wytze
29-09-05, 13:02
http://www.i-sis.org.uk/FAES.phpISIS Press Release 27/09/05
Food and Energy Security: Local Systems Global Solidarity
Alan Simpson MP offers a brilliant analysis of what’s wrong with current
national and international policies on food and energy and why we must
break all the rules
The new political divide
It’s the strange nature of our times that’s defining a quite different
politics. The defining difference now is between those who want to
address, with a degree of urgency, the challenges of climate change and
the way it is going to rewrite all of the rules that will determine how
we live our lives, and those who don’t.
And that doesn’t cut easily on party lines. We have exactly the same
divisions in pretty much all of the parties at the moment; and that
requires us to be willing to look at a number of heresies. I wanted to
explore some of those heresies, partly to challenge, but also to excite.
What I want to put to you is that this is a time when we ought to be
openly advocating the case for breaking all the rules, because the
current rules don’t work; they are taking us deeper into an accelerating
crises, and breaking the rules is a sensible way of saving lives. I
think we ought to be giving platforms to that degree of irreverence.
Breaking old rules for new
So the alternative to today’s Washington consensus neo-liberal agenda of
global free trade is a different basis on which way the world works, and
that for me would have to be global rules base for essentially localised
sustainability systems.
It is not to turn our backs on internationalism, but to understand that
today and tomorrow’s internationalism is one of connectedness, of
solidarity (that was term that the Archbishop of Canterbury used), the
solidarity of witness and a different form of “gift relationship”, as I
shall explain later.
What we have to be looking for would include a rules base that enshrines
the right to produce to meet your own security needs before accepting
the need to produce to meet anyone else’s needs. It would include a
right to hold essential resources in public ownership rather than see
them carved up for private gain. There has to be a shift in the way in
which we use our fiscal resources for subsidies that promote
sustainability. In other words, it is not the eradication of subsidies
or the existence of subsidies that’s the problem; it’s the current use
of subsides to distort and destroy the ecology that we depend upon for
tomorrow.
Included within that global rules base must be an absolute, absolute
rejection of patents on food. We have to take that out, and the quid pro
quo that goes along with that is to establish the universal farmers
rights to save seeds. And then the issues that emerge would be about how
we feed the world rather than who owns the food chain. We then have to
go on to look internationally at the case for global eco-taxes. There is
a need to replace the WTO with a different global organisation, one
that’s focussed on a sustainable global ecology.
And that would be the interconnectness of a global framework within
which we may have the prospects of survival.
Triple crises and their origins
There are three interconnected crises facing us now: the crisis in water
security, the crisis in energy security, and the crisis in food security
Mae-Wan Ho said that global food production has been declining over the
last four years. But we need to connect those to some of the other
pressures that we face in every part of today’s global economy. It terms
of water, within the 20th Century, global water consumption increased
six fold – twice the rate of population growth. There’s a fair majority
of people who will expect, within reasonable circumstances, to still be
alive in 2025. Many will have children of their own by 2025 that they
don’t have now. But the figures for global water crises suggest that by
2025, in twenty years time, the proportion of people on the planet who
will be living in areas of “significant water stress” will rise from 34
percent to 63 percent. In absolute numbers it’s a total sum of about six
billion people, which is the entirety of today’s world population. So we
cannot go on using those water resources in the profligate way we have
been doing. Water uses tie in to a different form of ecological auditing.
Huge amounts of the water resources have gone into agribusiness, the
business of overproduction from the land, in order to produce food
surpluses in the industrial world that are then dumped on the developing
world in order to undermine the sustainable agricultural base that they
themselves ought to be able to rely on. So we are squandering water in
order to destroy the viable economies of both the North and South.
The same is true in relation to energy. If we were to do an energy audit
of where we are now, what we would find is that within our own country,
we know that in today’s power stations, 70 percent of the energy is
dissipated as waste. We pump huge amounts of water back into the
atmosphere through cooling towers in order to just generate the energy
that we have.
Globally we have a massive misuse of subsidies. Subsidies in the wrong
direction that have gone primarily into sustaining the production of
coal, oil and gas. £235 billion a year globally is going into the energy
subsidies and into energy systems that actually accelerate the crises.
So it isn’t that we’re short of money, we have huge resources of money,
but we are using them to accelerate the crisis rather than the reverse
it. And I’m genuinely excited about the possibilities of reversing it.
The Woking miracle
I have to confess that I never, ever in my life thought that I would say
that a revolution of any sort would have begun in Woking! I’m sorry if
anyone reading this is from Woking. It just has never been a place
that’s stirred my loins, in thinking that’s where revolutions could
happen, but it has! And within the next couple of years Woking will be
going off the National grid because it generates more energy than it
needs. It is currently generating 135 percent of its energy needs from
renewable and sustainable sources. They include hydrogen fuel cell
technology, which also happens, to provide a by-product of pure water.
Something like one hundred thousand gallons of pure water a year as a
by-product. And this is going back into the depleted water resources,
back into the local economy.
What Woking also discovered is that not only are our national power
stations massively inefficient in the way they work, but that the
national grid is massively inefficient. For every pound’s worth of
electricity that Woking was putting into the grid, it was costing them
pretty much £20 to get it back because of a whole series of leaks in the
generation system, the distribution system and various taxes at
different stages. So they found that it was much better for them to have
bought and installed the wiring system for the whole of Woking. They
have reclaimed the ownership of their local energy system and they
invite people to sign up to energy services contracts, not energy
consumption contracts, but energy services contracts in which some of
you are actually are having solar roofs installed as part of the
contract because the system generates wealth as well as generating
warmth and well-being. They have cut the energy costs to the fuel-poor.
This government’s target is 10 percent of income. Woking have cut them
to 6 percent of the income of the poor and this has all been done and
it’s not just on a local scale, somewhere tucked away beyond some
serious consideration.
National governments have lost the plot
What’s happening now in London is that London did a global search of
whom to appoint as their climate change co-ordinator and they pinched
the guy from Woking. His remit is to make London energy self sufficient
within a decade. Now that is not messing around, this is a really
serious consensus of how we can generate our energy needs from and with
renewable sources within a decade without destroying the prospects for
the future. And not content with doing that, London is already in
discussions with twenty-five other global cities that are saying,
actually we’re giving up on national governments because they’ve lost
the plot. We’re going to do it ourselves. We will try and have this as a
globilized initiative in which we share the resources of our know-how on
a “gift relationship” basis so that we can all survive.
So the scale upon which this can take place is awesome if only we are to
understand it and to engage it. The only people who don’t want to do
that by and large are the majority who are occupants of this place (the
House of Commons) but there are honourable exceptions and I say those
exceptions are across different parties. But the momentum for that
change will come, and is already coming from outside, and that is
phenomenally exciting, absolutely astonishing. So that’s where, I think,
we need to be heading, and I’ll just point out that neither Woking nor
London nor any of the other global cities who are in this, none of them
are making an assumption that there is a single part of the energy
components that will be nuclear. So all of this can go and run in a
quite different way. And it ties in to the food agenda.
The slow food movement
I went to a fascinating conference last November in Turin. It was
convened by the Italian slow food movement, which had brought together
five thousand representatives of food communities in 132 different
countries, many of whom didn’t have passports; they didn’t even have ID
documents. But they were looking at how they could share their knowledge
of sustainable food production in ways that offered common ground for
long term viable futures. And I have to say that in some ways the most
exciting of the discussions was one between farmers from Afghanistan and
Columbia who were talking not about problems of drugs production, but
about the production of raisins in Afghanistan and savannah fruits in
Columbia as a basis of earning a living, feeding their families,
producing goods that other people needed that were non-destructive of
other peoples futures. Now all of this was going on in defiance of the
WTO negotiations, and I think we have to come out here as advocates of
that defiance.
I suggest we can tie our ropes together in a different way from the one
that is being driven through the WTO. I said this to those who are part
of the Make Poverty History campaign, that if we genuinely believe that
all that’s needed is to free the Southern Hemisphere to get into more
genuinely free trade competition with the North, and then remove the
barriers, you ought to look at some of the work that people like
Caroline Lucas has done about the ecological consequences of large
distance goods distribution and the sheer volume of fossil fuels that
are consumed in the process of shipping goods from one side of the
planet to the other.
Food and Energy Security: Local Systems Global Solidarity
Alan Simpson MP offers a brilliant analysis of what’s wrong with current
national and international policies on food and energy and why we must
break all the rules
The new political divide
It’s the strange nature of our times that’s defining a quite different
politics. The defining difference now is between those who want to
address, with a degree of urgency, the challenges of climate change and
the way it is going to rewrite all of the rules that will determine how
we live our lives, and those who don’t.
And that doesn’t cut easily on party lines. We have exactly the same
divisions in pretty much all of the parties at the moment; and that
requires us to be willing to look at a number of heresies. I wanted to
explore some of those heresies, partly to challenge, but also to excite.
What I want to put to you is that this is a time when we ought to be
openly advocating the case for breaking all the rules, because the
current rules don’t work; they are taking us deeper into an accelerating
crises, and breaking the rules is a sensible way of saving lives. I
think we ought to be giving platforms to that degree of irreverence.
Breaking old rules for new
So the alternative to today’s Washington consensus neo-liberal agenda of
global free trade is a different basis on which way the world works, and
that for me would have to be global rules base for essentially localised
sustainability systems.
It is not to turn our backs on internationalism, but to understand that
today and tomorrow’s internationalism is one of connectedness, of
solidarity (that was term that the Archbishop of Canterbury used), the
solidarity of witness and a different form of “gift relationship”, as I
shall explain later.
What we have to be looking for would include a rules base that enshrines
the right to produce to meet your own security needs before accepting
the need to produce to meet anyone else’s needs. It would include a
right to hold essential resources in public ownership rather than see
them carved up for private gain. There has to be a shift in the way in
which we use our fiscal resources for subsidies that promote
sustainability. In other words, it is not the eradication of subsidies
or the existence of subsidies that’s the problem; it’s the current use
of subsides to distort and destroy the ecology that we depend upon for
tomorrow.
Included within that global rules base must be an absolute, absolute
rejection of patents on food. We have to take that out, and the quid pro
quo that goes along with that is to establish the universal farmers
rights to save seeds. And then the issues that emerge would be about how
we feed the world rather than who owns the food chain. We then have to
go on to look internationally at the case for global eco-taxes. There is
a need to replace the WTO with a different global organisation, one
that’s focussed on a sustainable global ecology.
And that would be the interconnectness of a global framework within
which we may have the prospects of survival.
Triple crises and their origins
There are three interconnected crises facing us now: the crisis in water
security, the crisis in energy security, and the crisis in food security
Mae-Wan Ho said that global food production has been declining over the
last four years. But we need to connect those to some of the other
pressures that we face in every part of today’s global economy. It terms
of water, within the 20th Century, global water consumption increased
six fold – twice the rate of population growth. There’s a fair majority
of people who will expect, within reasonable circumstances, to still be
alive in 2025. Many will have children of their own by 2025 that they
don’t have now. But the figures for global water crises suggest that by
2025, in twenty years time, the proportion of people on the planet who
will be living in areas of “significant water stress” will rise from 34
percent to 63 percent. In absolute numbers it’s a total sum of about six
billion people, which is the entirety of today’s world population. So we
cannot go on using those water resources in the profligate way we have
been doing. Water uses tie in to a different form of ecological auditing.
Huge amounts of the water resources have gone into agribusiness, the
business of overproduction from the land, in order to produce food
surpluses in the industrial world that are then dumped on the developing
world in order to undermine the sustainable agricultural base that they
themselves ought to be able to rely on. So we are squandering water in
order to destroy the viable economies of both the North and South.
The same is true in relation to energy. If we were to do an energy audit
of where we are now, what we would find is that within our own country,
we know that in today’s power stations, 70 percent of the energy is
dissipated as waste. We pump huge amounts of water back into the
atmosphere through cooling towers in order to just generate the energy
that we have.
Globally we have a massive misuse of subsidies. Subsidies in the wrong
direction that have gone primarily into sustaining the production of
coal, oil and gas. £235 billion a year globally is going into the energy
subsidies and into energy systems that actually accelerate the crises.
So it isn’t that we’re short of money, we have huge resources of money,
but we are using them to accelerate the crisis rather than the reverse
it. And I’m genuinely excited about the possibilities of reversing it.
The Woking miracle
I have to confess that I never, ever in my life thought that I would say
that a revolution of any sort would have begun in Woking! I’m sorry if
anyone reading this is from Woking. It just has never been a place
that’s stirred my loins, in thinking that’s where revolutions could
happen, but it has! And within the next couple of years Woking will be
going off the National grid because it generates more energy than it
needs. It is currently generating 135 percent of its energy needs from
renewable and sustainable sources. They include hydrogen fuel cell
technology, which also happens, to provide a by-product of pure water.
Something like one hundred thousand gallons of pure water a year as a
by-product. And this is going back into the depleted water resources,
back into the local economy.
What Woking also discovered is that not only are our national power
stations massively inefficient in the way they work, but that the
national grid is massively inefficient. For every pound’s worth of
electricity that Woking was putting into the grid, it was costing them
pretty much £20 to get it back because of a whole series of leaks in the
generation system, the distribution system and various taxes at
different stages. So they found that it was much better for them to have
bought and installed the wiring system for the whole of Woking. They
have reclaimed the ownership of their local energy system and they
invite people to sign up to energy services contracts, not energy
consumption contracts, but energy services contracts in which some of
you are actually are having solar roofs installed as part of the
contract because the system generates wealth as well as generating
warmth and well-being. They have cut the energy costs to the fuel-poor.
This government’s target is 10 percent of income. Woking have cut them
to 6 percent of the income of the poor and this has all been done and
it’s not just on a local scale, somewhere tucked away beyond some
serious consideration.
National governments have lost the plot
What’s happening now in London is that London did a global search of
whom to appoint as their climate change co-ordinator and they pinched
the guy from Woking. His remit is to make London energy self sufficient
within a decade. Now that is not messing around, this is a really
serious consensus of how we can generate our energy needs from and with
renewable sources within a decade without destroying the prospects for
the future. And not content with doing that, London is already in
discussions with twenty-five other global cities that are saying,
actually we’re giving up on national governments because they’ve lost
the plot. We’re going to do it ourselves. We will try and have this as a
globilized initiative in which we share the resources of our know-how on
a “gift relationship” basis so that we can all survive.
So the scale upon which this can take place is awesome if only we are to
understand it and to engage it. The only people who don’t want to do
that by and large are the majority who are occupants of this place (the
House of Commons) but there are honourable exceptions and I say those
exceptions are across different parties. But the momentum for that
change will come, and is already coming from outside, and that is
phenomenally exciting, absolutely astonishing. So that’s where, I think,
we need to be heading, and I’ll just point out that neither Woking nor
London nor any of the other global cities who are in this, none of them
are making an assumption that there is a single part of the energy
components that will be nuclear. So all of this can go and run in a
quite different way. And it ties in to the food agenda.
The slow food movement
I went to a fascinating conference last November in Turin. It was
convened by the Italian slow food movement, which had brought together
five thousand representatives of food communities in 132 different
countries, many of whom didn’t have passports; they didn’t even have ID
documents. But they were looking at how they could share their knowledge
of sustainable food production in ways that offered common ground for
long term viable futures. And I have to say that in some ways the most
exciting of the discussions was one between farmers from Afghanistan and
Columbia who were talking not about problems of drugs production, but
about the production of raisins in Afghanistan and savannah fruits in
Columbia as a basis of earning a living, feeding their families,
producing goods that other people needed that were non-destructive of
other peoples futures. Now all of this was going on in defiance of the
WTO negotiations, and I think we have to come out here as advocates of
that defiance.
I suggest we can tie our ropes together in a different way from the one
that is being driven through the WTO. I said this to those who are part
of the Make Poverty History campaign, that if we genuinely believe that
all that’s needed is to free the Southern Hemisphere to get into more
genuinely free trade competition with the North, and then remove the
barriers, you ought to look at some of the work that people like
Caroline Lucas has done about the ecological consequences of large
distance goods distribution and the sheer volume of fossil fuels that
are consumed in the process of shipping goods from one side of the
planet to the other.