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Some thoughts on Richard Heinberg’s ”Envisioning a Livable Future”

December 10, 2024

Few in recent years have made a more significant contribution to our ecological salvation than Richard, and in my dogmatic opinion his most recent essay is stating many of the lessons we need to learn fast if we are going to get through to a satisfactory world. But there are themes on which I believe we need to go further than Richard does, and to be more emphatic than he is regarding directions that need to be taken.

There can be no debate with Richard’s outline of our dire predicament, nor of his claim that most people fail to grasp how serious it is. And I have no doubt that his general vision of the way out of the situation is correct. My concern is that we can be much more emphatic about it than Richard is, and we need to be shouting it from the rooftops.

But first a comment or two on Richard’s discussion of the situation. He rightly argues against tech-fix optimism, but I think his case could have been much stronger. The three most impressive studies I know of by Parrique, Hickel and Kallis, and Haberle review hundreds on papers and find that, in general, no absolute “decoupling” of resource and energy use from GDP growth is occurring, and is not remotely likely to be achieved. If you increase GDP, you will be using more resources to do it. Yet we are so far beyond sustainable levels of resource use and ecological impact that resource use must be reduced to a small fraction of current levels. There is no possibility that better technology and more recycling can cut them to sustainable levels while production, consumption, lifestyles and GDP continue to increase. Many, including too many green people, adhere to the myth that solutions can be found on the supply side, that is, in solutions that enable continued rich-world affluent living, while the resource and environmental impacts can be cut sufficiently. The action has to be on the demand side; that is, on transitioning to lifestyles and systems that enable dramatic reduction in resource use. The solution has to be a Simpler Way, involving far resource-simpler lifestyles and systems.

Richard focuses on the population factor in the I=PAT equation. I don’t think this is a wise priority. Of course there are too many people trying to live too affluently, but you and I can’t do much to reduce population, and it seems to be tapering. It will probably only increase by 20%, whereas world GDP increases 3% every year, and the mainstream’s determination is to keep it growing forever. Getting rid of that suicidal system is the main priority.

Richard doesn’t deal head on with this supremely important factor generating our now probably fatal predicament, which is: the economy, stupid. We are trapped in a system that is by nature a growth system. We are producing and consuming far too much, but our economy must have constant growth without end. There can be no conceivable solution to the polycrisis without dramatic degrowth down to levels of production, consumption and GDP that are a small fraction of present levels. This means we must face up to, among many other historically astronomically big changes, scrapping capitalism. It also means eliminating interest on loans, and it means abandoning affluence (the title of my widely ignored 1985 book). Richard seems to have taken the advice he once gave me when he told me that in America to criticize capitalism is like spitting on the flag.

Richard’s account seems to cast us as the culprits. “We” are indeed culpable, but ordinary individual people are not the main causes of the polycrisis. The main causes are our systems. They are far too resource-squandering, and they are geared for growth. For instance, our food system is appallingly energy intensive, transport dependent, nutrient wasteful and soil damaging. Local agricultural systems can totally avoid these evils (see below). Again, obviously by far the most seriously mistaken system we have is the economic system. Richard does not emphasize sufficiently that none of the big problems can be solved unless we face up to dramatic degrowth, probably down to per capita resource consumption rates around 20% of those in rich countries today.

There is only one social form that can enable this. It must be about most people living in small, cooperative, highly self-sufficient and self-governing communities, in control of their local economies, which are driven by needs and not by profit or market forces. (For details, see The Alternative and the Pigface Point video.)

Our study of egg supply shows why. The supermarket supply path has vast global input chains involving factories, trucks, feed mills, chemicals, “waste” dumping, marketing costs, freezers, computers, insurance and expensive technologies. We found that the energy and dollar costs of backyard and village co-op egg supply were around 1% of those for the supermarket egg. In addition, all “wastes” can go to nearby gardens and methane producers, eliminating the need for chicken feed mills and sewer systems. It would be the same for many other items that can be supplied via local economies.

Taking collective control of the fate of our communities would enable us to solve most, if not all, of the social problems we have now. We could eliminate unemployment, poverty, stress, loneliness and depression, by making sure everyone has a valued livelihood, while cutting the work-for-money week to about two days.

Many ventures now illustrate the wisdom of this path, especially the Catalan Integrative Cooperative and various ecovillages, such as Dancing Rabbit, where various measures such as energy use are around 10% of US averages. My studies of an alternative homestead, how a Sydney suburb could be remade, and the Pigface Point video document show how such savings can be made.

This vision does not jeopardize sensible socially valuable technologies, universities, modern medicine, etc. The evidence is that simpler ways can increase the experienced quality of life.

Richard’s thoughts on what’s needed are sound, but we need to elaborate well beyond the two main themes he very briefly mentions, i.e., localized food production and “social relations”. As I see it the key to our salvation is to be found in the Transition Town arena. That is, we need to build systems in our suburbs and towns which enable us to meet as many of our need as possible though cooperative arrangements, commons, worker bee committees and town assemblies. There can be an important place for small private firms and farms nearby, but we have to take social control over “development” and not allow it to be determined by profit or market forces. This is an anarchist vision, not a centralized socialist way.

Obviously none of this is going to happen unless there is, as Richard realizes, profound change in ideas and values, away from the quest for wealth and property towards concern for the common good, community, and deriving life satisfaction from non-material pursuits. The social form sketched above could not work well without such dispositions, but it would reward and reinforce them. We would all see that our quality of life depended primarily on how well our town was working, rather than on our personal wealth, and it would be satisfying to join worker bees, help make the town’s decisions, and make sure all were provided for well. Many eco-villages are providing inspiring instances of these positive dynamics. The goal has to be moving existing towns in this direction.

It is very likely that there is going to be a huge global collapse before long. If we are lucky, it will be slow-onset, giving time for people to realize that the old growth and affluence path is no longer going to provide for them, and that they must seek to build cooperative, self-sufficient and frugal local systems.

It seems to me that the general perspective I’ve sketched above is very difficult to disagree with, and that we need to argue and state it and the reasoning behind it strongly whenever we can. Richard gives the impression that it is only one option among many that are worth considering. My concern has been to persuade him to advocate it more strongly in the future as the only way out.

Ted Trainer

Dr. Ted Trainer is a Conjoint Lecturer in the School of Social Sciences, University of New South Wales. He has taught and written about sustainability and justice issues for many years. He is also developing Pigface Point, an alternative lifestyle educational site near Sydney.

Many of his writings are available free at his website The Simpler Way.

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