One of the
positive externalities of episodic insomnia is that occasionally I get to chip
away at the backlog of reading and writing that I have been meaning to do.
I just read
the article, "Solutions for a cultivated planet" by JA Foley et al.,
in Nature Vol. 478 (2011).
Now, granted,
us scientists have a saying that, “Just because it was published in Nature doesn’t make it wrong…” Nonetheless
it did stir my thinking of what's perpetually missing from our conversations in
academia, the media – and everywhere, basically – about "sustainability"
and the future.
The authors
posit projected growth in population and thus increasing food demands heading
towards 2050. They rightly indicate that current agricultural practices compound
manifold forms of environmental pollution, loss of biodiversity and ecosystem
services, and contribute to climate change – all while failing to meet the
nutritional needs of a large segment of the human population. (Doh!) They
suggest that “intensification,” and “closing the yield gap” can substantially
increase food production and thus meet growing future demands. But nowhere do
they acknowledge the utter dependence of contemporary agriculture on a steadily
increasing supply of cheap and abundant fossil fuels.
Acknowledgement
and consideration of the absolutely central
role of our ability to increase the supply of cheap fossil fuels is what is
missing from so many academic analyses and journal articles, University
classroom discussions, national media attention, Presidential debates, NPR
programs, etc., etc., etc.
Affordable and
accessible fossil fuels underpin our entire contemporary economy. Being able to
continually increase our access to cheap fossil fuels is what has enabled
continued economic growth over the past several decades. The rules of our
economic "operating system" have been developed and deployed under these
circumstances; so we have become "growth-dependent."
Now, as
cheap accessible fossil fuels (primarily oil) peak and begin to decline, in
lieu of increased access to cheap high-net-energy sources we have resorted to attempts to substitute,
for example:
- The inflation of credit bubbles ensnaring, among others, home buyers (often poor/working class minorities targeted by predatory lenders) and hordes of hapless Millennial generation university students
- Engaging in extreme financialization of the economy and creation of wildly, preternaturally abstruse instruments such as “collateralized debt obligations,” “credit default swaps,” and sub-prime “mortgage backed securities” (Warren Buffet famously labeled derivatives as “financial weapons of mass destruction…)
- The societal countenance of – and bi-partisan government support of and subservience to – swindle at the highest levels, and the enshrinement of fraud on Wall Street (“Everything’s fucked up, and nobody goes to jail…”)
- The feckless pursuit of “ZIRP” and umpteen rounds of QE "money printing" by the Fed
- Tragically overweening hyperbole about “fracking” and shale gas/oil making the US energy independent and representing some great (cheap) energy bonanza; and…so on….
…all in
order to make it appear that we still have a growing economy, and will be able
to have a growing economy indefinitely.
So how does
this relate to things like Foley et al.'s Nature
article, and in general to themes of sustainable development and the future?
Without being
able to increase our access to high-net energy, cheap, accessible and abundant
fossil fuels we cannot have continued economic growth. Without continual economic
growth, under the current political economy we cannot form and deploy financial
capital for socially productive purposes (this is the proper role of the
finance sector). If we cannot deploy increasing sums of capital towards
agricultural intensification we cannot increase food production, according to
Foley et al.'s model which is reflective of most all mainstream ag “development”
intentions.
In fact, if
fossil fuel scarcity increases and energy becomes more expensive and lower
net-energy – as inevitably it shall – then any "solutions" to our
food production dilemma that require vast expenditures of capital and energy
will be nonviable. This applies to anything that is colloquially considered to
be "high-tech," as well as anything organized on a massive scale.
And this
applies not only to “solutions” to our food production problem, but to all
critical sectors of human and community life: transportation, energy, water and
sanitation, consumer goods, health care, the built environment, even
entertainment and recreation. Anything organized on a vast scale and dependent
upon long and intricate supply chains – thus anything that is expensive, energy
intensive, and technologically complex – is therefore vulnerable and fragile. (Uh-oh.)
So here’s the
punchline:
Any meaningful discussion of strategies
for meeting development goals – in any sector – henceforth has to take
into account increasing scarcity and therefore costliness and lower net-return
on basic energy inputs, and the impairment of capital formation and deployment
implied therein.
It sounds
common-sense, but turns out nobody is doing it. Not even in the pages of Nature.
* * *
I’d like to
believe that we’ll transform our economy to one that’s sustainable because we
recognize the severe moral failing of permitting the catastrophic loss of biodiversity
that’s already well underway. We won’t.
I’d like to
believe that we’ll transform our economy to one that’s sustainable because
we’re hard-nosed utilitarians, fully and rationally abreast of the true value
of the “ecosystem services” we’re currently destroying. We aren’t.
I’d like to
believe that we’ll transform our economy to one that’s sustainable because we
are prudent conservatives and thus adherents of the precautionary principle and
therefore adamant to avert the unknown and mostly unknowable deleterious effects of
the climate destabilization we’re causing. We aren’t.
The Vietnam
War ended not because it was morally wrong to begin with, not because of
compassion for the suffering of millions of innocent villagers in SE Asia, not
even because it became intensely unpopular among the middle-class constituents
of the US Congress. It ended because it was too expensive.
We are going
to transition to a sustainable economy because our ability to sustain the
unsustainable is rapidly eroding to zero. If we “got our shit together” along
the lines of the above aspirational conjectures, we could do the transition
with substantially less collateral damage (in terms of other species, human lives,
climate stability, etc.). But all you need to abolish any hopes of that
happening, however, is to watch about five minutes of television. (Any channel,
any time of the day will do.)
Those of us
contemplating what “sustainability” really
means (i.e. that our present condition is characterized by extreme
unsustainability and super-fragility) cannot afford to wait for society (i.e.
government, the economic elite, and the culture in general) to “do the right
things for the right reasons.” Ain’t gonna happen. We have to start working now
to develop and spread the local, bioregional, “low-tech” modes of existence
that are going to increasingly predominate in the decades to come.
To wit:
Recognizing the finitude of oil and the transience of
oil-derived affluence, the former Emir of Dubai Sheikh Rashid bin Saeed al
Maktoum (1912-1990) remarked, “My grandfather rode a camel. My father rode a camel.
I drive a Rolls Royce. My son flies a jet plane. His son will drive a Mercedes.
But his son will ride a camel.”
Perhaps some Millennial generation American
will observe, "My great-grandfather worked on a farm. My grandfather
worked in a factory. My father worked in a cubicle. I am unemployed (with $xxx,xxx
in student loan debt). My son will work on a farm..."
An ending
note: this is perhaps getting to sound a little apocalyptic, but it isn’t at
all. I’d need another essay to explain fully why this is so, but for now here’s
a short illustration:
A lower-tech,
poorer (less affluent), more local life that involves manual labor doesn’t
necessarily make you worse off. Presently, we work far, far too many hours fastened
to a computer terminal (see, you can tell something is wrong right there in the
name “terminal”…). This we do in order to make money. A sedentary life spent
under the constant hypnosis of screens – work station, laptop, iPhone, GPS,
iPad, flat screen TV, etc. – makes us pallid, flabby, unfit, and unattractive
(non-sexy). So we need to pay a big portion of the money we make doing all this terminal nonsense to specialists and corporations who compel us to exercise
(e.g. perform aerobics, spin classes, lifting weights, yoga, etc.).
What your
personal trainer or yoga instructor is doing is leading you through a series of
motions approximating farm labor – bending and stooping, crouching, lunging, twisting and stretching, fetching weight over your head, and so on. These elaborate
gyrations are designed to get your pulse up, burn fat, tone your muscles, and
improve sex-appeal.
The good news
is, when the corporation employing you to inhabit that cubicle goes belly-up in
the collapsing economy and you have to go get a manual labor job on a farm, you
will actually be coming out way ahead. You’ll be getting paid (a little bit) to
become tan, fitter, and more attractive. Now, that’s not so apocalyptic, is it?
After all, Mephistopheles - that old truth-telling devil - did point out:
There is a natural way to make you young...Go out in a field
And start right in to work: dig, hoe,
Keep your thoughts and yourself in that field,
Eat the food you raise...
Be willing to manure the field you harvest.
And that’s the best way - take it from me! -
To go on being young at eighty.
After all, Mephistopheles - that old truth-telling devil - did point out:
There is a natural way to make you young...Go out in a field
And start right in to work: dig, hoe,
Keep your thoughts and yourself in that field,
Eat the food you raise...
Be willing to manure the field you harvest.
And that’s the best way - take it from me! -
To go on being young at eighty.