Which Energy? Gets High Praise At Launch
People at the Westminster meeting were �stimulated and energized�.
Sam Burcher and Dr.
Mae-Wan Ho
�This report is extremely stimulating and could hardly be more timely,� said
Tim Yeo MP, Chair of Commons Environmental Audit Committee in his opening remarks
as the buzz of excitement was hushed. People were still coming in from far-flung
reaches of the country, having taken the earliest trains to arrive on time.
Tim Yeo had set the tone. Participants showered praises on ISIS� Energy Report
at Launch Conference in UK Parliament 25 May 2006. The conference went over
time by nearly half an hour, and it was a full hour later before we could sit
down to lunch. There was so much bottled up enthusiasm that had to be expressed,
frustrations that had to be vented, and ideas to be sounded out to take things
forward.
After lunch, a small group met for further discussions to prepare for Saturday
27 May, when more than 30 real enthusiasts would gather for a brainstorming
meeting hosted by Chris Maltin, CEO of Organic Power Ltd., Somerset, to take
the Dream Farm II project forward. That too, turned out to be a great success.
Meanwhile, our main sponsoring
organisation the Third World Network, presented Which Energy? to the 14th Session
of United Nations Commission on Sustainable Development (CSD14) in New
York USA, 12 May 2006.
Sarahda Iyer of Third World
Network reports back: �The response at CSD 14 from NGOs as well as government
delegations was overwhelming to say the least. The 220 copies were picked
up faster than we could lay them out. The Report proved to be the best of
all-under-one-roof assessment of the various options for a sustainable energy
future for present and future generations.�
We shall be circulating
the speeches from the Launch Conference, as far too many good things would
be lost if they were compressed into a conference report. Instead, we present
below a selection of the contributions from the floor, edited for brevity,
at and immediately after the conference.
David Saunders, entrepreneur and financial consultant from Sussex, reporting
on the conference to his friends: �A very comprehensive Energy Report which
(amongst other things) examines and demolishes the case for more nuclear power,
and gives reasoned and creative arguments for a variety of other sustainable
approaches. It�s a report that should excite anyone who has a passion for natural
solutions and wants to see broad-scale adoption of systemic approaches. (Ex-Environment
Minister Michael Meacher said he felt inspired and nourished by the report and
the Launch Conference).
�Proposals include the creation of ultra-productive �Dream
Farms�- advanced, zero-waste, energy-generating, multi-cropping, biodiversity-increasing,
economy-enhancing organic farms � for local energy and food self-sufficiency. The
plan is to set up a model Dream Farm in the UK, which integrates
aerobic and anaerobic approaches to waste elimination, energy generation,
compost making and water purification, and to research and disseminate best
practice.�
David Fleming, author of several influential books on sustainability and
economics: � I think we need to realise how good this Report is.� It�s by far
the best paper I�ve read about the future of energy and let�s give it as much
publicity as we possibly can�
Dr Alan Guwy, University of Glamorgan in Wales and leading expert on
anaerobic digestion in the UK: �I fully endorse all the speakers today. There
is a future for renewable technologies. The economics of renewables is that
they now demand that government and industry take them seriously. In our pilot
study we plan to show that potentially across the UK we can make one third of
a billion pounds in diesel equivalent from agricultural co-products. And with
an ever-increasing population there is always the resource of organic waste.�
Dr. Graham Ennis, Director Omega Institute, Brighton, Sussex:
�I feel really uplifted and energised. Thank you so much for the vision expressed.
�Tony Blair can only be described as being possessed of invincible ignorance.�
There is a man who is a technological and scientific illiterate, who is deeply
frightened of science and technology because he doesn�t understand it. He has
been captured by a clique of government scientists and senior civil servants
who don�t really understand science and technology either.
�We have looked at this Report very carefully. This is the way forward if
we wish to have energy and food security in this country.� There is no question
of it.� The economics are outstanding.� Large-scale organic farms based on this
system would create an interesting and benign balance that produces agricultural
wealth on an industrial scale that would make farmers rich. A totally green
wealth balanced by green economic growth. The defining principle of the Report
is that once you realise that this model of wealth creation is possible, and
that it is transferable to other sectors of the economy, it becomes much bigger
than farming alone. This green economic growth model substitutes for the environmentally
damaging growth patterns and gets away from the old military-industrial-complex
that is raping the earth we live on.� This new model is holistic and is fundamental
to shaping a greener society.�
Dr Colin Hines of Protect The Local Globally, the pro-localist, anti-free-market
think-tank: �This report is a ground-breaking document.� It brings new angles into
the energy debate.� The information on biofuels is crucial.�
�I want to make two points: the funding of these very
hopeful scenarios we�ve heard about today, and the politics of nuclear power.�
Pensions are actually a way that we could provide the upfront funding required
for the very dramatic transitions in both the energy systems and the food
systems, and as we heard, the economics of both are good.� Alan Simpson has
often made the point that it was municipal bonds that funded improvements
in sanitation and energy in Britain a couple of hundred years
ago, and it could be municipal bonds that will fund the energy transition.
So my question is:� What likelihood is there for encouraging municipal bonds
as a way to fund the huge resources required for example, just to make the
city energy tight?� That requires a lot of upfront money for long-term saving
which is exactly what pension funds are looking for.�
�On the nuclear front, I wonder whether you might do well with a combination
of nuclear sceptics on both sides of the house to start questioning Mr Blair�s
nuclear policy.� According to one report released, he�s going to try to get
it through without a debate in Parliament, and so there won�t be a vote on this.�
Tim Yeo, MP replies:
�It is quite right that improvements were financed by municipal bonds in previous
centuries.� However, I�m cautious about telling pension funds where to invest
their money.� The answer is to allow organisations to float bonds with certain
tactical edges. Then leave the pension fund to make up their own minds as
to whether the returns are going to be good in those areas, and that would
certainly be possible to do.
��On the question of nuclear it will be disgraceful if
the decision is taken without a vote in the House of Commons. I think if we
could organise it in a way that there had to be a vote, the outcome would
be very problematic indeed [for Tony Blair].�
Mark Griffiths, chartered surveyor from Hampshire, is keen to see much
more emphasis put on energy conservation and renewable technologies: �This
Report is one of the few serious efforts to examine the real potential of
renewable energy, and is to be welcomed as a much needed injection into the
national energy debate as we urgently consider the future of our supplies.�
Dr. Eva Novotny, research fellow in astrophysicist, Cambridge University:
�Everyone is much inspired! Congratulations, ISIS
has done it again, a great new project launched in record time.
�Governments can no longer afford to dither over the looming energy crisis
or the effects that non-sustainable energy sources will have on the health of
the planet. Which Energy? lays out the possibilities for replacing
the world�s dwindling fossil� fuel supplies; and it becomes clear that only
renewable sources based on wind, sun, water and organic wastes can sustain our
future indefinitely. The last two chapters show how several diverse problems
can be solved simultaneously by practising agriculture on farms that operate
on a closed cycle: wastes from one unit of the farm become inputs to the next
unit and at the same time generate from those wastes a biogas that fuels all
the energy needed to run the farm. No carbon dioxide or methane is released
into the atmosphere. These organic farms build up the soil to produce healthy
crops and healthy animals, without the soil-destroying and oil-hungry
�procedures of modern chemical farming.�
Oliver
Dowding, organic farmer Shepton Farms, Somerset: ��The journey
of a thousand miles, starts with a single step� It is up to us to make that
step and perhaps not worry quite so much about what we don�t have the power
to change, but what we do have the power to change.� We can�t expect to on
having the lifestyle we�ve always had in the way we�ve always had it because
it depends on things we aren�t going to have to fuel it. In other words we
do have the power to reduce our energy consumption and waste in this country
on an individual level.�
Dr. Geoffrey
Hunt, Professor at University of Surrey, Founder of Freedom
to care: �We should all understand how precious people like Dr Mae-Wan Ho
and Professor George Chan are to our society and our future.� And why it is
that we don�t have more people like them and why it is that so many of them
are marginalized, pushed out of academia, pushed out of the research institutes,
sometimes victimised and vilified, and lies told about them, when these are
the very people that are showing us the way forward.
�We need political change,
not just technological changes that will engage citizens in valuing openness
and transparency, freedom of information and decent electoral systems, which
we certainly don�t have. Rather than the primitive regimes and corporations
that trample all over the planet.�
Michael
Meacher MP replies:� �I think that�s a wonderful statement
about the politics of the future.� You put your finger on so many of the key
points about what�s wrong with our society.� It is basically and increasingly
a corporate state.� It is run in a very narrow clique between the leaders
of business, finance and to some extent the media and the political leadership.�
And it is only a very small group of people who are dictating the whole direction
of policy altogether with the increasing suppression of free speech, not obviously
and totally, but in very important ways.� I think the range of the debate
is being narrowed and we are going in the direction of America.� Thank you
for what you said.�
Tim Yeo MP, speaking as he had to leave before the end of the general
discussion, which went overtime: �Maewan, thank you very much indeed for that
vision of the future and I look forward to covering the countryside with these
farms!� I was very glad you mentioned the importance of having happy animals.
My favourite chef is Albert Roux and he told me a long time ago that the best
taste in food comes from animals that are happy. �A happy chicken is a tasty
chicken�!� I�m quite sure that�s absolutely true.�
The Rt Hon Michael Meacher MP, at closing: �It�s been a wonderful morning that
has fired my political and spiritual energies.� We�re here to celebrate the
launch and carrying forward of this Report which has a transformational capability.�
The world and this country face an energy crisis.� These original, thoughtful
and ingenious, but highly practicable and affordable ideas are indeed the way
forward.�
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