The Next Energy Economy: Grassroots Strategies for Mitigating Global Climate Change
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VKOJ4XMzNG0&playnext_from=TL&videos=-Zs8MNdNC0M
Sunday, May 2, 2010
Thursday, April 1, 2010
Distinction of, misuse and consequences of modern terminology

There is an essential difference between growth and development. Growth has a positive connotation - a forest grows, a child grows. But after a while we surely want our child to stop growing and instead developing. Not a quantitative growth, but an qualitative development.
The term growth is used and mentioned, as previously pointed out in the blog, practically in every major political or organizational instance worldwide as a operational goal.
Which solutions, what values are rewarded with growth as a motive in political desicions? Does it lead us where we want to go? Examples of unreflected references to growth in Sweden are plentiful; the Collage of Education expresses that it educates teachers for the sake of growth, the Swedish horse breed organization donates money for growth and the county council of Örebro is offering health care not for the sake of the health, but to promote growth!
One of many deeply problematic consequences coupled to continued economic growth is that required work declines when technological rationalizations improves production costs and time in manufacturing sectors generally. Problem is that this underlying trend forces overall production volymes to increase so as to secure job opportunities. Ironically, this is the logic behind all consumption-stimulating measures in the aftermaths of the financial crisis (raw material crisis?). It is also the same path towards the gap.
Alternative routes encompasses for example less than 40 labour hours per labour week, extraction and exchange of returns in productivity to free-time and sharing labour. For alternative routes we need brave, bold and engaged politicians that are more interested in the future of coming generations rather than misusage of authority and power. For alternative routes we also need a shift in values among ordinary citizens that can support real sustainable decisions.
Sunday, February 28, 2010
Financial crisis or raw material crisis?

Alarmingly, the strategy utilized world-wide to bring economies back on track (apart of using state tax money as stimulation packages leading to a degration of public sector welfare) is through increased consumption and continued growth. An economical governance demanding accelerated access to cheap and high-energy fuels. Not to mention climate change with all of its direct and indirect consequences.
It goes without saying that when the global economy again rises, it will again hit the same energy boundaries that initiated the crisis it was supposed to revive from.
Dead end. Try alternative route.
Labels:
consumption,
growth,
inflation,
oil barrel price,
raw material crisis
Saturday, February 20, 2010
Monopoly in thinking among national economists


It goes without saying that this will need to be questioned. In editorials, in political arenas, debates of all sorts and furthermore to spread the insight that we need another way of organising our economical system. And good news is, sustainable solutions already exist.
Localisation, down-sizing, democratical participation, ecological economics, social methods of sharing labour and resources, promoting all sorts of cultural activities for the benefit of citizens - a pluralistic economical framework should be what we need.
Friday, November 27, 2009
Planetary boundaries

What can be learned from this important contemporary holistical screening of the planets ecosystemservice functions?
First and foremost, the climate negotiations need to take into account the function of ecosystems and biodiversity as an essential aspect as they help to mitigate climate change.
Secondly, at the longer perspective, we need really to start thinking to modify our economical system. The current driving forces in the economical system are central aspects of unsustainability. We need to transform the economical system so as to be integrated with the ecological, biophysical boundaries the planet poses. We need to understand that the economy is completely dependent on healthy ecosystems.
What a marvelous piece of human history. We can co-create and co-transform the way society is designed, re-value our relationship to time and money and become more cultural so as to replace our dysfunctional cosumption-oriented lifestyle.
Let´s do this.
Monday, November 23, 2009
An alternative to conventional governance

The first woman to win the Nobel Prize in Economy, Elinor Ostrom, has with her science opened up an alternative to conventional governance. State or privatized governance over whatever good or natural resource have been the conventional up to now while common governance usually has been regarded as a form of political statement and much doubtful. Elinor studies show that a critical limit in order to ensure a good function of common governance seems to be 15 000 inhabitants. After that limit is trespassed, the agreements among the individuals sharing the resource seem to be easily disrupted and inorder emerges. Also, Elinor shows with her studies 5000 examples of successfull common governance of natural resources ranging from fisheries, forests and grazing lands. This has enormous potential into developing into many more implemented examples. The prize winner could not have been presented to the world with a better timing. Understanding that political systems are not capable in dealing with humanities problems in such a paste that is needed, we rather will have to look in taking things in our own hands and forming communities again so as to live locally, thinking globally - acting glocally!


Monday, November 17, 2008
Global Day of Action
On 6th December the Global Day of Acton will take place. The ambition is through manifestations arranged in hundreds of countries worldwide call on world leaders to take urgent action on climate change during the UN top climate meeting that will be held in Poznan, Poland.
Take the opportunity to demonstrate. Take a look at http://www.globalclimatecampaign.org/
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