Wednesday, August 1, 2007

Progress

Read lots of books, seen lots of documentaries. No longer believe that conspiracy theories are all that far-fetched. Have located many more resources - see delicious under Williampeakoil tag. I'm moving more towards preparation. Permaculture as a concept has taken hold of my imagination. Gardens without digging. Another important direction I am taking is the development of supportive community. Read some good articles by Carolyn Baker recently. Even Neale Donald Walsch has touched on the subject in 'Tomorrow's God'. And did I mention how I enjoyed Jarod Diamond's 'Collapse'?

Thursday, June 21, 2007

An Inconvenient Truth


Am going to have to do this differently. Just short, sweet post a topic at a time so as not to end up with an unreadable list. So today then...

Yesterday - in fact - I went to a free screening of Al Gore's Inconvenient Truth, which I had not see before. It took place at Taieri College as part of the Green Party's Climate Defence Tour. Jeanette Fitzsimons, the Co-leader, was to have been there, but wasn't.

Neither were the audience. Two of us braved the cold conditions, a woman in a wheelchair and me. I think a Russian family turned up part-way through, and maybe one other woman who left early.

So much for public awareness/apathy/whatever.

Saturday, May 26, 2007

The first month

Notes from month one (May 2007):
  • First read about Peak Oil after following a link on a site about velomobiles - bringing about an instant shift of my focus, better late than never!
  • Starting this blog off in the local library having just read the pamphlet, -----, by Robert Anderson (the same person as Robert Atack? with whom I've started a communication?
  • Learned that NZ uses 85% of its oil for transport, 5% on farms, 6% for industry, 2% for commercial, and just 0.9% for private use in homes
  • One book, Climate Change, ------, that I apparently loaned from the library, has gone missing. Haven't seen hide nor hair of it at home
  • Finished reading Kunstler's The Long Emergency, the best book on the topic I've read - eloquent, accurate, organised, even a touch of humour! Sent the author an email but haven't heard back yet
  • Otago Polytechnic...
  • Climate and locale investigation...
  • Financial review...
  • Retirement deadline...
  • Three books read (mostly) in the past few days are:
    • A thousand barrels a second by Peter Tertzakian - a great read with a strong historical perspective (learn everything you never wanted to know about Candlestick makers, whale hunters, and James Watt's business deals) and many informative graphs. Peter's main view is that a situation called break point occurs many times, followed by a a re-grouping or re-evaluation. It seems he is confident of a technical innovation?
    • Twilight in the desert by Matthew R Simmons takes a concentrated look at the Middle East oilfields. Only read the last chapter of this. He is incredibly qualified to comment.
    • Oil: Anatomy of an industry by Matthew Yeoman - a readable and introductory book on the topic. Strong political focus. A good chapter on the Bush dynasty. Is fairly dismissive of the proponents for an imminent oil peak - swallows the line that we're still good for at least 20 years.
    • Plan B 2.0 by Lester R. Brown - a feel good utopian manual for saving the earth. Has a mission. Compares the cost of global defence spending with the amount it would take to fix everything. If you buy 5 or more copies you are automatically in Lester's A team.