Dreaming the Future Can Create the Future
Then again, in the immortal words of Yogi Berra, "The future ain't what it used to be."
We also stand at the brink of worldwide ecological and civilizational collapse. We face a reckoning from the treacherous breach in our relationship with nature. We've been acting like a rock star trashing a hotel room, and it's the morning after. But this hotel is planet Earth. The guest rules are non-negotiable. If we don't change our ways fast, management may vote us off the island.
We're entering an age of nature. It calls for a new social contract of interdependence. Taking care of nature means taking care of people, and taking care of people means taking care of nature.
The ecological debt we've incurred is dire. We've precipitated climate change that's within one degree centigrade of the maximum temperature in the past million years. As NASA's chief climatologist James Hansen warns, "Beyond that, we will likely see changes that make Earth a different planet." Think Jurassic Park. Hansen and many other leading scientists say we have ten years at best to make a massive global shift, an extreme carbon makeover. It's show-time.
We're entering a drastic period of creative destruction. We've already begun to trigger what some ecologists call "regime shift," irreversible tipping points. Global warming is getting all the ink, but other intimately interdependent issues equal its magnitude: the mass extinction of 30-50% of Earth's biological and cultural diversity - freshwater shortages that will lead to wars - the universal poisoning of the biosphere - and the greatest extremes of inequality in modern history, a world that's 77% poor.
We're going to be busier than a cat in a room full of rocking chairs.
Periods of creative destruction also present transformative opportunities to make the world anew. These tectonic shocks are evolutionary exclamation points. They release vast amounts of energy and resources for renewal and reorganization. Novelty emerges, and small changes can have big influences. It's a time of creativity, innovation, freedom and transformation.
The grail is resilience - strengthening the capacity of natural and human systems to rebound- or to transform when the regime shifts. As Charles Darwin said, "It is not the strongest of the species that survive, nor the most intelligent, but the ones most responsive to change."
The driving force behind this unprecedented globalized collapse is financial. Hazel Henderson has characterized conventional economics as "a form of brain damage." We're experiencing its devastating effects right now. It rationalizes the insatiable predation of nature and people, while disappearing environmental and social costs from the balance sheet. It concentrates wealth and distributes poverty. It exalts greed and self-interest. It conflates free markets with democracy. It merges corporations and the state. Its foreign policy is empire. It has been a catastrophic success.
As Kevin Phillips has chronicled, every major empire over the past several hundred years has undergone a depressingly predictable cycle of collapse, usually within 10 to 20 years of its peak power.
The hallmarks are always the same:
· The financialization of the economy, moving from manufacturing to speculation;
· Very high levels of debt;
· Extreme economic inequality;
· And costly military overreaching.
The Dutch, Spanish and British empires followed this pattern. The US is repeating it. But as J. Paul Getty said, "Every time history repeats itself, the price goes up."
Yet there's an even deeper story behind empire crash.
Energy is a nation's master resource. Each empire has had an idiosyncratic ability to exploit a particular energy source that propelled its rise to economic power. The Dutch learned how to tap wood, wind and water. The British Empire fueled its ascendancy on coal. The American empire has dominated with oil.
The cautionary tale is this: No empire has been able to manage the transition to the next energy source. The joker in the deck this time around is the climate imperative to transition off fossil fuels worldwide. It requires the most complex and fiercely urgent passage in the history of human civilization. Nothing like it has ever been done.
Ecological regime change demands political regime change As Lester Brown wrote, "Socialism collapsed because it did not allow prices to tell the economic truth. Capitalism may collapse because it does not allow prices to tell the ecological truth. We are in a race between tipping points in nature and our political systems."
Just as economics is driving the destruction, it needs to power the restoration. The charge is to transform the global economy from a vicious cycle to a virtuous cycle.
As the Archbishop of Canterbury said, "The economy is a wholly owned subsidiary of the environment." Real wealth creation is based on replenishing natural systems and restoring the built environment, especially our infrastructure and cities. It's based on investing in our communities and workforce. It's been shown to work best when done all at once. Restoration is an estimated $100 trillion market. There's plenty of work to do, plenty of people to do it, and abundant financial incentive. And every dollar we spend on pre-disaster risk management will prevent seven dollars in later losses.
The rules of virtuous engagement aren't that complicated. As Fred Block wrote in "The Moral Economy, "The essential idea was brilliantly expressed in the title of a 1980s bestseller, All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten. The guiding principles are familiar rules such as: don't hit - take turns - play by the rules - listen to the teacher - don't waste food and art supplies - and be prepared to share. These principles produce order in the elementary school classroom, and they can also assure order and prosperity in our nation's economy."
The question is: Will we change our old bad habits fast enough to beat forbidding odds?
In 2006, the worm turned. David Orr calls it a "global ecological enlightenment." A big bang of brilliant, effective work is meeting with unprecedented receptivity. Yet still the pace of destruction outstrips our response. Real success will require a giant leap across the abyss on visionary currents of bold action. It will take skillful means. It will take a big heart. And in times like these, as Albert Einstein said, "Imagination is more important than knowledge."
Many of the solutions are already present. Where we don't know what to do, we have a good idea what directions to head in. Game-changing technological and social innovations are surfacing constantly. Global digital media can spread them at the speed of text messaging.
At the forefront is biomimicry, the art and science of mimicking nature's design genius. As Janine Benyus observes, nature has already done everything we want to do, without mining the past or mortgaging the future. There's nothing like having four billion years of R&D at your back.
The biomimicry company Novomer looked at excess CO2 in the atmosphere and asked: What would a plant do? It would treat it as food. Novomer figured out how to use CO2 as a feedstock to produce biodegradable green plastics. That's just one glimmer of what's possible.
Biomimicry is arguably the single most important design strategy to shoot the rapids of the next ten years. But it transcends gee-whiz technology. Biomimicry inspires us with nature's genius, and celebrates our kinship with the web of life. Among Navajo people, the worst insult you can say is, "You act like you have no relatives." Biomimicry invites us to act again as if we have relatives.
Indigenous peoples, our old-growth cultures, are the world's original biomimics. Indigenous and traditional wisdom hold equally crucial keys to restoration.
A riptide of capital is mainstreaming biomimicry and clean tech, now the third largest domain of venture capital investment. In Silicon Valley, the "watt.com" era has dawned. Compared with $100 billion for the entire Internet market, the worldwide energy market is $6 trillion. Google just put forth a $4.4 trillion Clean Energy plan. By 2030, it proposes to slash fossil fuel use by 88% and CO2 emissions by 95%.
The smart money is hot on the trail of the next industrial revolution. There's mounting pressure on Uncle Sam because government policies make or break markets.
Astoundingly the US has no national energy policy. That's hopefully about to change. David Orr, the nation's leading environmental educator, helped assemble a national network to deliver PCAP - the Presidential Climate Action Plan. It's a pragmatic 100-day action plan for the incoming 2009 administration, and it's in play.
But for now, the real action is happening at local and regional levels.
California, the world's sixth largest economy, passed AB 32, the world's first comprehensive climate change legislation, and is gearing up to install 12.5 square miles of solar panels - 12 times the previous largest. Massachusetts just passed the nation's most far-reaching package of renewables and green jobs legislation. Texas is about to build the biggest wind installation ever, surpassing Germany as the world leader.
Multi-city and multi-state collaborations are spreading nationwide. In the coal-fired Midwest, Re-Amp's 7-state network has helped accomplish serious state-level renewables and efficiency targets. The collaboration has also stopped all but one of 24 proposed new coal plants from being built.
Enough municipalities are competing for "greenest city" status to start a new sports league. Mayor Michael Bloomberg of New York, who produced the Big Apple's 2030 green plan, said: "Shrinking the world's carbon footprint is a pro-growth strategy, indeed the only pro-growth strategy for long term." Tellingly, the nation's greenest cities are the ones with the most active citizenry - where bottom-up meets top-down.
Demand for a green-collar workforce is rising far faster than supply. In the U.S., where income inequality is the highest of any industrialized country, these jobs pay $16-30 an hour at entry level - $33,000 to $62,000 a year. The green-collar restoration economy can and will help address economic, racial and political injustice while healing the atmosphere.
But the real impetus behind local initiatives is to re-boot Uncle Sam because national laws and policies severely restrict local activities. And the federal government is where the real money is.
Will Uncle Sam get on board, or at least get out of the way? Will the nation devolve into a radically decentralized, regionally governed country? Both? A decentralization of power seems almost inevitable, organized by bioregions appropriate to how nature functions.
Yet in truth the environment is a "globalocal" issue, and there's major movement internationally as well. Germany, with fewer sunny days than Michigan, is the world's solar leader because of government policies that have already resulted in 14% renewable energy. Spain, France, Italy and Greece are copying the policies. The European Union is aggressively driving new markets with CO2 caps and strong incentives for clean energy entrepreneurs.
Resource-poor Japan, the gold standard of energy efficiency, is making a major play to market its radically advanced conservation technologies worldwide. China has made top-level commitments to large-scale R&D on renewables and auto gas efficiency.
We need to take this work to scale during the next decade. Breakthrough technological innovations have to spread rapidly, as do the government policies that drive these markets. Of equal importance are social innovations and political regime change.
The new e-Parliament in Europe is reaching out directly to national lawmakers across Europe and the Mediterranean to accelerate the spread of policy best practices, model legislation and parliamentary tool kits. It's pushing to build a large-scale multinational green grid within the next decade. It has been instrumental in disseminating Costa Rica's successful forest policy. By incentivizing the support of ecosystem services, Costa Rica has restored the country's forest cover from 29% to 51%, and ecotourism is roaring.
The new national constitution of Ecuador just turned property law on its head. It's the first country to institute legally enforceable rights for nature and ecosystems. Working with Tom Linzey's Community Environmental Law Defense Fund, the Ecuadorian government modeled Linzey's similar groundbreaking work with 100 local communities in the U.S.
The governments of Australia and Canada have initiated national reconciliation through formal apologies to their First Peoples for past harms. The North owes a massive ecological debt to the South. Both among and within nations, the global restoration economy will go a long way toward healing the ravages of empire, genocide and racism.
These are landmark successes. But as Michael Kinsley of Rocky Mountain Institute says, "We've got to go from success stories to systemic change." It's going to take epic cooperation among business, government and civil society, and among nations. We need to play big and aim high.
It begins with a dream. In the words of Janine Benyus, "The criterion of success is that you keep yourself alive, and you keep your offspring alive. But it's not your offspring--it's your offspring's offsprings' offspring ten thousand years from now. Because you can't be there to take care of that offspring, the only thing you can do is to take care of the place that takes care of your offspring."
In that spirit, Bioneers initiated a collaborative project last year in our back yard called Dreaming New Mexico. Its purpose is to help reconcile human and natural systems at the state level.
The project co-director Peter Warshall came up with the idea of creating future maps of our state's dreams. The first is the Age of Renewables. The year is 2020 and we've done everything right. What might New Mexico's energy dream look like?
It's an eminently do-able dream, grounded in rigorous research and drawing heavily on our state's wealth of talent. The map shows the practical vision of a green grid, the available sources of local renewable power, a decentralized power system, and more. The back of the map breaks out key domains - local solar, wind and geothermal - as well as issues of governance, transportation and environmental justice. An accompanying pamphlet goes into depth.
With a grant from the Google.org Fund of the Tides Foundation, we've worked with Rebecca Moore, Tanya Keen, John Gardiner and the Google Earth Outreach team to adapt one part of the future map onto Google Earth. It's a new kind of storytelling - a "geo-narrative." You can see it on the web at: dreamingnewmexico.org.
We're now working on a future map of a localized food system. We hope these templates might be useful tools for other communities to dream their futures.
I'd like to close with the words of David Oates from an essay called "Imagine" in High Country News.
"To imagine is difficult. It takes courage - encouragement; it takes opportunities carefully constructed (by me or the fates). Then something magic happens: A key turns in a lock, eyebrows ascend on foreheads - and a new world is glimpsed, a 3-D moment that dazzles.
"A vision predicates an imaginative leap: that we are -- after all -- fundamentally connected to each other - that my fate and happiness are not private matters only, but a shared project. A tax cut takes no imagination: It's a few more bucks in your pocket. But seeing one's ownership in a community, one's own face in someone else's child, that takes imagination.
"Imagine - combining our resources to relieve suffering and to open up dead-ends of poverty and hopelessness. Imagine knowing that our fate is each other.
"Imagine: knowing that our fate also swims with the salmon and grows with the trees.
"Imagine living beyond yourself - finding the thing you're good at and in love with, even if it doesn't pay so well. That would be like coming back to life, wouldn't it? It would be like grace.
"Imagine."
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18 Comments so far
Show AllThis guy is all over the map on this one. Besides quoting a known idiot like Michael Kinsley or any of the bozos at the Rocky Mountain Institute, and pushing for a quantum reality the only real thing said here and I quote "At the forefront is biomimicry, the art and science of mimicking nature's design genius. As Janine Benyus observes, nature has already done everything we want to do, without mining the past or mortgaging the future. There's nothing like having four billion years of R&D at your back."
If nature had anything to do with it she/he would never have allowed the human species to get a large as it is. All of any of these problems can be solved by realizing we are way over populated and start working on solutions to solve overpopulation in the next generation.
I actually imagine the future -- how to grow food in the winter, how to heat houses, electricity generation improvements, transit improvements, a government that works, putting the global warming genie back in the bottle.
The trouble isn't that I'm wrong. At least some of the time I will be wrong, that's the nature of inventing and imagining, but I ask lots of people and soon I run really low on negative suggestions.
No, instead I find that I kind of overwhelm people, and good people, the best. They suffer cognitive dissonance. They kind of stagger away dazed. Then they don't do anything. Do you realize what this means? Nothing ever gets done!
What, does each of us need a protester sitting in front of our door on a hunger strike? Is that what it takes to be moved to compassionate action?
What exactly is a green-collar job?
On any given day, the plate from steelworker's rolling mill may go to Wal-Mart one day and a wind turbine mast the next. A civil engineer may be likewise may be tasked to design a coal prep plant one month and a public transit station the next, an ironworker may be erecting a wind turbine one day and a coal tipple the next.
And where did that salary range come from?
And I bet this Kenny Ausubel is probably, like many liberals, pretty hostile to union organizing.
It's one thing to dream but unless you make that dream come true, it will never come true. Maybe it's time we the people went back to our local elections and fought for a better future from the ground up. Obama most likely knows that given his victory speech. President Obama will try to push for changes for a better future but we the people must step up to the plate and cooperate and not let the monied elites cripple his chances. When the electorate stood up to corruption of the monied elites back during the Great Depression, FDR was able to overcome fierce opposition by Congress and the Courts. We can avoid another Great Depression if we all step up to the plate.
"President Obama will try to push for changes for a better future but we the people must step up to the plate and cooperate and not let the monied elites cripple his chances."
I think you have it backwards.
As his list of advisers and prospective appointments, his recent press conference, his jingoistic victory speech, and his friendly meeting with Bush shows, Obama will not push for much of anything in our interests. We have to push him - and more importantly, the US congress, to get what we want.
I understand the issue of Obama's appointments and his meeting with the current president but that's always normal. However, let's not forget that Reagan's appointees did not support his tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations but he pushed for it anyway. I know Obama's record in the Senate is mixed at best but as president, he has more room to freely decide unlike the Senate where his vote this way or that would rarely make much of a difference. Of course we're going to have to put pressure on him and Congress and he made no bones about that in his victory speech. However, this is only short term to some extent. We need to focus on long term solutions such as paying attention to our local elections and turning out better local and state leaders and fulfilling strongly influential positions with better candidates be they teachers, judges, sheriffs, business leaders, etc ... Take a look at the Congress members in Washington and check out their backgrounds before they made it to Washington. You would be disappointed to find out that a great deal of them in both parties were able to slip through the cracks due to poor turnout on the local and even state levels. It's like constructing a building on a faulty foundation. It's high time we learned from Howard Dean and paved the way for a better future for us all from the bottom up along with vetting the existing ones in Washington especially the newer members of Congress.
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sorry, duplicate post.
I want to make a difference. I think many of us do -- we just don't know where to start. This may be why the world is so fanatically enthusiastic about Obama. We know things are messed up and are desperately looking for leadership and guidance. But the leadership must come from within, and it starts with our core values. As long as everyone is still selfish, still obsessed with their own comfort at the expense of the health of the planet and its creatures, we can't change
So what is the ultimate new world you envision?
I think it looks a lot like the experimental, temporary communities we create in the "subculture" at festivals like Earthdance, Boom, Lightning in a Bottle and Burning Man. A place where we live camp on the earth in nature, live with much less, consume much less, and yet we're happier and radiantly healthy. These are places where people experiment with new ideas, technologies, foods, fashions and values.
Where we are in community, not isolation, and where our value is in what we contribute to change, in our creativity and our beauty and our talent -- not in the labels we wear and how much we buy and own and consume.
Where our culture is participatory, not passive. Where we can be free to express ourselves and express our sexuality, in all of its flavors. Where we are all created equal, regardless of our race or skin color.
Where we respect the human and animal rights and lives of others--including our fellow humans, the birds and insects and animals.
Where we tap the free energy that is all around us -- in the wind and sun and the water -- instead of burning fossil fuels that poison us.
Where we pay attention to the rhythms of the Earth and the seasons.
And where we are less depressed and more engaged because we are living in community, not isolation.
It's not all about regulations and policy -- it's about shifting the fundamental values at the core of our culture and society.
Sioux Rose
Traveling light: Great post. You make me want to time travel back to the 60's...
Unless you know how to travel faster than light, forget it. Even if time travel were possible, it's just as good as running away from the problem. In life, success comes when one learns to stand up to the problem and tackle it win or lose.
Change global economy from a vicious cycle to a virtuous cycle??
Are people that insane and stupid? To be that ignorant of the laws of ecology? The capitalist system and greater civilisation as a whole CANNOT be made into a virtuous cycle, no ifs, ands, buts about it. It is unsustainable at it's fundamental level.
No one is going to go into an office or into any business with a model to change US capitalism into democratic socialism or even abolish the model the civilised world has had for centuries: Steal what you can from what natives you can and convert them to the state religion.
"The question is: Will we change our old bad habits fast enough to beat forbidding odds?"
Considering that the Mayan/Hopi prophecy for the end of the Fifth World is bearing down on us like a locomotive, it's not looking good.
I don't see a critical mass of New Consciousness forming.
I see a lot of fear--mostly in regard to losing one's material comforts--and fear is not enough to create change.
I suspect that the dinosaurs were afraid of the asteroid, too....
Thank you for two things. Putting Darwin in context
, "It is not the strongest of the species that survive, nor the most intelligent, but the ones most responsive to change."
The key to indigenous wisdom is SPIRITUAL/SOCIAL. It is a social relationship with the creation that has thousands of years of adaptation experience. The Guarani are experiencing genocide along with the other indigenous peoples in South America - yet people think it is some sort of quaint battle against the titans of industry. These peoples 'get it' in ways most westerners cant even conceive. They are literally dying in standing up against the monoculture model that is raping Brazil. 'When they talk about mother earth they are talking about home, library, pharmacy, supermarket, sheltering and being sheltered, the veins of rivers, balancing- always balancing. The Amazon is/was not virgin, it is the result of thousands of years of indigenous stewardship.
In the 18th century Carl von Linne referred to the Guarani as "primus verus systematicus" in recognition of their intellectual contributions to biology!!!!
This indigenous science is embedded in the cultures. Write a letter to stop the genocide:
http://www.survival-international.org/tribes/guarani
You cannot 'instrumentalize' indigenous knowledge, it is alive as it is and can be learned. This is why massive monoculture moraoriums worldwide are needed. Whose land/forests are being decimated????
Sioux Rose
OLD GOAT: Thank you for caring passionately about this. Sometimes I wonder if as tree rings encode weather events, if everything ever experienced remains codified, and thus accessible to consciousness capable of sensing it.
Obama unleashed positive energy we can use. He can't change things alone.
Kenny Ausubel's positive article is quite a contrast with Chris Hedges negative one below.
Sioux Rose
I like this article because it shows that SOLID GREEN efforts are being made in other lands and they can serve as role models for our own. I wonder if, in the way Ithaca, NY had "Ithaca dollars," a GREEN currency could begin to circulate that's used to buy, barter, or trade for green items and/or services?
Obama could certainly use the labor pool waiting for something to do to train many willing persons in green technologies.
Just watching Cuba get hit with the 3rd hurricane this year alone and the Haitian school house possibly collapse from earlier wild weather destabilizing its not particularly well-built structure, we should realize that using 25% of the world's fossil fuels, our nation IS causing these weather events (which are lethal) to escalate.
Live simply, that others may simply live never felt truer.
I wonder where we can see the map of the future localized food system?
In the meantime, the most revolutionary thing any one can do grow their own food!