Home  5  Books  5  GBEzine  5  News  5  HelpDesk  5  Register  5  GreenBuilding.co.uk
Not signed in (Sign In)

Categories



Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition
Green Building Bible, fourth edition (both books)
These two books are the perfect starting place to help you get to grips with one of the most vitally important aspects of our society - our homes and living environment.

PLEASE NOTE: A download link for Volume 1 will be sent to you by email and Volume 2 will be sent to you by post as a book.

Buy individually or both books together. Delivery is free!


powered by Surfing Waves




Vanilla 1.0.3 is a product of Lussumo. More Information: Documentation, Community Support.

Welcome to new Forum Visitors
Join the forum now and benefit from discussions with thousands of other green building fans and discounts on Green Building Press publications: Apply now.




    • CommentAuthorJoiner
    • CommentTimeJul 21st 2011
     
  1.  
    Jobsworth's at work, inflating their positions.
    Ba Humbug (to be very polite btw)
    • CommentAuthorJoiner
    • CommentTimeJul 21st 2011
     
    I particularly liked the bit about painting the helmets green being "a start". :rolling:
    •  
      CommentAuthorSteamyTea
    • CommentTimeJul 21st 2011
     
    Are they going to be ready in time to enforce the EU air quality legislation. Could we put the Green Berries up against them :wink:
    • CommentAuthorJoiner
    • CommentTimeJul 22nd 2011
     
    "Are they going to be ready in time to enforce the EU air quality legislation."

    I'd have thought so. How long does it take to paint a helmet green?

    I think someone's on something over there. :smoking:
  2.  
    Granted it's not a very impressive start, but give them a chance guys. It's easy to take the piss but even this is a small step towards recognising that there are serious geopolitical consequences to climate change (maybe over-population next)
    • CommentAuthorJoiner
    • CommentTimeJul 22nd 2011
     
    Andrew, it's a nice thought, but totally impractical under the circumstances that will prevail at the time they're considering. Thinking along those lines is to think pre-peak-oil. The UN needs to come to terms with the probability that the meek will, indeed, inherit what's left of the world, not the guys running around in green helmets.
  3.  
    More green wash and hysteria
    • CommentAuthorJoiner
    • CommentTimeJul 22nd 2011
     
    ST, does hysteria have a calorific value?
  4.  
    Well its a lot of hot air so it must do :)
    •  
      CommentAuthorSteamyTea
    • CommentTimeJul 22nd 2011
     
    Posted By: JoinerST, does hysteria have a calorific value?

    Have to ask a woman I think, not something that men can get :wink:
    • CommentAuthorcrusoe
    • CommentTimeJul 22nd 2011
     
    Venturing onto dangerous ground here ST. I live with 3 redheads and have learned my lesson. :shocked:
  5.  
    Lucky git!
    • CommentAuthorJoiner
    • CommentTimeJul 23rd 2011
     
    Not if one of them was Rebekah Wade! :devil:

    (Steamy's going to ask who she is now.)
    •  
      CommentAuthorSteamyTea
    • CommentTimeJul 23rd 2011 edited
     
    Isn't she an out of work editor?
    • CommentAuthorJoiner
    • CommentTimeJul 23rd 2011
     
    :bigsmile:
  6.  
    OK - here's the challenge - what would you guys have the UN do ?
    • CommentAuthorJoiner
    • CommentTimeJul 24th 2011
     
    It's not so much what anyone would have them do, but what they'd be ABLE to do in the circumstances prevailing at a time when the whole world is falling apart because the reality of peak oil has hit home at last.

    What are they going to do? Walk to the trouble-spot? Wait for the troublemakers to come to the grounded helicopter gunships?

    Always biofuel, of course, if there's enough left over from feedstock for biomass electricity generation to keep the "peace-keepers" mobile.

    Just finished reading the book recommended by 'adwindrum', John Micheal Greer's "The Long Descent", ( http://www.amazon.co.uk/Long-Descent-Users-Guide-Industrial/dp/0865716099 ) which discusses all the issues (although, actually, THE issue) which underlie my concern for the future, given the high-tech nature of the "solutions" advocated on here, which I think many will know I fundamentally disagree with, my definition of sustainable having a more sustainable core. It's a book worth reading. It should be compulsory reading for all the UN clowns making suggestions like the one that prompted this thread, because it might just introduce a touch of reality to discussions about what we should be doing to address our collective future. :bigsmile:
    • CommentAuthorJoiner
    • CommentTimeJul 24th 2011
     
    Actually Andrew, you're possibly right, I am being a bit unfair. Credit should at least be given for the fact that they're proposing SOMETHING to counter the consequence of climate change that is already (?) having an impact, which indicates a growing awareness of an impending near-doom. But as the effects are likely to be geo-political on a scale previously not experienced, a UN presence does rather depend on the UN having a force big enough to overwhelm those they're sent to control. Not a realistic expectation. And as we've seen with efforts to intervene in Libya, where socio-economic factors, rather than religion, were at play, force has to be escalated beyond the original intention merely to facilitate a return to equilibrium - there will always be tensions requiring "a controlling presence" unless you annihilate or completely emasculate one side or the other. :confused:
    •  
      CommentAuthorSteamyTea
    • CommentTimeJul 24th 2011 edited
     
    The whole basis of UN intervention assumes there is a 'problem'. World population has been increasing, energy usage has been increasing at a greater rate, more people have access to clean drinking water, technology and trade make resources more accessible to more people, food is better distributed, international aid is becoming more effective. Where is the doomsday?
    True for some individuals it is very rough with fatal consequences, but then so is a strange Norwegian dressed as a copper, lightening strike on a train or a bit to much heroin, but the world is getting better day by day.
    I can hear the cries of 'it can't last', why can't it. Every minute of every day there is some humanitarian crisis that gets resolved. How many people here know of someone who has gone totally bankrupt, does that person vanish, cease to exists, no, society steps in and helps out that individual in almost all places in the world. It may not elevate them to their previous status, but they do not starve. So we already have a global economic system that is capable of working towards an energy decent plan (as the Transition people like to call it), so where is this problem that requires the UN?

    Edit:
    To control a nation you first have to totally crush them and their socio-political system. That way you get their respect. Not my opinion but that Italian fellow (can't remember his name but the book was 'The Prince') who wrote about it in the 16th or 17th century.

    Machiavelli
    Remembered
  7.  
    Joiner - I completely agree that it's unrealistic to expect the UN to be able to do anything effective when the wheels really fall off. It may be just clutching at straws but I feel that if international agencies at least acknowledge the problem, the seriousness will begin to filter down.
    Steamy Tea - am I right in understanding that you don't see increasing world population and increasing use of unsustainable energy sources as a problem ? Nor the fact that an estimated 1 billion people are currently underfed ? That world food prices have gone up 50% as a result of biofuels ? That climate change has only just started devastating world food production ? That meanwhile millions of acres of prime agricultural land in developing countries are used to produce linseed cake, cottonseed cake and rapeseed meal for European livestock ?
    Those are just a few of the reasons why it can't last.
    • CommentAuthorJoiner
    • CommentTimeJul 24th 2011
     
    Ha ha. Nick, the Pollyanna Syndrome, by definition, acknowledges no limits - well, other than for arguments sake. It assumes business-as-usual in a world of diminishing resources.

    It's not a Doomsday scenario involving cliffs and brick walls, rather one of downhill for the next two centuries so plenty of time to prepare - as long as we recognise that it's downhill from now on; that the reason for the acceleration isn't improved engine efficiency but one of those optical-illusion events when a downhill stretch LOOKS as if it's uphill. The "Wheeeeee" gradually taking on a slightly panicked note when reality kicks in and you find that the brakes aren't working.
    •  
      CommentAuthorSteamyTea
    • CommentTimeJul 24th 2011
     
    Posted By: Taigh Cruinnam I right in understanding that you don't see increasing world population and increasing use of unsustainable energy sources as a problem

    No I don't see this as a problem, population growth is a distribution and expectation issue, fossil fuel resources are still large, improved efficiencies can make them last longer, but the really important part is that alternatives (hydro, wind, solar and nuclear) can make up the difference. Energy production is volatile, no one is claiming that it must increase disproportionately as population grows.

    Posted By: Taigh Cruinnestimated 1 billion people are currently underfed

    True that there is a serious problem here, but the 'world' as a whole produces more than enough food, the Western World, and the British especially are good at throwing perfectly good food away (estimates between 20 to 30%) so the UK waste alone could feed another 20 million, US between 60 and 100 million, that is 10% of the starving billion fed to Western standards. It is a management issue and that is all.

    Posted By: Taigh CruinnThat world food prices have gone up 50% as a result of biofuels

    Not really the case is it, to cause a 50% increase in food prices, food production would have to drop by a third, there has not been that kind of change because of bio-fuels. Agricultural (food) land usage and yields have been increasing year on year for the last 20 plus years, go look at the FOA site.

    Posted By: Taigh CruinnThat climate change has only just started devastating world food production

    The recent draughts and floods are being caused by the Pacific oscillation, was predicted and is a weather event. Weather can affect some crops more than others. It is very unfortunate when then effect food staples in impoverished areas (thinking Horn of Africa), last year and the year before the Russian wheat crops were affected by a 'locked jet stream', another weather even, though not predicted. Many crops are grown in marginal areas and are therefore affected by a small temperature, precipitation, wind or solar radiation levels. Not saying that climate change is not happening, just that recent events cannot be attributed to it. When one area looses another gains.


    Posted By: Taigh Cruinnmillions of acres of prime agricultural land in developing countries are used to produce linseed cake, cottonseed cake and rapeseed meal for European livestock

    3 words 'Division of Labour'. One of two economic theories that always holds true.
    Where I live in Cornwall, most of the land is Grade 4, or dreadful and only good for dairy herds, so we import the feed because other areas can produce feed better than us, but our climate suits cows better, the outcome being that milk and feed is distributed better and cheaper.

    I am not a climate change denier, not a fossil fuel dinosaur, just that I think that the market place sorts it out better than anything else.
    There was a time when fossil fuels were too expensive to use, this changed, so it can change again. Not a problem at all.
    •  
      CommentAuthorSteamyTea
    • CommentTimeJul 24th 2011 edited
     
    Posted By: JoinerThe "Wheeeeee" gradually taking on a slightly panicked note when reality kicks in and you find that the brakes aren't working.

    'Ninety miles an hour'
    http://www.mp3lyrics.org/b/bob-dylan/ninety-miles-an-hour/

    As for acknowledging limits, lets say , 'for arguements sake' :wink: that behavioural change can reduce fossil fuel by 30%, that has us at 70% of 1991 levels, simple technology i.e insulation can save 40% of that gets us to 42% of the 1991 levels, advanced technology i.e. smart metering, storage and electrical mass transport could save another 30%, that gets us to 30% of 1991 levels. That could drag out FF usage by a factor of 3 or we could substitute that with renewables.
    Let us say that we double world population (another limit :wink:), existing resources could last 1.5 times longer than current predictions. Renewables could be hard to implement at that level, but then with the population moving to cities and using that freed up rural land for renewables (no issue with turbine noise when there are no people there to whinge and whine) further savings , mainly heating/cooling and transport could reduce by 10% more.

    So why must we assume that we are heading downhill from now on?
    How is this going to help, even if it is in Green. Could they agree what shade of green, I propose Kawasaki Racing Green and British Racing Green, in stripes :cool:
  8.  
    Posted By: SteamyTeajust that I think that the market place sorts it out better than anything else.


    Hmmm - I think that the market place, aka global capitalism, is rather more the problem than the solution, and all it sorts out is the exploitation of the many for the benefit of the few, as our downhill momentum increases. Over 80% of the world's population live in countries where income differentials are widening (ref: http://hdr.undp.org/en/reports/global/hdr2007-2008/).
    • CommentAuthorJoiner
    • CommentTimeJul 24th 2011 edited
     
    ST - :bigsmile:
    •  
      CommentAuthorSteamyTea
    • CommentTimeJul 24th 2011 edited
     
    Wealth tends to congregate into clusters regardless of the system, even mathematical ones that have no conscience.
    But for a giggle think what the value of cash would be if one person in the world had it all, this is the very reason that markets work, they distribute resources in the most effective way. We do get anomalies though, hence at the moment we value gold higher than water, but this has not always been the case and it will not always be so, and there has always been the doom sayers telling us so, think Merchant of Venice 'all that glisters is not gold' and Midas, strange how we still have enough water to go around and more gold than ever (about enough to fill two large swimming pools).
    Wage disparity within a society is perceived as a problem, especially at the moment with the young not being able to afford houses. Does this really mean that they will never afford a place, no, just that their is not enough desire for a home. If they really wanted cheaper housing they would, on mass, put in offers on houses at a price they could afford, at the moment they are not even looking. Listen to Alvin Hall on youth employment, puts it into perspective:
    http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b012tpzg
    and for more info
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/moneybox/7510244.stm
  9.  
    "they distribute resources in the most effective way"
    Effective for whom ? Certainly not the underfed billion, nor the 640 million without adequate shelter, nor the
    400 million with no access to safe water. But maybe that's simply a management issue too ?
    • CommentAuthorwookey
    • CommentTimeJul 24th 2011
     
    ST - whilst I agree with some of what you say about the way pressure and markets can effect change, I think you underestimate the pressure on the biosphere from all these people, and their rising living standards.

    Read the new edition of 'limits to growth' for some interesting (and quite scary) modelling on how the market and physical feedbacks interact. It's quite easy to get fairly complete collapse rather than gentle return to sustainable consumption levels.
    •  
      CommentAuthorSteamyTea
    • CommentTimeJul 24th 2011 edited
     
    Posted By: Taigh CruinnEffective for whom

    The market, as an entity, has no morals, it is also independent of any central control, so is in effect the will of all who enter into it at all levels. It is only when governments start to tinker and impose controls that it becomes unbalance. We all enter into the market place every time we do a transaction. This is not to be confused with the Stock Exchange, which is highly regulated. But on that note, a market can stand a small amount of inefficiency or control (local tax regimes, losses) without loosing the plot.
    Oddly enough it is not always the obvious that exchanges at the highest rate, it is often the the second or third best that has the largest transaction value, therefore benefiting more people, this is what Game Theory, that John Nash managed to model so well, is all about.
    Another thing bearing in mind when thinking about market places is that money is really only a token of time (or how long you have to work to make something so that you can swap it for something else). Also transactions may be instantaneous, but there is a time lag until benefits are seen. Imagine a farmer buying a plough, he is not going to see any benefits until he has ploughed his land and the crop has grown (hopefully a larger area of land for his time than not having a plough), which may be up to two years later.
    Now do I want to see people suffer, of cause not, but I cannot see a better system, we have tried socialism, communism, cooperatives, trade quotas/embargoes, isolation policies, preferred trading partners, hoarding, none seem as good as a true market place.
    An interesting scenario is happening with China and India becoming the manufacturing centres of the world, if they over supply, or under supply, then either the price drops to an unsustainable level and they have to stop manufacturing or the price rises until it is unattainable, the derivatives (not something I fully understand) such as energy prices are thus regulated by this consumer goods price elasticity. If they are not making they are not burning. An alternative way to look at this is that if customers in the West place a higher value on food, shelter, comfort and convenience they stop buying consumer goods (from Woolworths and Courts), this feeds back to the manufacturing that then feeds back to the derivatives such as energy prices. Try controlling that through fixed and rigid system and you end up with everyone having very little as there is no incentive to develop and produce improved goods, think on the Russian Automotive business from the 1960's until the every early 90's.

    No, the market place wins every time, it is why it exists after thousands of years.
   
The Ecobuilding Buzz
Site Map    |   Home    |   View Cart    |   Pressroom   |   Business   |   Links   
Logout    

© Green Building Press