Imagine a Government Promoting Local Self-Reliance in Energy
Rising energy costs are a big problem, creating a direct financial hardship for those who can least afford it. High energy costs hit hardest in rural communities, where many residents commute long distances to low-wage jobs, and rely on propane – one of the most expensive fuels available – for home heating. Together, these two factors are threatening to destroy the rural communities that are the heart of this great country.
Big problems deserve big solutions, but so far, the proposals to address the energy crisis coming out of Washington have failed to contemplate the magnitude and scope of the energy problem.Even the presidential candidates, given a national stage every day to present a new platform on energy, have not taken the opportunity to put forth ideas on the scale needed to address the energy crisis in this country.
Let’s assume for a moment that the reason our politicians have put forth no credible plans for solving the energy crisis is that they don’t have any idea how to do it. In that case, here’s a fresh perspective: rather than trying to create an energy supply that can sustain our economy, let’s instead create an economy that can be sustained by our energy supply. It goes something like this:
Every town in America should immediately conduct an economic leakage study to characterize the loss of dollars from the community, particularly for importing food and energy from outside the community. Next, identify the greatest opportunities to reduce the losses through local production of food, fuels, and electricity.
Federal, state, and local governments must enact policies and fund programs to build economic resilience and security by applying the principles of local self-reliance to food and energy. For food, that means providing funding and support for community gardens, small farms and farm cooperatives, and local farmers markets. For thermal energy, it means creating opportunities and incentives for local, independent companies to heat local schools and businesses with solar and biomass energy. For transportation fuels, it means setting up small-scale, regional fuel cooperatives to grow, process, and deliver fuel from a diverse array of regionally appropriate biofuel crops. And for electricity, it means transferring ownership of the entire wires infrastructure to the public sector – and operating it the way we run our national highway system – for the public good.
Imagine unleashing the awesome power of government on a set of policies and programs that promote community self-reliance in food and energy, putting an end to the perverse incentives and programs that have created the least efficient, most polluting, energy and food system the world has ever known.
Imagining a government like this – one that works in the public interest – is imagining a revolution that is long overdue.
Reader Comments