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Our hope is that people all over the Lower Mainland will start their own peak oil meetups, to lower their carbon footprints & costs for travel to the meetings, but more importantly to begin the process of localization by getting together with others in their community to come up with local solutions - every city and neighborhood will have its own unique challeges and assets, and there’s no substitute for sitting down with those who live near you.

As a way to make it easier for people to start meetings, VPO has come up with a standard meeting format, available for download. The format addresses many of the conundrums that every meeting faces:

Who’s in charge? (Answer: Nobody - we’re all equals - though some members will always have more experience and knowledge than others, and can be of service to those who are just catching on to peak oil and its consequences.)

How do we balance the needs of newcomers, who have questions, and regular attendees who want to move on to solutions?

What’s involved in getting ready for peak oil? (We suggest a 3 part program.)

How will the individual meetups keep in contact with the larger VPO organization? (We suggest each meeting have a VPO rep who will represent the group at periodic intergroup get-togethers.)

How do we integrate speakers and group members who want to share particular knowledge and expertise?

How do we collect dues to pay for our expenses?

What sorts of volunteer positions need to be filled to keep the group running, and how long would any one person need to commit to a position?

How will we keep in touch with each other between meetings?

And so on. Download the format and accompanying Co-secretary sheet, and write us at to let us know how your meeting is doing!

From Monday’s Globe and Mail

Humanity is threatened by a global-warming crisis. Canada, facing the crisis of global financial meltdown, is looking for ways to keep people working. The time is ripe, it seems, for an era of massive, green public-works projects.

Projects like a 12-kilometre SkyTrain subway line connecting Vancouver to the University of British Columbia.

Imagine that train packed with smiling, eco-guilt-free students zipping on and off their secluded campus by the sea. The UBC subway line, which would run through the heart of the city, is already on the drawing board, slated for 2020. Provincial and Vancouver political leaders have voiced their enthusiasm. The price tag is set at $2.8-billion.

Well, hold on there. Patrick Condon, senior researcher at the Design Centre for Sustainability at UBC, has run further numbers and believes he has a more sensible plan.
Instead of building that train, you could give every new UBC undergrad the keys to their very own Prius automobile. Year after year. Forever.

That’s right. As Prof. Condon calculates in a new study, you’d start by putting the $2.8-billion price of the train into a trust that earns 6-per-cent interest. That would generate $168-million a year - about enough to give every full-time undergrad entering UBC a basic $25,000 hybrid vehicle. (No leather seats - we’re in crisis mode, you know.) Now wouldn’t the planet - not to mention UBC’s recruitment officers - like that approach more than just one measly new subway line? Read the complete Post.

Freaking people into states of fear is not productive. However, simply coddling the desire for “positive” news is also not productive.

To the extent that we desire only the truth, as elusive as it may be, the stronger and more prepared we are to deal with the challenges we face as our society inevitably changes.

Is there truth with optimism?

I often speak to high school and university students. Many are terrified and/or angry about the state of the world, the wastefulness of society, and visible ecological destruction. Such reactions remind me of my learning in my youth that our world could be vaporized by nuclear weapons. What? Are these people insane? Turns out, yes, some of our leaders are literally sociopathic and not that bright. When we’re young, our families and teachers protected us from certain disturbing realities. If we remain naïve or just ill-informed, the discovery of alarming truths about our world may create shock to our emotional system. We might react with denial, rage, or mindless television. However, the best way to never again be disillusioned is to not be illusioned in the first place.

I’m optimistic. I believe society can change. I’ve witnessed society change to achieve civil rights, women’s rights, to end slavery, or cure disease. But before we can be optimistic we must be realistic, otherwise our optimism is delusional.

Okay, most people can grok that. So then, here’s the realism: CO2 in the atmosphere is warming the planet, ancient methane now bubbles up from deep Arctic permafrost, we lose forests and topsoil daily, energy is limited and will decline, deserts grow, toxins kill land and water, aquifers shrink, rivers dry up, seafood species decline, 24,000 people will starve to death today, 75 million new humans are added to the planet each year, we now face the inevitable laws of exponential growth in natural systems, and our leaders remain virtually clueless and certainly ineffective. Our naïve presumptions of population and economic growth are not remotely tenable in timescales that account for the next few generations.

Okay, take a deep breath. This is just natural reality demanding our attention. First point on the optimism track is this: our solutions must work on the same scale as the problem. We’re not going to change this with vegan shoes and hybrid cars. We need a vast new socio-ecological paradigm shift. All the little “baby steps” are fine, but not remotely enough. So yes, change the light bulbs, get a bus pass, take out your compost, make soil, recycle everything. Great. That’s just the baseline of common sense.

But now that we’ve been realistic, we can see that the optimistic track will demand a large-scale paradigm shift, and as far as I can see it comes down to this:

1. ecology
2. community.

The two things that industrialism has trashed.

So: Take back your local community and integrate it with your local ecology. This transition will be as much about resilience as about “solutions.” Learn how ecological systems work. This is not about integrating “green” into all our bad habits, but rather about integrating humanity back into the ecology that sustains life. All human enterprise must – absolutely must – conform to ecological laws, demands, patterns, and systems. We are talking about a transition from poor, proud, mistaken Homo Industrialus to a more modest, but much happier Homo Ecologus. This is not a question of piddling around with “10% recycled paper” in Starbucks coffee cups.

So, by being realistic, by facing our anxieties, we’ve actually arrived at an authentic path to optimism rather than the delusional.

Rex Weyler
www.rexweyler.com