Just some of the stuff thrown out by my neighbours in a single day |
We live in
a throwaway consumer society, in case anyone hadn't noticed. It's
often said that people these days are more materialistic than in the
past, although that would seem to imply we had some kind of respect
for materials, which we clearly don't. I often feel like I am at the
epicentre of the throwaway consumer whirlwind, living, as I do, in
Europe's most wasteful country.
The
picture you can see above was taken this afternoon and represents
just a quarter of the stuff that was put in the dump area today not
forty paces from the front door of my flat. Tomorrow, lots more
stuff will arrive and on Monday morning workmen will put all of it in
a giant metal compactor and then it will be taken on a truck to the
local incinerator and turned into what the politicians here call
'green energy'.
In theory
all the TVs and bikes etc. will be sorted into different piles and
processed according to what they are composed of. In practice though,
most of it ends up in the same metal container along with everything
else. Luckily the prevailing winds are Westerlies so the trickle of
smoke that comes out of the incinerator will take it harmlessly away
out over the Baltic towards, er, Sweden.
I've
always been puzzled how anyone could throw a perfectly good thing
away. Growing up, it was hammered into me that you just don't waste
stuff. Thus my clothes were 'let out' (i.e. made bigger) by my mum as
I grew and we had the same knackered kitchen table with one leg
shorter than the other for decades. I also became an expert at
scraping the mould off the top layer of marmalade to get at the
'perfectly good bit' underneath – and was taught to judge whether
food was edible or not just by using my nose rather than looking at
some 'best before' date. Talk about lost skills.
I clearly
remember my first bike, which my parents gave me for my sixth
birthday. It was a bright red affair with solid rubber tyres and
home-made stabilisers salvaged from dead roller skates. My father had
cobbled it together from bits of other bikes and painted the frame
himself with some strong smelling oil paint. But if you think you can
detect an accompaniment of weeping violins as you read that then
you'd be wrong: we were a solidly lower middle class family with a
detached house in niceish part of town. That's just the kind of bike
you could expect to get in 1977, and I suspect some of my friends
were even jealous of my new chick magnet.
But
whatever you may think of home-made bikes and knitted mittens that
were attached by a length of string to one's duffel coat so that it
was impossible to lose them (a feature that delighted school bullies
everywhere) – not many people are actually willing to go back to
the 1970s. Here in the more bohemian parts of Copenhagen one could be
forgiven for thinking that we have returned to that era. In what
could be termed austerity chic, it's virtually impossible to walk
around Vesterbro without bumping into bearded, long-collared fashion
victims looking like extras from Starsky and Hutch. Some bars are now
decked out in the 'authentic' bad taste of the era replete with
yellowing wallpaper and smoke stained furniture. Of course, all the
clientèle are speaking on iPhones about their latest vinyl record
acquisition and drinking fashionable lager, so the illusion doesn't
hold up to much scrutiny.
![]() |
Bang og Jensen - one of Copenhagen's most tragically hip bars has gone back to the 1970s |
But I
wonder how many people in our very pampered societies are really
willing to go back to the 1970s – or beyond? As austerity begins to
bite and graduates start to get used to the idea that they'll
probably never get the job they assumed would be rightfully theirs at
the end of their studies, more and more younger people are having to
face up to the fact that their level of material wealth will never be
as great as their parents'. And then some.
All this
was a very circuitous and long-winded lead-in to what I promised to
talk about this week, namely, how to prepare for the coming energy
crunch and all the associated chaos. Here's a confession: I aim not
just to get through this mess alive, I intend to live through every
moment of it as best as I can. I hope to help any others who are
prepared to listen. To that end, this advice will seem pretty damned
radical to those who are new to the peak oil blogosphere, and grist
to the mill for anyone who has been paying attention over the last
few years.
I'm not a
fan of 'How to' lists, and neither do I like so-called advice dished
out by clueless experts or well-meaning amateur busybodies, so I'll
start by saying that the next few posts will be a collection of very
important pointers that I have arrived at after much consideration,
and ongoing consultations with many other people in the peak energy
scene. I personally try to live up to them all, and I'm fully aware
that the term 'hypocrite' can kill a well-meaning suggestion faster
than a silver bullet kills a vampire. To that end I'll be measuring
each of my suggestions against actions I have taken in my own life,
with the general aim being to communicate that if a lazy so-and-so
like me can achieve it, so surely can you. I stand by all of the
suggestions I make and, as you'll notice, I don't use a pseudonym and
am hence quite happy to take all the opprobrium I encounter from
others squarely on the chin. That's not to say that I think I have
'the' answer. There is no 'perfect' solution and I'm in favour of the
idea of dissensus i.e. a collection of different approaches to
solving the same problems as a more resilient and, to use a modern
term, open source way of doing things.
How to live with less
One of the
most important lessons for people to learn today is how to live with
less material goods than they have been led to believe is theirs by
birthright. In the West we gobble up resources at an alarming rate,
and people in former Third World countries are now copying us. But
for all sorts of reasons, the party's over. Here are some of the main
reasons:
- Conventional oil, which fuels our expedient lifestyles, has peaked. Forget dreams of shale gas and Alberta tar sands – these are just shadow plays concocted by investors and politicians and believed in by those who want to believe in them. From now on, as we tumble down the far side of the supply curve, we will see steadily climbing prices of everything from food and energy bills to healthcare and technology.
- Population is continuing to climb, despite the fact that most people are reliant on cheap forms of energy, particularly oil and natural gas, to deliver calories to their bodies. This will not end well.
- The West is broke. We have lived beyond our means for too long. No amount of money can compensate for a lack of cheap concentrated energy. The East might be playing catchup with us, but they face the same constraints on this small, finite planet, and will face the same future.
- Technology will not save us. Everything from computing tablets to nuclear power stations depends of processes which are highly energy intensive and prone to supply disruptions, politics and financial bubbles. Some technology will cushion our fall, but in the long run the industrial civilization faces the same fate as every other former civilization: a rapid deceleration in speed and reduction in the level of complexity. Technology = complexity. Complexity = weakness. It's our major blind spot: see it.
Given all
that, it's highly unlikely that we are going to see our standards of
material living increasing again in the future. So if we assume that
we have the choice between becoming poor voluntarily and being forced
to become poor against our will, which one shall we choose?
Consumerism,
despite what we are told on the adverts, doesn't really deliver.
There is plenty of evidence now that a certain level of material
wealth is optimal and when we get beyond this we start to become
unhappy. We humans are social primates, and when once we acquired
manufactured good to meet our material needs, we now seem to purchase
them merely to boost our individual status and satisfy the false need
that has been planted there by black magicians (aka marketers). The
point at which we drifted away from this optimal level of consumption
is beyond the memory of anyone under about 40.
The
pursuit of stuff is now our be all and end all, and we work on
consumer debt-powered treadmills to acquire bigger houses, better
cars, more exotic holidays and more up-to-date gadgets. This has
never occurred before in our evolutionary history, but so ingrained
has the idea become that some
people now faced with personal bankruptcy would rather choose suicide
as a way out rather than shake the demon of consumerism off their
back and lead a life that is actually worth living.
Does
anyone remember the first time they heard the term 'retail therapy',
meaning buying stuff you don't need as a way of halting depression?
In any other society in the world (and there are mercifully quite a
few left) this would simply be called 'insanity'. But these days it
is something to chuckle about – a guilty little pleasure akin to
eating a box of chocolates or watching your favourite film for the
umpteenth time. Similarly, people giggle that they are 'shopaholics'
in much the same way that people don't giggle that they are heroin
addicts or crack-heads. 'I went to Dubai for a spot of retail
therapy,' is a phrase I've unhappily heard uttered more than once.
In
America, and increasingly here in Europe, you are no longer given the
choice of becoming a consumer. If you want to 'get ahead' you're
encouraged to attend university and, ahem, study a discipline which,
increasingly, is some shade of marketing. Even if you don't study
marketing you might end up doing an MBA, meaning that you'll have got
yourself into debt right from the start of your adult life. A car
follows, as does a modest starter home filled with furniture from
Ikea - and before you know it you're trapped in career and saddled
with debt. This is known as being snookered.
But there
is another path you can take. It's not an easy one, but then nothing
truly worth doing ever is easy. This is the path of consuming less
and living within your means. It's not an attractive proposition
these days, and you'll likely lose a few friends and relatives along
the way. But you can take encouragement from the fact that plenty of
people are already doing it and having a fine time of it. Here are
some examples:
Mark
Boyle lives in the UK with no money. He lives in a caravan, brushes
his teeth with sticks and eats wild food and food that has been
thrown out by others. Read more about him here.
If
that sounds just a bit too hardcore, consider Jacob Lund Fisker, who
'retired' at around the age of 33 and lives off USD 7,000 a year
despite living a very full life in Chicago. He has an excellent blog
packed with advice on how you can do the same here.
And
the idea seems to be catching on, with a film being made about a
German granny who lives off no money at all after having become
'irritated with the greedy consumer society'. Read more about her
here.
Finally,
anyone can buy a starter home on a soulless estate, but it takes
courage and vision – and not having a 9-5 job – to build
something like this.
What the
people above have in common is that they rejected consumerism as a
path to happiness and instead chose to focus on their inner lives and
the things that made them truly happy. Things like learning to play a
musical instrument, building your own home, growing your own food and
learning new skills cost little or no money, but the paybacks are
huge and ongoing.
I myself
regard those above as aspirational and inspirational and I'll be
honest and say that because I have kids I probably can't get the
numbers down as low as they can. Nevertheless, everything everywhere
is a work in progress, and I'd like to work towards their example. In
my own life I have achieved the following:
Food.
At present, around half of the food my family consumes is
leftovers from the staff canteen where I work. A prodigious amount of
waste occurs here and I could probably feed myself and family quite
well on that alone. Of the rest, around 70% is organic – there's
not much point buying non-organic vegetables as they contain very
little in the way of goodness. About 95% of meals are cooked from the
raw ingredients, although we occasionally succumb to the supermarket
pizza. I'm 'mostly' vegetarian (since the New Year), although I don't
have a problem with eating meat – just factory-produced meat. I
describe myself as a 'part-time carnivore'.
I used to
grow a lot of our own food when we lived in Spain but now my options
are severely limited. There is a small balcony to our flat which gets
the sun from around 2pm, so there are some challenges. I grow
tomatoes and peas and this year I have a few pumpkins growing. I also
have a wormery there which handles most food waste and turns it into
compost. There is normally too much compost so I have to smuggle it
out of the apartment block at night time and dump it under bushes. We
are the only flat with food growing, with all others displaying
flowers, and I am frowned at for doing so. My next door neighbour, an
old woman, recently described me as a 'foreign pig' for the untidy
collection of food plants, which stand in stark contrast to her neat
rows of marigolds.
We almost
never eat out at restaurants or go to cafés or bars – it is simply
too expensive here in Denmark. With the exception of a cheap and
cheerful Chinese dim sum place I sometimes go to for a treat, the
only restaurants I end up in are the very high end ones. Why? Because
I carved out a niche for myself as a restaurant reviewer as a way to
get to go to these places. My enthusiasm for it has dimmed in the
last year or so, but in the past I have dined out at Michelin starred
eateries with aplomb. One memorable meal would have set me back
around USD 500 if I'd have paid for it – a fact I considered as I
ate a packet of noodles the next evening, coming in at around
1/1000th of the price but with a not dissimilar calorific
value.
Transport.
I go practically everywhere by bike, averaging around 100km per week
to work and back. We do possess a car, although I almost never drive
it. My wife regards the car as necessary for ferrying the children
around and most journeys it makes are less than 1km. Despite it being
the most economical car on the market, getting around 58mpg, it's
very expensive having a car in Denmark and, although I'm not against
car use per se, we plan to swap it for a cargo bike later this year.
In terms
of planes, I try and avoid them wherever possible. This hasn't been
possible this year but I hope to make my final plane journey within
the next year and stick to ground-based transport after that. I had
never been on a plane until I was 21, so I aim to have had two
decades of flying with them before quitting. Given that we plan not
to go anywhere outside of Europe in the future, it should be a simple
case of hopping on trains and buses.
Energy.
We live in a flat that was allocated to us by the council when we
were broke and as such have little control over the heating, which is
set for the whole block (too high, as it happens, and in Winter I
have to open the windows or else bake). We use about 5 kWh of
electricity a day, and most of this is used by the fridge and on
cooking. Wherever possible I use energy saving measures, such as slow
cooking with the lid on, putting devices on timers, maintaining the
fridge freezer etc. Clothes are washed at 40 degrees Centigrade and
dry on racks around the flat. Our electricity consumption is around
half the normal rate and we get a nice cheque back each year because
our billing is based on the average rate.
Stuff.
Nearly everything in our flat is taken from the dump I mentioned
above and our whole apartment is decked out this way. Most of the
stuff is nearly new (the microwave was still in its unopened box) and
the things I have rescued so far include: a pine table at which I am
now writing, an espresso maker, three TVs, numerous frying pans and
dishes, chairs, two beds, several computers, bookshelves, plant pots
(with plants), some expensive designer chairs, lots of artworks, a set of weights, two grandfather clocks, several bicycles, a wood-turning lathe, two seal skins, some giant
wooden cats (that hold CDs), a set of Dickenses printed in 1907,
numerous stereos and DVD players and a sewing machine. Many of the
kids' toys are similarly from the dump and they often accompany me on
my forays, regarding such outings as completely normal. I've even
found a bag of silver cutlery there, and a plastic bag filled with
coins, and a complete wine making set from the 1960s – there really
is no end to the treasure one can pick up there.
Clothes.
I wear my clothes until the literally fall to pieces. Some of my
socks are 20 years old and still going strong. Part of my reason for
this is that I hate clothes shopping. After about 10 minutes in a
clothes shop I become dizzy and nauseous, so I try and limit the
experience to around once or twice a year if I really need something
for some reason.
Holidays.
The last few years we have taken our holidays in other people's
houses while they came to live in ours. House swapping is an
excellent – and free – way to have a holiday and we've been lucky
enough to have had several breaks in rural France, taking the
overnight train to get there. This year we are going to stay on a farm in Greece - our first 'proper' (i.e. paid for) holiday in about six years.
Leisure.
Many people buy expensive gear to be able to pursue some kind of
leisure activity such as kite surfing or boating or scuba diving. My
leisure activities tend to consist of reading and going for walks. It
might sound corny, but I can get far more pleasure from watching a
beautiful sunrise on the beach, than I would by doing something that
required me to buy a load of gear or, gods forbid, join a group of
like-minded enthusiasts. That said, I do love photography, and
building things. And cooking, and lots more.
Personal
grooming. My wife cuts my hair for me and we make all our own
soap. I made a pot of shaving soap two years ago and it is still only
half finished. I'm also working on making shampoo, which is getting
increasingly expensive.
Conclusion.
Many people would read the above and no doubt find fault with some of
my choices, but for me I am quite happy to be continuously reducing
my consumption footprint. Many others will no doubt think that this
is too severe and that I should 'live a little'. The thing is, I live
more than a little, I actually consider that I live a lot without
attending expensive concerts or sporting events or going on costly
trips to holiday resorts. Instead of spending money unnecessarily we spend it on things that we consider of much greater value - including holidays.
The amount of money we actually spend every month is far below what is considered the poverty level in Denmark (you are officially 'poor' if you have less than 8,450kr in your pocket every month after tax – that's about USD 1,450) and yet we count ourselves as amongst the richest 1% on a global scale – something to bear in mind when assessing how 'monastic' one might consider oneself to be.
*** Update - in response to several comments people have posted about the above on other websites I should probably clarify that I DON'T regard scavenging as a way of living in a post industrial future. I should probably have stated that it can only be useful when there is a surfeit of 'waste' generated by a consumer system in overdrive and that by taking what's there for free out of the waste stream you can spend your hard earned on more useful things like books and tools and insulation. Neither do I dress in rags and feed my children swill from a bucket. Sometimes things can get exaggerated a little ...***
The amount of money we actually spend every month is far below what is considered the poverty level in Denmark (you are officially 'poor' if you have less than 8,450kr in your pocket every month after tax – that's about USD 1,450) and yet we count ourselves as amongst the richest 1% on a global scale – something to bear in mind when assessing how 'monastic' one might consider oneself to be.
*** Update - in response to several comments people have posted about the above on other websites I should probably clarify that I DON'T regard scavenging as a way of living in a post industrial future. I should probably have stated that it can only be useful when there is a surfeit of 'waste' generated by a consumer system in overdrive and that by taking what's there for free out of the waste stream you can spend your hard earned on more useful things like books and tools and insulation. Neither do I dress in rags and feed my children swill from a bucket. Sometimes things can get exaggerated a little ...***
Peak
n'Oil Band Number #8
Led
Zeppelin
An easy
choice for this week. In the realm of rock anthems about consumerism
as a substitute for something more meaningful Stairway to Heaven
can't be beaten. There are probably plenty of other Zeppelin tracks
that address meaningful peak oil realted subjects too, but the only
one can think of right now is When the Levee Breaks.