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Can 'Burning Man' Become a Model for Green Living?

By Matthew Taylor, PeacePower Magazine. Posted October 23, 2007.


Can 45,000 people journey vast distances to a lifeless Nevada desert and participate in an environmentally sustainable festival devoted to burning stuff?
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Can 45,000 people journey vast distances to a lifeless Nevada desert and participate in an environmentally sustainable festival devoted to burning stuff? As strange as it sounds, during the last week of August 2007, the annual hedonistic celebration Burning Man attempted to do just that: go 'green.'

What has Burning Man done to merit its theme, The Green Man? Is Burning Man making serious efforts to green itself, or is it all a front, a form of greenwashing? How will the Burning Man experience affect burners, and will they bring it home into their lives? What does the Green Man art theme say about the state of civilization and its trajectory? It was in search of answers to these questions and others unimagined that the author trekked to the playa this year.

A certain segment of the Burning Man community has long made respect for the environment a high priority. For years, event organizers have promoted a "leave no trace" ethic and encouraged all participants to scour campsites down to the tiniest scraps.

The under-appreciated Earth Guardians work year-round to keep the playa clean and tidy, and ensure that "burn scars" don't deface the desert. Burners Without Borders, a group of volunteers vowing to "bring it home," journeyed to the Hurricane Katrina destruction zone in 2005 to provide an estimated one million dollars worth of free home demolitions to help property owners clear away wreckage from the disaster. Last year, the same group salvaged six semi trucks full of reclaimed wood from the festival and donated it to Habitat for Humanity. (This year, a Burning Man spokesperson says it was even more).

But in the past few years, participants have demanded a much higher level of environmental responsibility. Just keeping the desert free from "MOOP" (matter out of place) was not enough.

According to Kachina Katrina Zavalney, volunteer coordinator for Burning Man's Green Team, at last year's burn, "I was walking around feeling unhappy -- not like I had a chip on my shoulder, but more like, 'Gosh, people think this place is so progressive, but yet it smells so bad from all the generators, it's so loud, there's not a lot that people can say about the environmental efforts or what's being done out here."

An alliance of like-minded volunteers converged around the Green Theme for 2007. The task was daunting.

"The idea of building a sustainable, temporary city in the middle of nowhere on its face is preposterous. There's no frame against which our work here can be compared except ourselves?because no one else does what we do. Given that, I think what we've been able to accomplish is extraordinary," said Tom Price, environmental manager for the Green Man theme.

Nobel peace laureate Al Gore, whose cable network Current TV was onsite to document the event, expressed optimism about the playa's green prospects.

"I think it's just great that the people of Black Rock City have made the Green Man this year's theme for Burning Man, and I hope that folks will use TV Free Burning Man as a platform to spread that great message even further," said the former vice president.

"Because we build the city from the ground up we're able to look at everything and change whatever we want to on a dime. So, we've looked at transportation, solid waste, materials, energy, art, media, everything, all aspects of the event," Price added.

Analyzing the environmental sustainability of a city of more than 45,000 people is a monumental task. Given space constraints, we'll examine a few elements: electricity, water, fuel, carbon, education, and the future.

Electrifying the Playa

This year, Burning Man LLC ("the LLC") worked with a team of Berkeley engineers from The Shipyard to install a 30-kilowatt solar photovoltaic (PV) array in the shape of the Native, sacred Zia Sun symbol. The array powered the pedestal underneath the iconic man statue and the surrounding Green Pavilion. (Such an array could power approximately 10 to 20 San Francisco homes). Batteries stored extra energy during the day so the man could glow green all night.


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Matthew A. Taylor is a UC Berkeley peace and conflict studies student who has installed solar photovoltaic panels on his roof and indefinitely renounced jet aviation.

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Looking forward to your comments...
Posted by: mrmatthew on Oct 23, 2007 3:19 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hey, I'm the author of this story and I can't wait to hear what you have to say! Thanks for reading and responding.

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» Not likely! Posted by: Constitutionalist75
» Burning Man: Environment NO; Profits YES Posted by: Overburdened Planet
The Burn is a scene.
Posted by: gellero on Oct 26, 2007 1:32 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
BurningMan is the best party on the planet at this point in time. Been there several times myself, including this 'green' party. Great place to get your freak on. Disneyland on Acid. Creativity and art. But people should do what they can afford. There were about 100 airccraft this year. Including a Cessna Citation. Were the daily jumpers supposed to give up skydiving there because it used gas?? Don't renounce air travel Matt....no one will care. Aspire to be so productive you can own your own jet. Al Gore certainly has no problem with that. I have an aerobatic plane just for frivolous fun. Big deal. Ride your bike at 20, and feel good about it. 15 years from now you'll feel a lot better in your Porsche.

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