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TGoG Podcast 053 – A Gen Y’s Perspective of Sustainable Living with Amy Webber

February 6, 2014 @ 18:00 By Gavin Webber 3 Comments

TGOG podcast logo new 1400 v2It is great to get a different perspective from the younger generation. Today we talk to Amy Webber who last appeared in Episode 10, some four years ago.

Since finishing university, she pursued a career as a high school teacher and heads up the Humanities department of a local school and is passionate about educating kids.  I am very proud of her.

[spp-player]

She has a very interesting view of Gen Y and the Millennial generations with respect to climate change and energy descent.

My daughter also makes me blush during this episode when she tells me that she is very excited to see me finally present at the Sustainable Living Festival, and proud of all the things I have done.  Enough to make this old bloke tear up.

On a side note, this post is #1500.  That is quite an personal achievement, which I am quite proud of.  Who would have thought when I started it, that this blog would grow so large!

 

Amy and Ben at Armageddon

Amy and Ben at Armegeddon – Melbourne 2013

If you enjoyed the podcast, please pop over to iTunes and rate it and leave a review. You can also do the same within Stitcher Radio if you use that service.  It would help me out so much, and elevate the ratings so that others can find out about the podcast and learn about sustainable living in the ‘burbs.

You can subscribe to the show via RSS or iTunes or Stitcher for your portable device.  Just use the subscription buttons below.

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Until next time, stay green and keep keen!

 

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Filed Under: climate change, Coal Seam Gas, CSG, Fracking, Peak Everything, Podcast, Sustainable Living, TGOG Podcast

Power Down

February 4, 2014 @ 23:21 By Gavin Webber 12 Comments

Gavin in the dark

As I sit here at my desk bathed in candlelight, it never ceases to amaze me what chaos occurs when we have a power blackout.

Firstly everyone checks their fuse box to see if it is just them.  Then they look out of the front door to see if the street lights are out, and if the neighbours have also lost power.

Once that is confirmed to be true, then it starts.  The mad scramble for the dynamo torch (if you are fortunate to have one handy) or ferret around looking for candles and a lighter to get some illumination.  

Then it really happens.  You realise that just about everything you were planning to do that evening required the use of electricity to help perform the task.

For Kim it was housework now that is is a little cooler.  For Ben it was homework on his computer, and for me it was recording an episode of Little Green Cheese Podcast.

Hissy fits and boredom, quickly followed by simple solutions to make the best use of our time until the power came back on.  Kim started to play a game on her iPad, relaxing instead of working.  Ben is running around outside, playing and having fun destroying some cardboard boxes, and I have taken up pencil and paper to write this tale without the use of a computer.

It does make you think long and hard about how our lives are ruled by the energy we consume.  It does the vast majority of our work for us.  Energy slaves if you will.  Now there is an interesting concept!

So what happens if the energy slaves leave us permanently?

No, not all at once, but over a period of years.  A slow energy descent.  

It is well within the realms of possibility, and closer to reality than one may think.

As the world’s fossil fuel reserves peak in production and begin to decline (conventional crude oil has already peaked in 2005 according to the International Energy Agency), our energy slaves will slowly begin to vanish.  

Infinite growth on a finite planet is just not possible.

Even the tight shale oil and gas fracking is only a stop-gap measure.  This additional production is propping up the plateau of peak oil demand.  It has been observed that these tight oil and gas wells decline by up to 80% after a few years of production, sometimes in the second year, forcing more wells to be drilled.  Costs to producers are much higher than extracting conventional crude oil fields which drives up production costs and ultimately flow through to just about everything we consume.

What has this got to do with electricity blackouts?  

Well, you need oil to dig up coal and gas to burn at the power station.  You need oil to fuel the trucks to maintain the grid.  You need oil for just about everything.  Without it our civilization ceases to exist.

But hey, what do I know.  I am no geologist.  

However, I do know this.  By looking at the evidence before me I see a shit-storm on the horizon.  A great big oil bubble inflated by hype and greed, contributing to our climate woes, ready to burst or slowly deflate over many years.  The way it pans out is yet to be determined, like most things in our future.  

Climate change will add additional fuel to the proverbial fire, because without abundant energy, we may not be able to mitigate the affects.  See what I mean by a shit-storm?  Without a doubt, it will be very different to how we live right now.

Nothing to see here, just keep moving along.  We can keep growing our economies forever!  

Sounds just like all the media hype about peak oil being dead and buried.  It’s all smoke and mirrors with no real solution at hand.

Oh look.  The power just came back on.  Time to type up the post.

How do you think the next decade will pan out regarding energy?  Do you think we have plenty, or is it a bubble ready to burst?

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Filed Under: Peak Everything, Peak Oil, Sustainable Living

TGoG Podcast 046 – Energy Descent and Food Security with Mick O’Connell

December 17, 2013 @ 19:01 By Gavin Webber 1 Comment

Energy descent is not a topic that everyone is talking about in the streets or coffee shops. But I think it should be on the tips of everyone’s tongues.

As it would happen, my guest this week is Michael O’Connell and we talk about what we think may happen when the finite energy resources that we depend upon today to fuel our civilisation start to become a little more scarcer. Mick has had first hand experience in East Timor and has a good idea about what makes life worthwhile when you have little in the way of resources and the absence of a consumer culture.

[spp-player]

We also talk about food security and touch on sustainable living back here in Australia.  It seems that I owe him a few iced cold home brews!

This is a really interesting conversation about how far western society has to fall compared to other nations, and what basic things could make our lives much more fulfilling.

If you enjoyed the podcast, please pop over to iTunes and rate it and leave a review. You can also do the same within Stitcher Radio if you use that service.  It would help me out so much, and elevate the ratings so that others can find out about the podcast and learn about sustainable living in the ‘burbs.

You can subscribe to the show via RSS or iTunes or Stitcher for your portable device.  Just use the subscription buttons below.

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So did Mick and I get it right, or are we just two old coots who are way off the mark?

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Filed Under: food, Peak Everything, Peak Oil, Podcast, TGOG Podcast

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About Gavin Webber

About Gavin Webber

An Ordinary Australian Man Who Has A Green Epiphany Whilst Watching A Documentary, Gets a Hybrid Car, Plants A Large Organic Vegetable Garden, Goes Totally Solar, Lowers Consumption, Feeds Composts Bins and Worms, Harvests Rainwater, Raises Chickens, Makes Cheese and Soap, and Eats Locally. All In The Effort To Reduce Our Family's Carbon Footprint So We Can Start Making A Difference For Our Children & Future Generations To Come.

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