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What is the obsession with mediocrity? Compromise! Middling, equivocal, moderated and ultimately ineffectual solutions.

There is only so much oil under the ground, and the same goes for natural gas, coal and uranium. There are only so many rivers for hydroelectricity and the full cost accounting on renewables is harsh: even the best dream of efficient, low environmental impact solar, wind or wave power requires immense capital outlays and continual maintenance that requires energy.

Ultimately we will be living in an energy limited world, relative to today’s abundance of cheap, easy, quick energy. So why are we fiddling around incessantly with so many options that merely reduce our consumption a notch or two? More efficient cars, carpooling, rapid transit buses, trains — these all save a smidgen of energy, but only buy us a few years or a decade at best. Thinner plastics, recycling of packaging, low energy light bulbs, more efficient fridges — another basket of greenwashed habits and items that are still thoroughly unsustainable.

Living in a house bursting at the seams with people, more people keep arriving every day, you have the task of making sure everyone has a place to sleep. Rearrange the beds, bash down the sofa and make a bed of it, lay some blankets on the carpet for another few places, pop a camping mattress on top of the grand piano (tourist resort on a coral reef!) and bash up a tent in the garden. Sooner or later you’re going to run out of space, so why not deal with the problem before things get desperate. The sooner you stop letting people in the front door, the better your chances of inhabiting a pleasant home. If you leave it too late, the toilet will be clogged, the fridge bare and the grand sagging and out of tune!

The world is facing an environmental crisis that is leading to the sixth major extinction. This crisis has been caused by us having energy (and power) beyond our physical bodies — from wood, through peat and coal, to oil and nuclear power. The only likely way to stem or stop the tsunami is to use those same energy sources to reverse the destruction. So it is imperative that we stop wasting these energy sources. We cannot just reduce our consumption a notch or two to extend the hedonistic party. We need to jump to number one.

Live close to work and walk, or cycle. Ditch overseas holidays. Use teleconferencing for work. Buy unpackaged, locally grown, groceries. Less meat. Rise and go to bed with natural light as far as possible. Repair and reuse. Have one child, adopt another. Now. Just do it. Quit smoking. Be free. Unhinge yourself from the system. Crazy?

Driving two tonnes of metal and plastic several kilometres, using a litre of gasoline in the process, just to buy 20g of dried tobacco rolled in paper, to further pollute our air. Crazy! We have to stop. Jump to number one.




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12 Responses to “Let’s go straight to number one”

For those who want easy to understand scientifc solutions “Food Without Fossil Fuels Now”
http://www.i-sis.org.uk/foodWithoutFossilFuels.php

Which Energy? ISIS energy report
http://www.i-sis.org.uk/which_energy.php

Germany 100 Percent Renewables by 2050
http://www.i-sis.org.uk/germanyRenewable2050.php

Basically good news, as SA has more renewable resources than Germany and a far less energy intensive economy. Solar and wind plants take 18 months to build, while coal fired power plants take 6-8 years. Its not too much of a brinteaser to decide which way to go if we want to avoid power outages in the short term now the economy is gearing up.

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Woody Woodpecker on November 20th, 2009 at 3:49 pm

[…] Thought Leader » Peak Oil Perspectives » Let’s go straight to number one www.thoughtleader.co.za/peakoilperspectives/2009/11/19/lets-go-straight-to-number-1/ – view page – cached What is the obsession with mediocrity? Compromise! Middling, equivocal, moderated and ultimately ineffectual solutions. […]

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Social comments and analytics for this post…

This post was mentioned on Twitter by solartechnic: Let’s go straight to number one - Thought Leader http://bit.ly/LUlP7…

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uberVU - social comments on November 20th, 2009 at 6:25 pm

Good one! I must be in a good mood today too…especially since I smoke!

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MLH on November 21st, 2009 at 2:39 pm

@Peak I like your graphic examples of our craziness. All life forms are totally dependent for their existence on energy all of which energy comes from the sun in the first place. In the last few centuries we humans have been profligate users of the solar energy that was stored away over millions of years in fossil fuels. We have been behaving like utterly irresponsible children let loose in a sweet shop. If we continue we are going to destroy not only the sweet shop and all that it contains but ourselves as well. Starting right now, not at somet future date, we all need to do everything that we can to desist from this collective madness.

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Rory Short on November 21st, 2009 at 4:03 pm

Sorry I missed the point, what is number one?

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Cactus on November 21st, 2009 at 4:19 pm

Good article…in simple language let’s go green, let’s be selfless and do our part.

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DY on November 21st, 2009 at 10:23 pm

I guess any oil industry employeee must be seriously looking to see how they can adapt their professional skills to renewable energy. Those who jump ship first will be best off before the renewable energy job market becomes flooded.

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Plonked on November 22nd, 2009 at 8:14 am

It is a taboo subject, but the ultimate cause of all ills like environmental destruction, water shortage, energy crises,air pollution, species extinction, more hunger and poverty, climate change, dilution of educational standards, collapse of healthcare, increasing violence and immorality, increasing crime rate, etc. are ALL ultimately attributable to ever-increasing overpopulation. If we carry on reproducing at this rate, we must beware that nature ultimately solves an exponential overpopulation increase by means of new incurable diseases, mysteriously reducing fertility, and other biological means. All this due to, our current preoccupation of politics, ideologies, nationalism, racism, rugby and wrestling, fashion, celebrities and luxury holidays.

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ian shaw on November 22nd, 2009 at 3:40 pm

@ian shaw

Blaming everything on overpopulation is simplistic and a cop out. Nothing taboo about the subject either, here is a much more balanced view than you present.

Climate Change and the Population ‘Bomb’: A Debate Not to Shy Away From
http://sacsis.org.za/site/News/detail.asp?iChannel=1&nChannel=News&iCat=1434&iData=386

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Cactus on November 23rd, 2009 at 11:33 am

nonsense… natural renewable energy holds the possibility of generating more than enough energy for our needs… we don’t need to become monks (rising and sleeping with natural light from the sun?!?!?!) we just need to be smarter…
jeez… you can go back to living in the stone age if you want to man… i can promise you the bulk of humanity ain’t gonna join you

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spank your own MONKey on November 23rd, 2009 at 8:38 pm

“… world is facing an environmentally crisis leading to the sixth major extinction…” Assuming you are right in this evaluation, then it is hard to see how this puny collection of ‘do’s’ you have listed, are going to be of any remote use, and so i say “party on”… Armageddon has been predicted in that big book… we already have a full house (as you point out) and we demand our pound of flesh.

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nicholas on November 24th, 2009 at 2:49 pm

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POP believes that the problem posed by the imminent peaking of global oil production is something warranting serious attention.

The group is made up of a small yet diverse group that brings together theoretical skills on geology, economics and strategy, with practical application of alternative lifestyle choices.

POP is dedicated to raising awareness of "peak oil", its likely impacts on South African society and the possible solutions to living in an energy reduced future.

The contributors are all members of ASPO-SA
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