Title: Low-Energy Lifestyle: Lessons from Cuba
1Low-Energy Lifestyle Lessons from Cuba
- Presented
- by
- Pat Murphy,
- Executive Director
- Community Solutions
- Yellow Springs, OH 45387
2The Problem We Will Run Out of Oil
3The Possible Decline Could Be Steep!
4Alternatives Unlikely to Fill the Gap
- Bio-fuels require land and fossil fuel
fertilizers - Questionable Energy Return on Energy Invested
(EROEI) - World grain stocks at a low point
- Best dam sites are gone
- Wood renewable but in short supply
deforestation continues - PV solar and wind turbines most rapidly growing
- Also site-limited
- Wont scale well and are intermediate
- David Pimentel Possibly 40 of oil and gas
- And much more expensive
5What Is Best Response to Peak Oil/Gas?
- Change the American Way of Life change our
lifestyle - Current way of life energy-intensive lifestyle
- New way of life low-energy lifestyle
- Our Way of Life will be negotiable if we run
out of oil - Natural resources are finite!
6Community Solutions Physical/Cultural
- Our goal is small local, low-energy communities
- We think people are happier and life is better
- Small communities are much more energy efficient
- Small community philosophy
- Cooperation is preferred to competition
- Social interaction is preferred to consumer goods
- How does Community help?
- A cultural view satisfied with a low-energy
lifestyle
7Taking the First Step
- Describing a low-energy lifestyle
- Defining and explaining the main categories of
energy use - Listing low-energy alternatives
- Designing strategies to achieve them
8Low-Energy Lifestyle Key Points
- More walking/cycling vs. less driving
- We have 10 times more cars per capita than rest
of world - Reduced size of meals, houses, cars
- More home economics vs. two parents working
long hours - Less mobility people will not move as much for
jobs - Live local entertainment vs. electronic national
entertainment - Higher quality of life benefit for lower standard
of living - Many social indices show declining quality of
life - Bowling Alone
9Low-Energy Lifestyle Considerations
- Contrary to American Way of Life
- A way of consuming only a recent (1950s) way
of life - Low energy fits earlier values prudence,
thriftiness - A more sustainable way to live
- Consider legacy of
- Nuclear waste, buried CO2 and air CO2, other
toxins - More consideration for children and grandchildren
- Avoids betting the world on exotic technology
10Key Categories of a Low-Energy Lifestyle
- Food
-
- Transportation
- Housing
- Community zoning and land use
- Others to be considered later
- Education
- Occupations
- Business and economics
11Food/Energy Changes 1900-2000 (world)
- Cultivated area increased by 1/3
- Harvest of edible crops increased by 6 times
- People per cropland acre increased by 2.7 times
- World population increased by 3.8 times
- Fossil fuels use increased by 150 times!!!
- Green Revolution energy intensive industrial
agriculture - Energy at the Crossroads, Vacliv Smil, 2003
12Problems of Industrial Agriculture
- Industrial food is not safe, healthy, or
nutritious - Obesity rates increasing rapidly in U.S.
- Industrial food is not cheap when all costs are
in - 10 calories of fossil fuel for every calorie of
human food - Industrial agriculture is inefficient wastes
fuels - Much of fuel inputs end up in water ways and
water table - Industrial agriculture injures the environment
and wildlife - Mostly from the wastes of the fossil fuel used
- Almost all agriculture pollutions are fossil fuel
residues
13Energy-Intensive vs. Low-Energy Food
- Reduce frozen and packaged foods consumption
- Manufactured groceries will be replaced by local
production - Food should be grown locally
- Reduce food shipment distance from 1200 to lt100
miles - Organic food will eliminate pesticides,
herbicides, fertilizers - Agrarian agriculture rather than industrial
agriculture - Tens of millions of new farmers needed (15-25 of
work force) - Labor intensive farming better for soil and more
productive - Folke Gunther (Sweden) estimates 5-1 energy
reduction - Sustainability through Local Self-Sufficiency
14Other Agriculture Changes
- Move to cooperatives, CSAs, farmers markets,
organic farms - Move to animal traction to replace some tractors
- Drying will be by sun and wind, not fuel-based
machines - All people will take food and agriculture
responsibility - Cannot remain ignorant of energy and health
issues - Food growing and nutrition must be part of school
curriculum
15Organic vs. Industrial Agriculture
- This is the fundamental choice
- Replace fossil fuels with labor
- Increase diversity
16Reducing Car Energy by 10 to 1
- Make cars smaller and lighter (from 20 mpg to 80
mpg) - Lower frequency of use (from 11,000 to 5,000
miles per year) - Drive slower (from 70 mph to 45 mph)
- Give up solitary driving (from 1.3 to 3
passengers per trip) - Emphasize public transportation over private cars
17Future Transportation
- Carpooling and ride-sharing will predominate
- Hitchhiking will become an acceptable norm
- Cell phone technology can help this
- Check Ride-Share communitysolution.org
- Single occupancy vehicles will be a luxury
- Trains will replace planes
- Buses/trolleys/jitneys/bicycles will replace cars
- Speed limits will be reduced
18Honda Insight
- 64 mpg
- Available since 1999
19Volkswagen Lupo
20Daimler Chrysler Smart Car
- Its not technology its culture
- 69 mpg
21Volkswagen Research Model
- Top speed under 70 mph
- 8 horsepower - 235 miles per gallon
- Looks futuristic but simply light and low powered
22Homes in the Future
- Low-energy, smaller homes will predominate
- Thick shell construction without garages will
reign - Houses will be much cheaper to build
- And even cheaper to operate (low utility bills) !
- More co-housing units will be built
- There will be more compact developments on
smaller plots - Eco-villages
- Houses will include gardens lawns will shrink
- Root cellars, cisterns and roof rain catchments
will be used - Addresses declining water resources
23Reducing Home Energy by 4 to 1
- Decrease size (from 2400 sq ft to 1000 sq ft)
1950 size - Increase wall/roof thickness (from 2x4 walls to
2x10 walls) - Change temperature range (from 70 to 60 in
winter) - Reduce number/size of windows (from 12 to 6
floor area) - Double and triple glazing
- Use flash and solar water heaters/thick
refrigerators/freezers - Include heat storage in various ways
- Passive solar
- Rock and water storage
24Basic Shelter Design Thick Shells
- New insulation technologies huge advance over
1950s - New glass also huge advance
25High Energy House (McMansions)
- 5000-6000 sq. ft.
- 800,000
- Average new home in US 2400 sq. ft.
26Low Energy Habitat for Humanity
- Less than 1000 sq feet
- 46,000
- Average small home in the world 500 sq ft.
27Community Structures
- Cities will become smaller
- Average house needs replacement every 60 years
- Small rural towns will grow and flourish
- Lot sizes will shrink clustered zoning will
appear - Local and individual energy systems will increase
- Individual house solar panels
- Community wind systems
- Suburbs will change from bedrooms to communities
- A market on every corner again
28Land Use and Cultural Values
- People will live locally road travel will
decrease - Residential and non residential places will not
be separate - Advocated in New Urbanism building
- People will live close to their work maybe the
same building - Many modes of casual mass transportation will
appear - Zoning will be based on energy analysis
29Cuba Low Energy Lifestyle Example
- Cuba is unique in the world today
- Oil use reduced over 50 in 1990!
- Per capita energy use in Cuba is 1/15th 1/20th
of U.S. use - Cuba is changing from an industrial to an
agrarian society - Emphasizing biotechnology not genetic
engineering - Large number of biological scientists
- Focus is to build human resources through
education - Medical and teaching education is a low energy
process - Community Service staff visited Cuba three times
in the last 18 months
30Cuban History 1990 Present
- Soviet personnel left Cuba in 1991 Soviet Union
collapsed - Ended economic subsidies 6 billion annually.
- GDP down 85 in the first 2 years
- Population lost weight (average 20 lbs.) 30
per capita calorie decline - Some cases of malnutrition and blindness
- Major decrease in material standard of living
31The Special Period After Oil Loss
- Cuba abandoned the Soviet Industrial Model
- Changed from industrial/petrochemical farming to
organic - Introduced private farms and farmer markets
- Farms are smaller and use animal traction
- Maintained free decentralized medical system
- Used their limited oil resources to generate
electricity - Deemphasized private automobile
322004 Status
- Economy growing steadily at a slow rate
- Food production up to 90 of pre crisis period
- But nowhere near pre crisis level of energy
inputs - Very little new housing mostly remodels
- High energy cost of cement results in short
supply - Transportation is still ad hoc (improvised)
- Everybody shares every vehicle
- Medical care and education are above previous
levels
33Cuban Food
- Involuntary vegetarianism more energy efficient
- Meat eating went from twice a day to twice a week
- Increased vegetable and viandas (starches)
consumption - Increased vegetable sources of protein
- Decreased wheat and rice (Green Revolution)
production - Urban gardens produce 50-80 of vegetables in
cities -
- Rural areas improved education for farmers
- Many people moved from Havana to the country
- Wages raised for farmers, who are very well paid!
- Little obesity now due to healthier diet and more
physical work
34Raised Beds at Havana Urban Farm
- Designed for hand labor
- Some placed on parking lots
35The Modernized Agrarian
- This man earns more than an engineer
36Oxen Replaced Tractors
- The farmer may have gone to agricultural college
37Rooftop Gardening
- Permaculture Applications
38Rooftop Food Animals
- Chickens, hamsters, rabbits
- Grows some grasses for animals
39Urban Gardens
40Cuban Housing
- Major problem particularly in Havana
- Immigration to Havana is limited
- Increased efforts to develop rural areas
- More sq. ft. per person in rural areas than in
Havana - House sizes are small relative to U.S.
- U.S. new house size 2400 sq. ft. 600 sq.ft. per
person - Cuba new house size 700 sq. ft. 135 sq.ft. per
person - There is a 41 ratio U.S. to Cuba sq.ft. per
person - 80 of Cubans own their home
41Eco Village
42Simple Furnishings
- Kitchen bath utilities are minimal
- Wooden furniture
- Wardrobes few built-ins
43Cuban Transportation
- Every means possible Camels, dump trucks,
mules, bikes - Vehicles heavily utilized
- Occupants per trip 1.2 in U.S., 5-6 in Cuba
- Roads lightly used and poorly maintained
- Hitchhiking is an accepted alternative
- In some cases illegal not to pick up hitchhikers
- Some empty vehicles commandeered by highway
patrol - Very inconvenient but very efficient relative to
energy use
44The Camel 300 Passengers
- Cheap Cuba mass transportation
45Provincial Version of Camel
- Each of these units looks different innovation
46Varied Forms of Transportation
- Horse drawn units like this have taxi licenses
47Rapid Innovation
- Mass transport appeared immediately using
existing vehicles - No time or money for light rail or subways or new
vehicles - Simply used whatever was available
- Added incentives to agriculture free market
- Big big change from socialist system
- Many new kinds of business appeared
- Government decreased regulation
- A social transformation more than a technical
one - Much of Cubas political philosophy was changed
- Successful because of Cuban cooperative history
- Competition is not the principle social driver
- An example of Community Spirit
48Medical System Did Not Collapse
- Free medical care remained first priority during
the crisis - Vital for the morale of the people
- Cuba has same life span as U.S. lower infant
mortality - Has more doctors per capita then U.S. more
labor intensive - There is much more effort on prevention
- System could not support fast food life styles
- Doctors live in the neighborhoods they serve
- Informally monitoring local health
49Summary Cuba Culture/Material Life
- Cuba has best health care, education, and diet in
third world - High life expectancy low infant mortality
rates - Free education through high school
- Elementary class size of 15 students per class
- Higher education free but limited availability
lt25 - Social security men retire at 60, women at 55
- Ages will probably increase
- Food supply healthy and adequate but not
plentiful or rich - Far fewer material goods cars, houses,
furniture - Cuba cannot afford consumerism at any level
- An example of genteel poverty
50Cuba Low-Energy Community Solution
- Definitely a low-energy lifestyle
- Changed from industrial priority to agrarian
- Huge reductions in energy use for food, transit,
housing - Major transformation of the society
- Culture, politics, values
- Not out of the woods yet
- Great stresses on society
- Still using energy to some extent
- Unclear if the soil is yet sustainable
- Social unrest lure of Miami
51Community Solutions Summary
- Peak oil is coming denial will be short-lived
- It will change our way of life
- Will not be able to live like we are now
- Our task is to educate and model the transition
- Three projects under development
- Energy Information Management System (EMIS)
- Food Information Management System (FMIS)
- Factor Four Model Village Agraria
- One successful model proposed
- Smart Jitney (communitysolution.org)
52A Personal Example
- Current
- Moved from 1800 sq.ft. to 800 sq.ft.
- Replaced car with Honda Insight 64 mpg
- Raising eggs for neighborhood
- Started garden will add neighbors land in
spring - Replaced furnace in house with efficient unit
- Replaced all light bulbs
- Heavy use of bicycles
- Planned
- Build 6 walls on inside of exterior walls
- Design and build window covers
53Remember Albert Einstein
- We cant solve problems by using the same kind
of thinking we used when we created them. - I believe that the horrifying deterioration in
the ethical conduct of people today stems from
the mechanization and dehumanization of our lives
the disastrous by-product of the scientific and
technical mentality.