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Eco-municipalities and Transition Towns : Sustainability and Community Development. Community Development Society Annual International Conference J uly 26, 2010. JERRY HEMBD State Specialist Community and Economic Development University of Wisconsin-Extension
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Eco-municipalities and Transition Towns:Sustainability and Community Development Community Development Society Annual International Conference July 26, 2010
JERRY HEMBD State Specialist Community and Economic Development University of Wisconsin-Extension Associate Professor of Economics Department of Business and Economics University of Wisconsin-Superior
Overview • Relate to conference theme • Personal interest • Eco-municipalities and The Natural Step • Transition Towns and the Transition Initiative • Community development connection
The Role of Community in Economic and Disaster Recovery “We’ve changed the planet, changed it in large and fundamental ways. . . . We need . . . increased engagement. Some of that engagement will be local: building the kind of communities and economies that can withstand what’s coming.” Bill McKibben Source: McKibben, Bill. Eaarth: Making a Life on a Tough New Planet. New York: Times Books, 2010.
The Role of Community in Economic and Disaster Recovery “Disaster demonstrates . . . the factors determining whether you live or die are the health of your immediate community and the justness of your society. . . If paradise now arises in hell, it’s because in the suspension of the usual order and the failure of most systems, we are free to live and act another way.” Rebecca Solnit Source: Solnit, Rebecca. A Paradise Built in Hell: The Extraordinary Communities That Arise in Disaster. New York: Viking, 2009.
Personal Background and Interest • Eco-municipalities and The Natural Step (TNS) in Wisconsin • Training in both approaches • Sustainable Communities Public Policy Forum • Regional (NCRCRD) Extension sustainable communities curriculum development • Sustainable Twin Ports • Potential links between such approaches and community developers
Background • Origin – 1989 in Sweden • Key figure – Dr. Karl-Henrik Robèrt • International • Sweden, US, Canada, Australia, Brazil, France, Italy, Japan, New Zealand, South Africa, UK • 60 eco-municipalities in Sweden; 40+ in US
Background • Key text: The Natural Step for Communities by Sarah James and Torbjorn Lahti (New Society, 2004) • Web resources: • http://www.naturalstep.org/ • http://www.thenaturalstep.org/en/usa • http://www.thenaturalstep.org/en/canada
Distinguishing Characteristics • Systems framework – “preanalytic vision” • Science-based with solid research support • Open source; non-proprietorial • Four key principles or system conditions • Fundamental human needs (Max-Neef) • “Backcasting” from principles • Participatory, process-oriented, non-prescriptive
Four Sustainability Principles In a sustainable society, nature is not subject to systematically increasing... ...concentrations of substances extracted from the Earth’s crust, ...concentrations of substances produced by society, ...degradation by physical means, and, in that society... ...people are not subject to conditions that systematically undermine their capacity to meet their needs.
Fundamental Human Needs Subsistence Protection Participation Idleness Affection Understanding Creativity Identity Freedom
ABCD Awareness Creative Solutions Decide on Priorities Baseline Future Present Does it move us in the right direction? Is it a flexible platform? Is it a good return on investment?
Seven Steps to Success • Finding the Fire Souls • Initial education/awareness raising • Official endorsement • Involving the implementers • Applying the sustainability framework • Whole plan endorsement • Keeping it going (institutionalization) Source: The Natural Step for Communities by Sarah James and Torbjorn Lahti (New Society, 2004)
Background • Origin – 2005-2006 in Ireland (Kinsale) and England (Totnes) • Key figure – Rob Hopkins • International • Ireland, Scotland, US, Italy, Japan, Sweden, Germany, Belgium, Holland, New Zealand • 321 “official” initiatives; 198 “mulling” initiatives
Background • Key text: Transition Handbook by Rob Hopkins (Green Books, 2008) • Web resources: • http://www.transitionnetwork.org/ • http://www.transitionus.org/ • http://www.transitiontowns.org/ (wiki)
Distinguishing Characteristics • Peak oil and climate change as drivers • Power of a positive vision • Psychology of change (and addiction) • Permaculture concept as a principal foundation • Energy descent plans • Building resilience • Participatory, process-oriented, non-prescriptive • Community-level origin and focus
Climate Change and Peak Oil as Fundamental Drivers of Change
Where are we going? Techno-explosion (brown tech) Climax Techno-stability (green tech) Energy & Resource Use Population Pollution Industrial Ascent (Modernism) Creative Descent (Permaculture) Earth stewardship Pre-industrial sustainable culture Collapse/lifeboats (civilization triage) Historical Time Future Time Baby Boom Agriculture 10,000 yrs BP Industrial Revolution Great Grand Children
The Four Energy Descent and Climate Scenarios Source: www.futurescenarios.org
Peak Oil and Climate Change • PLANNED RELOCALISATION • local resilience • carbon reduction • consume closer to home • produce closer to home • play closer to home • decentralised energy infrastructure • the Great Reskilling • localised food • energy descent plans • local medicinal capacity • local currencies • CLIMATE CHANGE • (a la Stern et al) • climate engineering • carbon capture andstorage • tree-based carbonoffsets • internationalemissions trading • climate adaptation • improved transportation logistics • nuclear power • PEAK OIL • (a la Hirsch et al) • coal to liquids • gas to liquids • relaxed drilling regulations • massively scaled biofuels • tar sands and non-conventional oils • resource nationalism and stockpiling
12 Steps of Transition • Set up a steering group and design its demise from the outset • Awareness raising • Lay the foundation • Organize a Great Unleashing • Form sub-groups • Use Open Space
12 Steps of Transition • Develop visible practical manifestations of the project • Facilitate the Great Reskilling • Build a bridge to Local Government • Honor the elders • Let it go where it wants to go • Create an Energy Descent Plan
Community Development Connection • Community as context or unit of analysis place based, asset based, action oriented • Localization and resilience • Systems thinking or approach (holistic) • Theory and practice to build knowledge base • Process comparability science-based context • Local government involvement • Sustainability imperative and community development?