CULTURE &
SOCIETY, SCIENCE & ENVIRONMENT
Lexicon of Change: The Rise of
Transition Culture
A movement aimed at tackling the
energy crisis with aplomb has been stepping on
the gas since its formation..
By: Judith D.
Schwartz
| March 12, 2010 | 05:00 AM (PDT)
| No Comments
http://www.miller-mccune.com/science-environment/lexicon-of-change-the-rise-of-transition-culture-10763/
The Transition
movement's ideas are creating the blueprint and even guiding the
conversation of how communities confront the twin crises of peak oil
and climate change. (Vasko Miokovic/istockphoto.com)
You may or may not have heard of
the Transition
movement www.transitiontowns.org/ - described by its founder, Rob Hopkins, as "an
exercise in engaged optimism"- yet Transition's ideas are
informing and even guiding the conversation of how communities
confront the twin crises of peak oil and climate change.
The movement is
driven by one simple idea: Rather than hand-wringing and lamenting
dwindling energy reserves and climate change, Transition wants people
to envision and create models for that future - and find much to be
cheerful about.
A variety of activities take place under the Transition banner. Scroll
around - the movement has had a strong Web presence from the start -
and you'll find numerous farm and food events, tree-planting
get-togethers, launching a local currency, campaigns to install Smart
Meters (through British Gas' Green Streets Energy Challenge), and a program in which
teenagers interview elderly people to learn about daily life before
the era of cheap
oil.
"Transition is
often seen as an environmental movement, but ultimately it's about
cultural change: enabling the shift from what's appropriate for the
upward net energy curve to what's appropriate for the downward
curve," says Hopkins, who had been a teacher of permaculture - a holistic design system
rooted in ecology - the principles of which underlie
Transition.
"[The Transition
movement] has become part of the part of the cultural scene,
especially in places like Vermont, Oregon and Northern California,"
says author and environmentalist Bill McKibben. "When he started this, Rob really understood that
people needed to take their worries about the climate and do something
practical."
What began five years ago as a student project on lowering energy use
in Kinsale, Ireland, has grown to 273 "official" initiatives in 15
countries, not to mention the thousands of "mullers" (as in
thinking about it). The United States now has 55 active
Transition
initiatives, the
latest in San Francisco.
And while many
Transition groups are in predominantly liberal areas, others have set
up in more conservative areas, such as Houston and Louisville in the
United States, as well as in working-class areas like Brixton and
Penwith in the United Kingdom. In Penwith, residents' memory of
poverty and knowing that they were last on the supply chain made them
receptive to Transition.
The movement remains
low profile and unsung. One reason may be that it's so hard to
characterize: Transition is at once local and global, high-tech and
down-home, methodical and freewheeling. Awareness of the movement has
also been confounded by its original designation of "Transition Town
movement," since a Transition community might be an island (as
in
Waiheke in New
Zealand), city (Los Angeles) or city district (London's Brixton and
Belsize Park). It is now simply referred to as "Transition," and a
Transition group is called an "initiative."
What follows is a
lexicon of Transition terms, which will help explain the movement and
where these ideas come from.
Transition: In
Hopkins' words, "Transition" represents "the process of moving
from a state of high fossil-fuel dependency and high vulnerability to
a state of low fossil-fuel dependency and resilience." Transition
"is not the goal itself - it's the journey," he says.
Specifically, it's seeing this journey as an opportunity to embrace
rather than a calamity to approach with dread.
"Transition" is
predicated on the assumption that society cannot keep consuming energy
and other resources at our current pace and that we're better off
accepting this reality and choosing how to adapt rather than letting
ourselves get backed into a crisis. The idea is that the adaptation
process can harness creative and even joyful possibilities that until
now have laid dormant in our towns and cities. As Hopkins has been
known to say, "It's more like a party than a protest
march."
Resilience: A community's ability to adapt and respond to
changes, as well as to withstand shocks to the system, such as
disruptions in food or energy supply chains. Resilience differs from
"sustainability" in that the emphasis is on community survival as
opposed to maintaining the structures and behavioral patterns that
currently exist.
"Resilience is the new sustainability," says Michael Brownlee, a
member of the Transition U.S. board and co-founder of Transition Boulder
County, the first
Transition Initiative in North America. "It's been co-opted by
almost everybody. Everybody is sustainable these days."
Marketing aside,
Hopkins says the two are intertwined: "Sustainability only works if
it has resilience embedded in it."
Energy
Descent: The
directional change from being on the energy upslope - designing our
lives according to the wide availability of cheap energy - to making
the most with less. When an individual shifts to lower energy use,
this is known as "powering down." Central to Transition is uniting
a community around developing and implementing an "energy descent
action plan," or EDAP, sometimes described as a 20-year "Plan B" for keeping a place
functioning and even thriving on a low-fuel diet.
As with all Transition efforts, each EDAP - to date only been a few
have been fully developed - reflects the circumstances and flavor of
the community it is to serve. Hopkins notes that Transition Town
Totnes, the South
Devon market town where he lives, will shortly be publishing its EDAP,
which he hopes will serve as a template for others.
Unleashing: A community breaking free from its dependence on
fossil fuels. A "Great Unleashing," which takes place when an
initiative has the momentum and organization to implement the EDAP, is
a big "coming out" party that announces the group's strategy,
commitment and enthusiasm to the broader world.
The Great Unleashing for Idaho's Transition Sandpoint Initiative in November 2008 drew more
than 500 people to the Panida Theater for talks - including one by
Mayor Gretchen Heller - music and dance. "The event is designed to
be seen historically as the point at which the process began," says
Hopkins. "It's a celebration of local culture. It's an event
that the next generation will commemorate by putting up a
plaque."
Reskilling: Reclaiming skills that previous generations took for
granted but most of us have let fall by the wayside. "The Great
Reskilling" refers to the community-wide mastering of skills that
will facilitate the process of "powering down."
For many, this is the entry point. Someone may attend a workshop in,
say, sock-darning (now something of a fad in the United Kingdom) or
mushroom identification, and begin to question aspects of a throwaway,
shrink-wrapped culture. "People have an intuitive understanding that
we're much more vulnerable than our forebears," says McKibben.
"Today we're so specialized, in that people tend to do one thing
well enough to earn money and depend on the larger system to do the
rest. People enjoy the feeling of becoming more competent in
things."
The range of
reskilling events is vast: coppice forestry, heat masonry, beehive
building, intro to beer brewing, 16-brick rocket stoves, nut drinks
and butters (kid approved, of course), lye soap-making, making cheese
with raw goat's milk, essential oils for cleaning and healing,
"pizza" (circular) weaving, using rain barrels, making your own
wooden knitting needles - and these come solely from those posted
for my home state of Vermont.
Will Transition
culture continue its rise? Will the movement play a role in how people
and communities greet the confluence of challenges looming before
us?
McKibben thinks
it's likely. "Many people [involved in Transition] are willing to
become politically involved," he says. "In the 350 event - the largest day of mass
political action the world has seen - Transition Town people played
a large role."
He notes that while
Transition initiatives focus on the local - creating food, energy
and economic resilience on a community basis - the connection
between global and local is not lost: "No matter how great your
organic garden is, it still has to rain sometimes."