Destruction of Demand: How to Shrink Our Energy Footprint

- by Richard Hein­berg, Novem­ber 4, 2014, Post Car­bon Institute

The human econ­o­my is cur­rent­ly too big to be sus­tain­able. We know this because Glob­al Foot­print Net­work, which method­i­cal­ly tracks the rel­e­vant data, informs us that human­i­ty is now using 1.5 Earths’ worth of resources.

We can tem­porar­i­ly use resources faster than Earth regen­er­ates them only by bor­row­ing from the future pro­duc­tiv­i­ty of the plan­et, leav­ing less for our descen­dants. But we can­not do this for long. One way or anoth­er, the econ­o­my (and here we are talk­ing most­ly about the economies of indus­tri­al nations) must shrink until it sub­sists on what Earth can pro­vide long-term.

Say­ing “one way or anoth­er” implies that this process can occur either adver­tent­ly or inad­ver­tent­ly: that is, if we do not shrink the econ­o­my delib­er­ate­ly, it will con­tract of its own accord after reach­ing non-nego­tiable lim­its. As I explained in my book The End of Growththere are rea­sons to think that such lim­its are already start­ing to bite. Indeed, most indus­tri­al economies are either slow­ing or find­ing it dif­fi­cult to grow at rates cus­tom­ary dur­ing the sec­ond half of the last cen­tu­ry. Mod­ern economies have been con­struct­ed to require growth, so that shrink­age caus­es defaults and lay­offs; mere lack of growth is per­ceived as a seri­ous prob­lem requir­ing imme­di­ate appli­ca­tion of eco­nom­ic stim­u­lus. If noth­ing is done delib­er­ate­ly to reverse growth or pre-adapt to inevitable eco­nom­ic stag­na­tion and con­trac­tion, the like­ly result will be an episod­ic, pro­tract­ed, and chaot­ic process of col­lapse con­tin­u­ing for many decades or per­haps cen­turies, with innu­mer­able human and non-human casu­al­ties. This may in fact be the most like­ly path forward.

Is it pos­si­ble, at least in prin­ci­ple, to man­age the process of eco­nom­ic con­trac­tion so as to avert chaot­ic col­lapse? Such a course of action would face daunt­ing obsta­cles. Busi­ness, labor, and gov­ern­ment all want more growth in order to expand tax rev­enues, cre­ate more jobs, and pro­vide returns on invest­ments. There is no sig­nif­i­cant con­stituen­cy with­in soci­ety advo­cat­ing a delib­er­ate, pol­i­cy-led process of degrowth, while there are pow­er­ful inter­ests seek­ing to main­tain growth and to deny evi­dence that expan­sion is no longer feasible.

Nev­er­the­less, man­aged con­trac­tion would almost cer­tain­ly yield bet­ter out­comes than chaot­ic collapse—for every­one, elites includ­ed. If there is a the­o­ret­i­cal path­way to a sig­nif­i­cant­ly small­er econ­o­my that does not pass through the har­row­ing waste­land of con­flict, decay, and dis­so­lu­tion, we should try to iden­ti­fy it. The fol­low­ing mod­est ten-point plan is an attempt to do so.

1. Ener­gy: cap, reduce, and ration it. Ener­gy is what makes the econ­o­my go, and expand­ed ener­gy con­sump­tion is what makes it grow. Cli­mate sci­en­tists advo­cate cap­ping and reduc­ing car­bon emis­sions to pre­vent plan­e­tary dis­as­ter, and cut­ting car­bon emis­sions inevitably entails reduc­ing ener­gy from fos­sil fuels. How­ev­er, if we aim to shrink the size of the econ­o­my, we should restrain not just fos­sil ener­gy, but all ener­gy con­sump­tion. The fairest way to do that would prob­a­bly be with trad­able ener­gy quo­tas.

2. Make it renew­able. As we reduce over­all ener­gy pro­duc­tion and con­sump­tion, we must rapid­ly reduce the pro­por­tion of our ener­gy com­ing from fos­sil sources while increas­ing the pro­por­tion from renew­able sources in order to avert cat­a­stroph­ic cli­mate change—which, if allowed to run its cur­rent course, will itself result in chaot­ic eco­nom­ic col­lapse. How­ev­er, this is a com­pli­cat­ed process. It will not be pos­si­ble mere­ly to unplug coal pow­er plants, plug in solar pan­els, and con­tin­ue with busi­ness as usu­al: we have built our immense mod­ern indus­tri­al infra­struc­ture of cities, sub­urbs, high­ways, air­ports, and fac­to­ries to take advan­tage of the unique qual­i­ties and char­ac­ter­is­tics of fos­sil fuels. Thus, as we tran­si­tion to alter­na­tive ener­gy sources, the ways we use ener­gy will have to adapt, often in pro­found ways. For exam­ple, our food system—which is cur­rent­ly over­whelm­ing­ly depen­dent on fos­sil fuels for trans­port, fer­til­iz­ers, pes­ti­cides, and herbicides—will have to become far more local­ized. In the best instance, it would tran­si­tion to an eco­log­i­cal, peren­ni­al-based agri­cul­ture designed for the long haul.

3. Restore the com­mons. As Karl Polanyi point­ed out in the 1940s, it was the com­mod­i­fi­ca­tion of land, labor, and mon­ey that drove the “great trans­for­ma­tion” lead­ing to the mar­ket econ­o­my we know today. With­out con­tin­ued eco­nom­ic growth, the mar­ket econ­o­my prob­a­bly can’t func­tion long. This sug­gests we should run the trans­for­ma­tion­al process in reverse by decom­mod­i­fy­ing land, labor, and mon­ey. Decom­mod­i­fi­ca­tion effec­tive­ly trans­lates to a reduc­tion in the use of mon­ey to medi­ate human inter­ac­tions. We could decom­mod­i­fy labor by help­ing peo­ple estab­lish pro­fes­sions and voca­tions, as opposed to seek­ing jobs (“slav­ery on the install­ment plan”), and by pro­mot­ing work­er own­er­ship of com­pa­nies. As econ­o­mist Hen­ry George said over a cen­tu­ry ago, land—which peo­ple do not cre­ate by their labor—should be owned by the com­mu­ni­ty, not by indi­vid­u­als or cor­po­ra­tions; and access to land should be grant­ed on the basis of need and the will­ing­ness to use it in the community’s interest.

4. Get rid of debt. Decom­mod­i­fy­ing mon­ey means let­ting it revert to its func­tion as an inert medi­um of exchange and store of val­ue, and reduc­ing or elim­i­nat­ing the expec­ta­tion that mon­ey should repro­duce more of itself. This ulti­mate­ly means doing away with inter­est and the trad­ing or manip­u­la­tion of cur­ren­cies. Make invest­ing a com­mu­ni­ty-medi­at­ed process of direct­ing cap­i­tal toward projects that are of unques­tioned col­lec­tive ben­e­fit. The first step: can­cel exist­ing debt. Then ban deriv­a­tives, and tax and tight­ly reg­u­late the buy­ing and sell­ing of finan­cial instru­ments of all kinds.

5. Rethink mon­ey. Vir­tu­al­ly all of today’s nation­al cur­ren­cies are loaned into exis­tence (usu­al­ly by banks). Debt-based mon­e­tary sys­tems assume both the grow­ing need for debt, and the near-uni­ver­sal abil­i­ty to repay it, with interest—relatively safe assump­tions when economies are sta­ble and expand­ing. But debt-based mon­ey prob­a­bly won’t work in an econ­o­my that is steadi­ly con­tract­ing: as the amount of out­stand­ing debt ebbs in tan­dem with ris­ing num­bers of defaults, so does the mon­ey sup­ply, lead­ing to a defla­tion­ary col­lapse. In recent years the pan­ic to pre­vent such a col­lapse has led cen­tral banks in the US, Japan, Chi­na, and the UK to inject tril­lions of dol­lars, yen, yuan, and pounds into their respec­tive nation­al economies. Such extreme mea­sures can­not be main­tained indef­i­nite­ly, nor revert­ed to repeat­ed­ly. When debt-based cur­ren­cies do fail, alter­na­tives will be need­ed. Nations and com­mu­ni­ties should pre-adapt by devel­op­ing an ecosys­tem of cur­ren­cies serv­ing com­ple­men­tary func­tions, as advo­cat­ed by alter­na­tive mon­e­tary the­o­rists such as Thomas Gre­co and Michael Lin­ton.

6. Pro­mote equi­ty. In a shrink­ing econ­o­my, extreme inequal­i­ty is a social time bomb whose explo­sion often takes the form of rebel­lion and revolt. Reduc­ing eco­nom­ic inequal­i­ty requires two simul­ta­ne­ous lines of action: First, reduce the sur­plus of those who have the most by tax­ing wealth and insti­tut­ing a max­i­mum income rate. Sec­ond, improve the lot of those who have least by mak­ing it eas­i­er for peo­ple to get by with min­i­mal use of mon­ey (pre­vent evic­tions; sub­si­dize food and make it eas­i­er for peo­ple to grow their own). This effort can be helped through the wide­spread cul­tur­al glo­ri­fi­ca­tion of the virtue of mate­r­i­al mod­esty (the reverse of most cur­rent adver­tis­ing messages).

7. Reduce pop­u­la­tion. If the econ­o­my shrinks but pop­u­la­tion con­tin­ues to expand, there will be a small­er pie to divide among more peo­ple. On the oth­er hand, eco­nom­ic con­trac­tion will entail much less hard­ship if pop­u­la­tion ceas­es grow­ing and starts to decline. Pop­u­la­tion growth leads to over­crowd­ing and hyper-com­pe­ti­tion any­way. How to achieve pop­u­la­tion decline with­out vio­lat­ing basic human rights? Enact non-coer­cive poli­cies to pro­mote small fam­i­lies and non-repro­duc­tion; wher­ev­er pos­si­ble, employ social incen­tives rather than mon­e­tary ones.

8. Re-local­ize. One of the dif­fi­cul­ties in the tran­si­tion to renew­able ener­gy is that liq­uid fuels are hard to sub­sti­tute. Oil dri­ves near­ly all trans­porta­tion cur­rent­ly, and it is high­ly unlike­ly that alter­na­tive fuels will enable any­thing like cur­rent lev­els of mobil­i­ty (elec­tric air­lin­ers and car­go ships are non-starters; mas­sive pro­duc­tion of bio­fu­els is a mere fan­ta­sy). That means com­mu­ni­ties will be obtain­ing few­er pro­vi­sions from far-off places. Of course trade will con­tin­ue in some form: even hunter-gath­er­ers trade. Re-local­iza­tion will mere­ly reverse the recent glob­al­iz­ing trade trend until most neces­si­ties are once again pro­duced close by, so that we—like our ances­tors only a cen­tu­ry ago—are once again acquaint­ed with the peo­ple who make our shoes and grow our food.

9. Re-rural­ize. Urban­iza­tion was the dom­i­nant demo­graph­ic trend of the 20thcentury, but it can­not be sus­tained. Indeed, with­out cheap trans­port and abun­dant ener­gy, megac­i­ties will become increas­ing­ly dys­func­tion­al. Mean­while, we’ll need lots more farm­ers. Solu­tion: ded­i­cate more soci­etal resources to towns and vil­lages, make land avail­able to young farm­ers, and work to revi­tal­ize rur­al culture.

10. Pro­mote the pur­suit of social and inner sources of hap­pi­ness. Con­sumerism was a solu­tion to the prob­lem of over­pro­duc­tion; it entailed engi­neer­ing the human psy­che to become more indi­vid­u­al­is­tic and to demand ever more mate­r­i­al stim­u­la­tion. Beyond a cer­tain point this doesn’t make us hap­pi­er (in fact, just the oppo­site), and it can’t go on much longer. When people’s abil­i­ty to afford con­sumer prod­ucts wanes, as does the economy’s abil­i­ty to pro­duce and deliv­er those prod­ucts, peo­ple must be encour­aged to enjoy more tra­di­tion­al and innate­ly sat­is­fy­ing rewards—including philo­soph­i­cal con­tem­pla­tion and the appre­ci­a­tion of nature. Music, dance, art, ora­to­ry, poet­ry, par­tic­i­pa­to­ry sports, and the­ater can all be pro­duced local­ly and fea­tured at sea­son­al fes­ti­vals: fun for the whole family!

*          *          *

More rec­om­men­da­tions could cer­tain­ly be field­ed, but ten is a nice round number.

Sure­ly many read­ers will won­der: Isn’t this just run­ning “progress” in reverse, and isn’t doing so anti­thet­i­cal to our core val­ue as a soci­ety? Yes, dur­ing the past few cen­turies we have become hooked on the idea of progress, and we have come to define progress almost entire­ly in terms of tech­no­log­i­cal inno­va­tion and eco­nom­ic growth—two trends that are approach­ing dead ends. If we wish to avoid the cog­ni­tive pain of hav­ing to relin­quish our deep-seat­ed infat­u­a­tion with progress, we could rede­fine that word in social or eco­log­i­cal terms. Sim­i­lar­ly, many peo­ple who judge that soci­ety is far too wed­ded to the pur­suit of eco­nom­ic growth to be per­suad­ed to give it up advo­cate redefin­ing “growth” in terms of increas­ing human hap­pi­ness and soci­etal sus­tain­abil­i­ty. Such efforts at rede­f­i­n­i­tion have some lim­it­ed use­ful­ness. Cer­tain­ly the act of col­lec­tive self-lim­i­ta­tion involved in delib­er­ate­ly shrink­ing the econ­o­my would denote a new lev­el of species matu­ri­ty that would like­ly be reflect­ed through­out our cul­ture. Social­ly and spir­i­tu­al­ly, this would be a step forward—and is hence per­haps describ­able as progress or growth. But it is hard to monop­o­lize the rede­f­i­n­i­tion of terms like “progress” or “growth”: there are already pow­er­ful inter­ests hard at work tying new mean­ings of the lat­ter to inven­tive inter­pre­ta­tions of man­i­cured and manip­u­lat­ed GDP, employ­ment, and stock mar­ket data.

It might be more hon­est to refer to the pro­gram out­lined above as a sim­ple rever­sion to san­i­ty. It is also our best chance for pre­serv­ing the best of civilization’s sci­en­tif­ic, cul­tur­al, and tech­no­log­i­cal achieve­ments over the last few centuries—achievements that could be lost alto­geth­er if soci­ety col­laps­es in a way sim­i­lar to past civilizations.

The rec­om­men­da­tions above imply the abil­i­ty and will­ing­ness of elites to turn the ship around. But both their abil­i­ty and will­ing­ness to do this are ques­tion­able. Our cur­rent polit­i­cal sys­tem seems designed to pre­vent col­lec­tive self-lim­i­ta­tion, and also to resist seri­ous attempts at reform. The plainest gauge of the like­li­hood of the imple­men­ta­tion of my ten-point plan is a sim­ple thought exer­cise: name a sin­gle promi­nent politi­cian, financier, or indus­tri­al­ist who would pro­pose or advo­cate even a small por­tion of it.

Still, there’s a deep irony here. While there’s no sup­port for degrowth among elites, many if not most of the ele­ments of the above plan have a very large real or poten­tial con­stituen­cy among the pop­u­lace in gen­er­al. How many peo­ple would pre­fer life in a small, sta­ble com­mu­ni­ty to exis­tence in an over­crowd­ed, hyper-com­pet­i­tive megac­i­ty; a pro­fes­sion to a job; debt-free life to the chains of oner­ous finan­cial oblig­a­tions? Maybe by artic­u­lat­ing the plan and its objec­tives, and explor­ing the impli­ca­tions in more detail, we can help this con­stituen­cy coa­lesce and grow.

(A talk giv­en at a Teach-in on Tech­no-Utopi­anism and the Fate of the Earth, http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/821939 orga­nized by Inter­na­tion­al Forum on Glob­al­iza­tion, Octo­ber 26, 2014, at The Great Hall at The Coop­er Union, New York City)


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