the whimsical and beautiful cob structures that are built as residencies and community buildings. Thatched roofs are predominant though there are sheet metal, living roofs, and other configurations.
The whole community was very welcoming and I felt honored that I was treated as some legendary permaculture figure. It made me regret that I hadn’t worked harder to come to Gaia Ecovilla in 2000 when I had been invited for the Latin American convergence.
The community supports itself primarily through course offerings of all kinds. Right now there are around ten adults and three very young children. I encourage anyone who is traveling in South America to include this wonderful demonstration site on your itinerary.
Totally off the grid thanks, primarily, to three wind generators with some help from a six panel array of solar cells. Their food forest is well designed and developing into a multi use ecology for the future. The most visually captivating elements in their community are the whimsical and beautiful cob structures that are built as residencies and community buildings. Thatched roofs are predominant though there are sheet metal, living roofs, and other configurations.
The whole community was very welcoming and I felt honored that I was treated as some legendary permaculture figure. It made me regret that I hadn’t worked harder to come to Gaia Ecovilla in 2000 when I had been invited for the Latin American convergence.
The community supports itself primarily through course offerings of all kinds. Right now there are around ten adults and three very young children. I encourage anyone who is traveling in South America to include this wonderful demonstration site on your itinerary.
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