permaculture

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Permaculture & Peak Oil: Beyond ‘Sustainability’

Wednesday, January 19th, 2011

Permaculture is an approach to designing human settlements and agricultural systems that are modeled on the relationships found in natural ecologies.

Permaculture is sustainable land use design. This is based on ecological and biological principles, often using patterns that occur in nature to maximise effect and minimise work. Permaculture aims to create stable, productive systems that provide for human needs, harmoniously integrating the land with its inhabitants. The ecological processes of plants, animals, their nutrient cycles, climatic factors and weather cycles are all part of the picture. Inhabitants’ needs are provided for using proven technologies for food, energy, shelter and infrastructure. Elements in a system are viewed in relationship to other elements, where the outputs of one element become the inputs of another. Within a Permaculture system, work is minimised, “wastes” become resources, productivity and yields increase, and environments are restored. Permaculture principles can be applied to any environment, at any scale from dense urban settlements to individual homes, from farms to entire regions.

Watch: Beyond Sustainability with David Holmgren

How Cuba Survived Peak Oil

Friday, February 19th, 2010

After the collapse of  the Soviet Union, in the early 90s, Cuba was left in a tight spot. The fuel that was running  the country was cut in half over night. What happened next can be a lesson for us all. Cuba tightened its belt and tightened its communities.

Watch: The Power of Community: How Cuba Survived Peak Oil