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Environment

Intelligent Growth: A Vision for a New Low-Energy Economy

By Stephan Harding, AlterNet. Posted January 4, 2007.


Continuing with standard economic growth will not halt the unfolding environmental crisis. But employing "tradable energy quotas" to ration the use of fossil fuels just might.
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Stephan Harding, coordinator of the MSc in Holistic Science at Schumacher College, explains why standard economic growth is not the answer, and why personal Tradable Energy Quotas are.

At last, mainstream economists are waking up to the fact that climate change is going to cost a lot of money. Recently, the U.K. government's Stern Review proposed a series of measures we must implement immediately to "decarbonize" the global economy, including emissions trading, technological cooperation and the reduction of deforestation. Stern concluded that "with strong and deliberate policy choices, it is possible to reduce the emissions in both developed and developing economies on the scale necessary for stabilization while continuing to grow."

While I was persuaded by some of the recommendations made by the Stern Review, this is where I believe he misses something vitally important. Simply put, growth of the wrong kind, no matter how decarbonized, will wreck the planet.

I think that we need to distinguish between two fundamentally distinct kinds of growth. There is the suicidal growth that our mainstream culture is so hell-bent on pursuing, predicated on the limitless extraction of our Earth's wild resources and the continual disabling of her ability to absorb pollution, stabilize soils, regulate the world's climate and operate a whole gamut of "ecosystem services." The alternative is "intelligent growth," which recognizes that we must move towards a global steady-state economy in which the living standards in the south would grow while those of the north decline until both converge on a steady and equitable per capita share of whatever benefits the Earth can spare us.

But how to move the global economy from growth to steady state? For many years I thought that this issue was insoluble, for at least two reasons. Firstly, it would clearly be impossible to decide upon and monitor steady state exploitation rates for every single resource needed by society. Secondly, any nation that had made a unilateral decision to implement a steady state economy would immediately be wiped out by competitors that hadn't.

So are there any feasible means for making the shift happen? After spending time with David Fleming, who recently taught here at Schumacher College, I'm now beginning to think that it can be done. The answer is for a national government -- any government in the rich world would do -- to adopt David's ingenious concept of Tradable Energy Quotas (TEQs), which is essentially a system for rationing our use of fossil fuels, currently our major source of energy.

TEQs includes every energy user and every energy provider in the national economy. They are measured in units, and every adult is given an equal annual allocation. Industry and government bid for their units at a weekly tender. Units can be traded. Anyone who uses less than their entitlement can sell their surplus, and anyone can buy more units if they need them. The total number of TEQs available is set out in a TEQS budget (set by an independent Energy Policy Committee) that looks 20 years ahead. The size of the budget goes down week by week, step by step, like a staircase.

By rationing energy, the TEQs scheme automatically places limits on our exploitation of nature, since without energy, resources cannot be extracted or processed. So, with TEQS, we eliminate, at a stroke, the need to separately monitor our use of a plethora of resources. The final amount of energy available to the nation -- the lowest rung of the energy step -- is set at a level low enough to ensure that the economy does as little harm to the natural world as possible while ensuring that citizens enjoy a simple but comfortable standard of living. For the time being, while we still have fossil fuels, TEQs units would be carbon-linked, but if we do one day manage to develop climate-neutral energy sources (such as widespread renewables) the units would be energy-linked -- to joules or kilowatt hours.

What about the issue of competitiveness? David Fleming points out that any nation that adopted TEQs would give itself a massive competitive advantage in the international market for energy-efficient products that is now blossoming as the severe implications of both climate change and peak oil become more and more apparent. The gradually descending energy "staircase" would give industry time to develop the new low-impact technologies that will be required in a steady state world. The first nation that embarked on its energy descent by adopting TEQs would trigger a domino effect as other nations scrambled to cash in on the huge profits being made in the new low-energy economy.

Perhaps David Fleming really has found the leverage point that can transform the global economy from an all-consuming monster to an ecologically viable presence on the planet. We had better try it before time runs out.

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See more stories tagged with: climate change, environment, carbon, energy, teq, tradable energy quotas

Stephan Harding is coordinator of the MSc in Holistic Science at the Schumacher College in Devon. He is author of "Animate Earth: Science, Intuition and Gaia," published by Green Books.

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View:
Only 2 kinds of growth: dumb & dumber
Posted by: Pat Kittle on Jan 4, 2007 12:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Intelligent" growth is a new one on me -- and I thought I'd heard them all -- smart growth, controlled growth, slow growth, managed growth, ad nauseum.

But upon reading your article it seems that you aren't promoting any kind of growth, but rather a "steady state" economy.

I support that, but I do have two suggestions:

1) Don't feel you have to call it "growth" of any kind. Maybe you've given this some thought and decided the word "growth" would make your proposal less threatening, given the widespread belief that anything else is unthinkable. Still, "steady state" is not a dirty word (phrase), and "growth" is (IMHO).

2) Our species is currently far too numerous even under the very best of circumstances (everyone behaving in an ecologically ideal fashion). In the real world, we're absurdly overpopulated, and making responsible human reproduction a top priority is absolutely essential to any real-world sustainable future. Yeah, some people react nasty at the mention of it, but that doesn't change the reality of its critical importance.

Best regards,
Pat Kittle

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great
Posted by: rsaxto on Jan 4, 2007 1:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is a great idea but it lacks a hook that will snag the most gross energy polluters. Perhaps mother nature will give us a huge global warming catastrophe that will get the attention of the grossest of polluters.

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Sounds too complicated and bureaucratic. Here's a better idea.
Posted by: maxpayne on Jan 4, 2007 7:57 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Get government to legalize and completely deregulate hemp, divert the funds used to subsidize fossil fuels to funding solar, wind, geothermal, water, etc ... alternative renewables.

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And by the way, the market is currently rigged in favor of fossil fuels. We need a truly free market
Posted by: maxpayne on Jan 4, 2007 7:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Not the fake "free" market that America has been poisoned to death with. Legalize, deregulate completely, and allow the people's market to decide.

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Where the hell would someone get the moral authority to...
Posted by: ABetterFuture on Jan 4, 2007 9:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...sanction police-state powers, in order to lower their neighbors living standard.

" The alternative is "intelligent growth," which recognizes that we must move towards a global steady-state economy in which the living standards in the south would grow while those of the north decline until both converge on a steady and equitable per capita share of whatever benefits the Earth can spare us.

And, if one isn't planning on utilizing the policing powers of the state to make Their Plan The Plan, pray tell how are you going to force your neighbor to choose between posting a comment on alternet or turning on their heater during the winter.

What a dumb, dumb, dumb idea. What's next on the agenda? Tradeable Toilet Paper Quotas issued via Gubbamint Vouchers? How about some Tradeable Bread Quotas, for the benefit of allowing the author and his six best friends to Plan some retribution towards Mikky Dees, damn them for forcing their evil burgers down their throats!

Buy some solar panels; put up some windmills; store water in a insulation-toggled metal tank where the sun gets scorching hot instead of paying to heat hot water that might be used 20 times per day 24-7-365; buy a farcking bus pass; take measures to take yourself off the grid...just DO SOMETHING productive with all this pent-up potential energy, rather than "inventing" state policing power to subject us to some iteration of neo-communism.

At the very least, don't pretend to be liberal or progressive if your best answer is to expand police-state control over basic aspects of your fellow citizens' lives. Go throw your lot in with the anti-gay and anti-abortion cultists, where your ideologies belong, and where you'll undoubtedly enjoy more success. But for the love of Pete, quit pretending like you're doing me favors by trying to make our neighbors suffer.

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» Yeah, no kidding. Posted by: MatthewSavage
"Intelligent" growth
Posted by: willymack on Jan 4, 2007 9:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No way, Jose. NO GROWTH is the ONLY thing that will save us from a huge calamity. That and the intelligent application of remedial measures. It's probably too late to save many species doomed to extincition, and maybe even our own.

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Moving Pollution Around
Posted by: NoPCZone on Jan 4, 2007 10:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Most of this kind of thing is just smoke and mirrors. Remove the subsidy to fossil fuels and tax polluting processes to force their cleanup. Unless it is more profitable to do the right thing, some will just continue to drag their feet. The market will take care of the rest.

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The Steady State Economy
Posted by: JohnF on Jan 4, 2007 11:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The steady state economy is, I think, an extremely important idea. We need to replace the pervasive, completely unsustainable growth imperative with something sustainable, and the steady state economy is the best alternative I've seen. I've written a bit about it, and note as well that in addition to the possibility of TEQs (something which does deserve some thought), it is believed that a steady state economy can be promoted with standard policy tools. See the last paragraph here.

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Stability, not growth
Posted by: albrechtkrausse on Jan 4, 2007 3:37 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Its imperative that we do not allow the developing countries gain a higher standard of living. We need aggressive sanctions on any country to seeks to improve their populace's hygiene, health, economy, or fiscal situation by using technology. Otherwise they might catch up to us and kill the earth will global warming. Gaia is watching and we need more wars to control those pesky darkies from ruining our right of comfort and domination. We must shy away from the tradition tactics of using the IMF, Worldbank, UN sanctions, or war and find new innovative ways to keep those wogs in their place. Our future, and more importantly Gaia herself, depend on it!

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» RE: Stability, not growth Posted by: richholland
This has to be one of the dumber ideas I've heard
Posted by: AdamG on Jan 4, 2007 4:52 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It would do nothing to stop one the biggest contributors to climate change- deforestation. The citizens of Ur (a Babylonian empire in Mesopotamia) deforested their home with nothing more then stone adzes (axes) and fire. Much of the world until recently has been deforested in much the same manner. Even in America much of the deforestation of the original forests here when Europeans came fell for no other reason than to clear the land and in many cases were burned.

Until people as individuals put self imposed limits on their overconsuming and overpopulating, we're doomed.

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Say what?
Posted by: johndoraemi on Jan 5, 2007 12:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"They are measured in units, and every adult is given an equal annual allocation. "

Every adult is "given" an "allocation" of energy?

Now all you need to do is clone Joe Stalin to really get the plan on track.

I'm currently reading 1984, and this idea seems like it would fit in seamlessly.

Some Big Brother entity gets to "allocate" whatever he defines as "energy" in my own home. If I have a windmill, I'm being moinitored. If I have solar panels, I'm being monitored. If I burn some wood from my land, I'm being monitored.

What a nonsensical solution.

Try this on for size?

1 - Encourage people to breed fewer fucking people.

2 - Promote wind, solar and tide instead of war, oil, drugs, corruption, pollution and a host of other sins.

3 - Promote straw bale construction, passive solar design, tax breaks for super energy efficient new housing and generous subsidies for revamping current wasteful systems.

4 - Promote natural lighting sunroofs everywhere, in order to eliminate powered lighting during the daytime.

5 - There are others, but I'm all tapped out right now, reading Orwell's dystopian nightmare and all.

John Doraemi publishes Crimes of the State
http://crimesofthestate.blogspot.com/

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» RE: Say what? Posted by: richholland
» RE: Say what? Posted by: johndoraemi
Energy credits = rationing
Posted by: Kuzminski on Jan 5, 2007 4:39 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"Energy credits," by whatever name, are no more or less than rationing. Some resource is rationed by giving individuals access to so many units and no more, just as gasoline was rationed in WW II. The difference here is that people are allowed to swap their energy credits, or buy and sell them, something one could do with gasoline coupons in WW II also. Trying to pretend that this is all some kind of new form of capitalism creating new markets, etc., is obfuscation, perhaps intended to make us feel better.

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Carfree
Posted by: Tokyo Tuds on Jan 5, 2007 8:54 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Our fossil-fuel, auto-dependant society is one of the worst offenders to mother earth. Autos are one of the great tools of civilisation, but by commoditising them and putting more than one on the road for every person in developed countries is also cancer-level "growth" in auto use.

All of us priviledged enough to live in developed countries have the personal power to make a huge positive impact on the environment within weeks. Go car-light, if not car-free and liberate thousands of your hard earned dollars at the same time. Sell your second car, and replace your first car with a hybrid; join an auto-share cooperative; by a public transport pass: voila, you have in a matter of weeks reduced your footprint on nature immensely.

A tangible plan to build or retro-fit a carfree city.
http://www.carfree.com/

"California breeds high expectations and then crushes them. Through history and myth, it tells you there are no limits, and then it leaves you stranded in a cracker box tract house between a 7-Eleven and a freeway interchange."
-- Steve Lopez
http://www.newcolonist.com/topten2.html

"British Households spend £1 in every £6 on motoring.
Do you?
Add up your car costs with this excel spreadsheet or pdf."
http://www.cuttingyourcaruse.co.uk/costs.htm

"Carsharing is a system where a fleet of cars (or other vehicles) is jointly-owned by the users in distinction from car rental or cars in private ownership. The users are organized as a democratically-controlled company, public agency, cooperative, ad hoc grouping."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Car_sharing
http://www.autoshare.com/

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» RE: Carfree Posted by: harris
Compare world response of Kyoto Protocol
Posted by: Liara Covert on Jan 7, 2007 4:32 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This article causes me to think of the U.S. backlash from the Kyoto Protocol and how the rest of the world is responding:
http://www.carbonneutral.com/pages/worldresponding.asp

Consider voluntary and regulated measures that have been put in place in the EU to reduce carbon emissions. These measures include active and ongoing systems of emissions trading and carbon offsetting. These EU initiatives are not only reducing cardon emissions significantly, they are proving that a trading system offers win-win situations for companies, governments and the public who gets cleaner air. I think this is a good beginning, but the mindset of decision-makers in other countries really needs to change to formally recognize key environmental problems and reduce greenhouse gases.

Its worth noting that Australia, where I currently live, remains heavily dependent on coal for energy. The Australian parliament has been leaning toward going nuclear in the future, but the carbon-trading mindset here isn't parallel to the EU in terms of carbon trading. Although Australia has the highest level of skin cancer cases reported in the world in part because of localized holes in the ozone layer, more discussions are needed here to raise awareness about the impact of greenhouse gases and carbon emissions.
--------------------------------
www.dreambuilders.com.au
--------------------------------

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