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Pathfinders
S-C-A-ISM
minus O-I-L?
Oil
is the super-fuel. Nothing else does all the things oil does, from
heating, fuel, plastics, food, chemicals, pharmaceuticals and
clothing. It has the highest energy conversion rate of any fuel and
it constitutes 40 percent of global traded energy and 90 percent of
transport (Financial Times, 4 January, 2004). But aside from
its contribution to global warming, it's also running out.
Or
so we are told. Despite the record rise of oil recently, this is
mainly speculator-driven and not due to any real shortage of oil.
What is running out is cheap oil. In fact the world has only used 15
per cent of known reserves, with at least another 20 per cent
recoverable by today's technology (BBC Online, 21 April 21,
2004). Though pundits talk about hitting peak oil, estimates for this
turning point range from already to as far away as 2050. As supply
diminishes and prices rise, more expensive options like the Canadian
and Venezuelan tar sands, with capacities rivalling Saudi Arabia,
will become profitable to extract. But the rise in costs will be
mirrored by a rise in the price of everything dependent on oil, and
for the world's poorest billion people, this could be a sentence of
death by starvation, with a likely proliferation of food rioting,
instability in liberal democracies and an upsurge in the ruling
class's faithful stand-by, fascist repression. Meanwhile, as the
stakes rise, so do the international tensions. Oil is already
determining many countries' domestic and foreign policy, and few
people doubt its role in recent wars. Governments are increasingly
jumpy. Oil production plants, and bottleneck sea-lanes, are
particularly susceptible to guerrilla attack, and with no in-house
reserves Europe or America could be reduced to chaos in weeks (New
Scientist, 28 June). Worse still, the ruling elites' increasing
inability to keep their oil-starved military up to scratch may make
wars more likely rather than less, as weakened capability could
provoke opportunistic pre-emptive attacks by rivals.
Socialism
faces a rather different problem. It is predicated on communal
sharing and participation, which in turn rely on the fact of material
sufficiency. Should anything threaten this sufficiency, the basis of
socialism itself would be threatened. Today, for example, over 50
percent of world rural populations have no access to electricity
(UNDP World Energy Assessment, 2000). Though not a problem to
capitalism, which doesn't care about non-effective, i.e. non-paying
demand (for more on this see page 19, this will be of the first
importance in socialism. Even allowing for waste reduction in the
west, that electricity must be found.
There is no single
alternative to oil, so a suite of alternatives will have to be
employed. Of the non-renewables, gas won't last much longer than oil,
and coal, the chief source of electricity globally, though there is
up to 250 years worth at present usage, is dirty stuff to burn.
Carbon capture technology may mitigate this, but is at an early
stage.
The main problem with renewables is that the
oil-addicted capitalist economy has hitherto starved them of funds,
because set-up costs are prohibitive and returns long-term. This is
true of geothermal heating systems, but also of wind and tidal
systems, ocean thermal electricity, biowaste to oil reconversion
plants, solar thermal and solar photovoltaic technology. Only nuclear
fission, with its potential for weapons, has found success, though
its waste problem remains intractable, and biofuels, though their
impact on food crops and deforestation is well known. Nevertheless,
so-called 2G biofuels that use waste feedstocks of lignin and
cellulose are beginning to put in an appearance (New Scientist,
21 June), while algal fuels are also showing some promise, though
expensive in land area (New Scientist, 16 August). The central
problem of collection and conversion in solar energy is being
addressed with 3G tech involving plastic panelling which can be
printed cheaply on any surface and may offer up to a 60 percent
conversion rate. Hydrogen, much vaunted in the press as a cheap fuel,
is really an energy vector not an energy source, being only as clean
as the energy used to create it, currently coal-fired electricity,
and the problems of storage and distribution are enormous. Currently
there are a small handful of hydrogen filling stations in the whole
of Europe (EurActive.com, 4 September)
There is some
hoopla about the renaissance of the electric car (New Scientist,
20 Sept ember) with its macho speed and mileage performances, but
aside from the £100,000 price tag, there is something about the
electric car that utterly misses the point.
Probably the
biggest difference between socialism and capitalism as regards energy
would not be how we produce it but how we consume it. Instead of
developing electric cars that do 0 - 60 in 4 seconds, socialism would
be developing ways of getting cars off the road altogether, because
abolishing paid employment and the need to make a living would also
abolish the commuter madness on the roads and motorways. Homeworking,
or just doing something useful in one's immediate local area, would
be a much more practical solution than hi-tech
boy-racing.
Similarly, there's no need and no point having, as
a norm, private kitchens all cooking the same food at the same time,
when socialising the process in the form of volunteer-run restaurants
could cut energy hugely and save on waste as well as time. Many
people detest cooking anyway and eat pre-packaged and expensive
rubbish as a result. There's no need either for each household to
possess identical music or DVD collections, books, clothes, tools or
any other item that could be shared via public library systems. The
life-span of a domestic power-tool in use, from purchase to a 10,000
year career in landfill, is estimated at just 10 minutes (New
Scientist, 6 January 2007). Waste is simply energy misused, and
capitalism does a lot of that because privatised materialist
consumption is how it makes its money.
Then there is what we
literally consume. Socialism has to feed everybody and it is obvious
it won’t be able to do so on a western-style meat diet. Even now we
are starting to be told to reduce our reliance on the meat industry
not simply because of its clear link to obesity, or to rainforest
clearance, or greenhouse gas emissions (18 percent - more than
transport, according to the UN Food and Agricultural Organisation - BBC
News Online, 7 September) but also because of
its global
impact on water and oil usage. Aside from any ethical considerations,
meat is simply too expensive a way of feeding people when for every
kilo of meat protein you need approximately 8 kilos of grain protein
(New Scientist, 14June)
If capitalism really uses up
the obtainable oil in its customary spendthrift way, then socialism
is going to have to employ a suite of solutions, both in means of
supply and modes of consumption. Whether this will involve a
generation without coffee, or cricket fields under cloches, a
communally-managed planet is going to be better placed to deal with
these issues than the privately-owned one we have. Socialism will do
whatever works, and whatever it takes. Capitalism just does whatever
pays, and devil take the consequences. Only one of these systems has
a future.
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