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12 May 2008

Rising Energy Prices call for Efficiency

uSwitch and Martin's Money Tips have respectively emailed me in the past two weeks. The first predicts as worst case scenario of a 46% price rice in gas & energy prices and a best case of 10%. The second predicted a 35% price rise.

I've no idea whether switching from one supplier to another will make any difference, but here are some things we can do to reduce fuel bills:

Electricity

  • Turn off wireless modems when not being used
  • Unplug mobile phone chargers
  • Switch off anything at the wall with a standby
  • Use low energy lightbulb
  • Only boil the water in the kettle you need
  • Switch computers off / into sleep modes
  • Do short washes in your washing machine

I'm good at this lot. With OCD and a thing about plugs, it's dead easy. Small appliances may not seem like big things - but their cumulative effect really mounts up.

Gas

  • Use your microwave more, your oven less for basic reheating
  • Use a lid on pots to retain heat
  • Turn off radiators in rooms you don't use
  • If the flame licks up the sides, the heat is too high or the pot too small
  • Let things cook in residual heat

Water

And just for good measure, let's save water too. I argued about our direct debit level when we moved here. The water company wanted it higher. Now, even though we're paying the lower monthly level, our account is at least £20 in credit.

  • Flush the toilet when you need to, not every time
  • Have showers instead of baths
  • Don't have the tap running when you brush your teeth or wash your dishes

Now, more than ever, if we use our energy and resources inefficiently, we'll be working to earn money which simply goes down the drain (or up the flue).

There's another load of tips which you can use for more efficient driving (I'm expecting fuel prices to soar too) - apparently it is possible to save 40% of your petrol bill - but I will blog this another time.

07 May 2008

Oil Price "May Hit $200 a Barrel"

This article cites different factors at work right now causing a super-spike where oil is $200 a barrel.

To put that in context, it's currently about $120 a barrel, up 400% from 2001 and have increased 25% in the last 4 months.

I can appreciate it's not for reasons of peak oil here (although who really knows if we have falling production) but the spike could be a taste of what is to come and if ity happens is expected to hit the economy.

Read the story here.

04 May 2008

Food Crisis: The Silent Tsunami

I've been meaning to write more about the food crisis, but I've been studying for my massage exams coming up soon, so it's bee a little quite on this front.

The next thing I was going to mention in my exploration of food was something Mahatma Gandhi espoused. He said that people should try to look after themselves. If they could not, then the family should look after them. And if the family cannot look after them, the village should. And if the village couldn't the region should etc.

In short, he espoused self-reliance and autonomy at the most local level possible.

Particularly in the developing world, I believe that developing countries are better off developing their internal economies and their internal level of affluence at the most local level. Because the globalised market is pitted against them.

Take supermarkets sourcing vegetables for example. They don't buy from poor individuals, they buy from large companies that pay lots of workers small wages. The trickle down effect of wealth is negligible particularly if individuals and families, becoming landless through the process of industrialisation - then sink below the level of subsistence because they can no longer grow their own food or forage on common land.

These people would be far better off if they had some land on which they could grow food, and  be able participate in small scale economic activities and production on a local level as part of a local economy, rather than being employed by large companies and the smallest and least powerful units in a massive globalised industrial complex.

Globalisation was supposed to make everyone richer.

My professional insight and analysis of this is this: bollocks. It was designed to leverage open national economies across the world to the clutches of large companies seeking new markets, cheaper labour with fewer human rights, supporting their transnational expansion.

Globalisation was supposed to work because of "comparative advantage theory". In short, we all do what we're best at. On a superficial level, it sounds quite smart. I mean, no-one can be good at everything so it;s good to share jobs out.

That's as may be in a town or a city with people, but on a global level it doesn't work for a number of reasons - prior accumulation of capital and information advantage through colonisation of countries; inequal distribution of world resources (forests, minerals, raw materials); different weather patterns etc. etc.

So it ends up being like this: one country which has already got the money and resources, technical knowledge and capital, starts producing computer chips. Then another country without the benefit of similar development and support and resources, gets to be good at making bananas. Who do you think is going to turn out to be richest?

I think that in the long term (and this is quite apart from the forthcoming necessity as a condition of peak oil) we are all better off by becoming more local. Because local economies are going to be what matters in the post carbon age.

In the age of peak oil and resource depletion, efficiency is key. And with spiralling fuel and food prices, globalised economics will actually come to be seen as a bloated, wasteful and inefficient means of meeting our real, basic needs.

To meet the coming challenges, we need to localise our food production, and localise to the closest possible unit - like Mahatma Gandhi's sentiments above. This has happened with Cuba in its (albeit artificial) experience of peak oil. Something like 50% of Havana's vegetable food is produced within Havana itself.

The best way of maintaining food security will be for it to be produced as close to home as possible. Local independence and self-reliance unhitches people from the trials and the uncertainty of global food economics.

Which is why I think we should all be growing our own, and participating localised food economies.

Although it's more contingent for people in developing countries to start moving towards food independence, it's only slightly less relevant for us here in the UK because we're richer. The changes will certainly hit us where it hurts sooner or later.

And I've wondered for a long time whether all this isn't just crazy thinking and maybe I'm some crazed doomster survivalist just itching for societal breakdown.

But then I read this evening on the BBC that the results of a UNESCO report cites a healthy proportion of what I'm saying here. The WTO chief says aid should focus on improving agriculture.

It's late and I'm not sure I have an easy conclusion to all of this. Perhaps I'll just leave it there for tonight.

But I am interested in your opinions. What do you think about food crises being reported around the world? What's the solution? I'd love to hear from you.

 

03 May 2008

From Rumi

I died from minerality and became vegetable;

And From vegetativeness I died and became animal.

I died from animality and became man.

Then why fear disappearance through death?

Next time I shall die

Bringing forth wings and feathers like angels;

After that, soaring higher than angels -

What you cannot imagine,

I shall be that.

- Rumi, 13th century love poet

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