Transition Culture

An Evolving Exploration into the Head, Heart and Hands of Energy Descent

Transition Culture has moved

I no longer blog on this site. You can now find me, my general blogs, and the work I am doing researching my forthcoming book on imagination, on my new blog.

Monthly archive for February 2006

Showing results 1 - 5 of 27 for the month of February, 2006.


28 Feb 2006

Eco-Build ’06. Talk No.1. Stephen Tindale – Greenpeace

**Eco-Build ’06. Talk No.1. Stephen Tindale – Greenpeace**

tindale*Over the next 3 days I will report on 3 of the best talks I attended at EcoBuild. While my notes are not comprehensive, I hope they will convey something that you will find useful*. Stephen Tindale is the Executive Director of Greenpeace UK, and his talk was called Tackling Climate Change. Much of his talk was arguing the case the climate change is a reality, which I won’t talk too much about here as I am assuming the if you are visiting **TransitionCulture.org** you are already familiar with the concept. He argued that rather than a long term problem, there is actually a very small window of opportunity in which to be able to address the problem. What interested me most was at the end of his talk when he addressed energy use in buildings.

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Categories: Climate Change, Energy, Politics


27 Feb 2006

Steve Bell on Iraq

Steve BellThe wonderful Steve Bell hits the nail on the head again about the situation in Iraq. Brings to mind the talk by Stan Goff on Global Public Media where he says that an exit strategy from Iraq is not a strategy at all, but a command, ‘everybody out in three months’… .

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Categories: Politics


27 Feb 2006

Eco-Build ’06. Three Beacons of Sanity – strawbale, hemp and Earthships…

eb2Amid the ocean of ‘sustainable’ concrete salesmen, property developers and petrochemical insulation companies, three things stood out at EcoBuild as beacons of post-peak sanity. The first of these was the strawbale lecture theatre build by Barbara Jones and Bee Rowan of Amazon Nails. It was a beautiful example of strawbale building, with sections of the walls lovingly plastered. It was great to be able to do a talk about natural building in a strawbale theatre. They had built it in just two days, with sections of it being plastered with lime showing the different coats.

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Discussion: 2 Comments

Categories: Localisation, Natural Building, Peak Oil


26 Feb 2006

Please support the Powering Down Blogathon.

toonAaron Nuline, who runs the excellent Powering Down blog recently participated in a ‘blogathon’ where he basically sat and posted blogs on his site all night in support of Trees for Life. Do send a donation in support of this particularly 21st Century way of raising money for charity. Fair play to the man for managing to think of anything interesting to say for such a long period of time. Indeed, some of the output he produced through no doubt bleary eyes was some of the finest I have yet read on his site, including stuff on David Holmgren, cloth nappies, mobile phones and eco-villages (all subjects close to my heart…), as well as this great cartoon. Have a look and then get your credit card out and support this noble (if not slightly bonkers) venture.

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Categories: Localisation, Peak Oil, Permaculture


25 Feb 2006

The Curse of the Were-Rabbit as a Post-Apocalyptic Utopia

wg1*A couple of months ago at **Transition Culture** I explored the fact that I and others had been unable to think of a movie that showed a positive example of how a post-peak world could be. We could think of plenty of Matrix-style nightmare scenarios, but nothing that looked at how a low-energy future could be in such a way as it might be both achievable and desirable. I was delighted therefore to read **Albert Bates**’ article, which he has kindly given permission for me to reproduce below. I finally got to see the film in question the other day, and concur with Albert’s take on it, as well as thinking what a great film it was… .*

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